Thursday, February 23, 2012

Home Depot Workshop do herself

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Does anyone understand this?
Then there was the psychology professor, a Yankee's Yankee and a feminist's feminist, who tells the following story about herself to illustrate that doctorates don't necessarily make you smart. She was driving to a workshop in Atlanta from her home in Ohio. It was about 10 am, and she'd been driving the entire preceding day and night herself, and she was consequently not in the best of tempers as she searched for a motel in which to crash. A Georgia state policeman pulled her over, got out of his cruiser, swaggered up to her driver's window, bent down, and drawled, "Lookie here, darlin',"--uh oh, everybody duck--"Lookie here, darlin', nobody blows through Georgia that fast." Said the feminist Yankee overtired psychology professor: "Sherman did." She says he was not satisfied merely to give her a speeding ticket; he made her follow him fifty miles out of her way to Nowheresburg, GA, and wait at the police station until three in the afternoon for a circuit judge to arrive so that he could explain to her why it wasn't the best idea in the world to be impolite to policemen, who were after all interested only in creating the safest possible environment for everybody including her, etc. etc. The lecture went on for about two hours, she says, after which she was released to drive the fifty miles back to her route and resume her search for someplace to crash. Girls, all the same.. Maybe not all the same。。

i think this means a wemon was driving to fast and got pulled over. i think the sheman thing is refering to shermans march to the sea where general sherman took a march to the sea in destrucion burning everthing in his path in a despreate attempt to gain power in americas civil war. then the police man got pissed and made her go to the police station ... hope i helped and if u can answer mine http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=AjP920GnkveeKxsDanXOS3nsy6IX;_ylv=3?qid=20090317190023AAHGSZ5
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OMG how can I stop being so lonely in this marriage?
I went to a family workshop today and heard a man talking about how his wife decided to better herself by joining a women's group and taking on new responsibilities at work and he liked it better when she was miserable and home. He sat there explaining how he felt needed before and he had less responsibilities... and allI could think was that happened to me....my husband has been pretty unresponsive ever since I got a great job and got my act together and I kept thinking its cause I am not doing good enough... so now he is acting all like I betrayed him some how....which I get because I changed "the rules"....and I am living this comfortable but seperate life that I hate....he says he can't get close to me cause I hurt his feelings (by expecting BOTH of us to grow up)..... what a friggin mess....this is a nice guy....if you met him you'd like him...but he hates responsibility and just wants a simple life....what can I do?

He has to let u grow in this relationship perhaps he is selfish...i seems he needs to let you bloom....
♥queen b♥ | Read more
What do you think of it?
“Usagi, will you please go get something from my workshop uptown? I need to get started on the table”, Mr. Gahara asked. “Yeah, yeah… ill get it”, Usagi said bitterly, “After I wake up and get dressed” The breeze felt good on the unusually warm spring day. Usagi decided to take the long way to the shop. She didn’t want to come home right away. She wanted to have as much of her Saturday to herself, before school started. “Hey! Watch it you little brat!”, the really drunk man said after running into Usagi. “Maybe if you didn’t drink so much you wouldn’t have run into me you smelly piece of trash. Now, get out of my way before I make you.”, Usagi said in Japanese. “Why you little K-“, the drunkard said before Usagi pushed him down and walked to her fathers work shop. “I’m not in the mood to mess with a worthless piece of trash like yourself”, Usagi said bitterly. “USAGI MIYAMO GAHARA!”, Mr. Gahara yelled. “Why are you talking to that man so badly?!”, he scolded, “I am so sorry for the inconvenience and my daughters words. Please forgive her” “But dad, its all his fault! HE started everything! He’s the one who bumped into me because he can’t even walk in a line!”, Usagi argued. “You disrespected your elders, and you need to apologize to this man!”, Mr. Gahara commanded. “No! I’m not apologizing to this worthless life form, let alone apologize for something I didn’t do!”, Usagi yelled. “Don’t you start to get an attitude with me! Now apologize to this man and go home and stay there.”, he said. “NO! I don’t have to listen to you. You were never there when me and mom needed you. You now started realizing that im there now that mom’s dead. I can see now why mom left you! I hate you”, Usagi screamed. She ran into the forest until she thought it was safe to stop. She curled up under a willow tree and cried. its for a school assignment(parents making me turn it into a book. Thanks so much jackbenimble. you r not being negative. i take criticism very well. you are right. i wish i was like that, but i was trying to go for shes angry at her dad and she took it out on the man. and i will take your advice i guess my previous manga creations got mixed into my writing without even realizing it^^

As a whole it reads alright. You do a nice job of developing the characters. I like how you're able to use the dialogue itself to develop the characters rather than merely telling your reader how they are. A couple things I'd recommend is reformatting it with paragraphs so as to make it easier to read. People will judge more kindly if you accomodate them. Also, I'd do a bit more research into Japan. The way your characters actually behave is very...naive manga-esque, so to speak. It seems a bit forced and unreal. Maybe you could try writing from your own perspective. It seems very clear to me which parts are coming from who you are versus the parts that are more what you wish you were. Who you are speaks more clearly than what you wish you were, I'd suggest you stick to that. Sorry to be so negative. It's just that you seem to have a talent for writing, and it'd be a shame to waste it on something so stereotypically shallow. Be a writer, not a caricature artist! Good luck.
JackBeNimble | Read more
I need history whizzes....................................................?
After the Civil War/War Between the States, women not only continued to lead the fight for improving all kinds of living conditions, but the took an increasing interest in public affairs. They proved themselves capable leader of the movements they supported. Clara Barton, who had helped the sick and wounded in the Civil War/War Between the States, founded the American Red Cross in 1881. She was for many years its able and energetic leader. Women like Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton were leaders of the National Woman's Suffrage Association. They overcame ridicule and strong opposition in their efforts to win equal rights for women. The growth of industry also helped to change the old beliefs about women's rights. As factories and businesses multiplied, more and more opportunities outside the home were opened to women. The wages women received in these jobs gave them more freedom. New industries also turned on labor�saving aids to help women in their homes -such aids as gas and electric stoves, vacuum cleaners, electric refrigerators, and washing machines. Housework became easier, and women had more time for interests outside their homes. Many colleges, formerly limited to men, now accepted women students. A number of women's colleges were founded. Because the opportunities for college education were greater, women were able to enter the different professions. Women Win Suffrage Changes such as those we have mentioned made it seem less and less sensible to deny women the right to vote. By 1900, four states west of the Mississippi River had approved woman suffrage (they had granted women the right to vote). Leaders in the battle for women's rights had to fight long and hard to bring suffrage to all American women. These leaders wrote newspaper articles and gave lectures. They even paraded before the White House to awaken the public to the need for this reform. At length, the Nineteenth Amendment (1920) was added to the Constitution, extending the right of suffrage to women. Women in all parts of the country voted in the election of 1920. Since that time they have taken more and more interest in government. Women today not only vote, but hold many offices in our national, state, and local governments. {The periodical, ]"The Woman Rebel", told the working woman that there is no freedom for her until she has this knowledge which will enable her to say if she will become a mother or not. The fewer children she had to cook, wash and toil for, the more leisure she would have to read, think and develop. That freedom demands leisure, and her first freedom must be in her right of herself over her own body; the right to say what she will do with it in marriage and out of it; the right to become a mother, or not, as she desires and sees fit to do; that all these rights swing around the pivot of the means to prevent conception, and every woman had the right to have this knowledge if she wished it… I resolved, after a visit to France, where children are loved and wanted and cared for and educated, to devote my time and effort in giving this information to women who applied for it. I resolved to defy the law, not behind a barricade of law books and technicalities, but by giving the information to the workers directly in factory and workshop... (Source: Margaret Sanger, "Comstockery in America," International Socialist Review) The Industrial Revolution was dawning in the United States. At Lowell, Massachusetts, the construction of a big cotton mill began in 1821. It was the first of several that would be built there in the next 10 years. The machinery to spin and weave cotton into cloth would be driven by water power. All that the factory owners needed was a dependable supply of labor to tend the machines. As most jobs in cotton factories required neither great strength nor special skills, the owners thought women could do the work as well as or better than men. In addition, they were more compliant. The New England region was home to many young, single farm girls who might be recruited. But would stern New England farmers allow their daughters to work in factories? The great majority of them would not. They believed that sooner or later factory workers would be exploited and would sink into hopeless poverty. Economic "laws" would force them to work harder and harder for less and less pay. The Lowell Experiment How, then, were the factory owners able to recruit farm girls as laborers? They did it by building decent houses in which the girls could live. These houses were supervised by older women who made sure that the girls lived by strict moral standards. The girls were encouraged to go to church, to read, to write and to attend lectures. They saved part of their earnings to help their families at home or to use when they got married. The young factory workers did not earn high wages; the average pay was about $3.50 a week. But in those times, a half-dozen eggs cost five cent

Since this is posted under "Computers - Laptops" Im assuming that you have a Laptop Question regarding the Novel above. And the question is????
JustMe68_86 | Read more
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