Would you rather choose sports or dairy farming? You may think dairy farming would be amusing at first, although DJ Schwenk from Dairy Queen by Catherine Gilbert Murdock, finds the task of milking cows daily, tedious. DJ had to withdraw from her athletics for her family farm that was falling apart. Throughout the story DJ shows that she is determined and brave because of her choices. Darlene Joyce, who is called DJ throughout the book, towers over all of her classmates. Her short hair descends just down to her ears and looks like a “New York City Girl”, as she mentions in the book. DJ’s freckles are sporadic across her nose. Her brawny figure is what she describes herself as looking like a cow. DJ likes to cover that muscular, teenage body of hers with athletic clothes or a football uniform in that case. Your personality tells a lot about you, just like DJ’s tells a lot about her. DJ is a brave, athletic person. DJ is a hard working farmer, helping out ever since a hip injury debilitated him. She’s brave because she joined football. DJ’s willing to help her family and put them first, that makes her caring. She’s introverted and has a low self esteem. Her low self esteem is a reason why she believes she isn’t smart, but if she …show more content…
It’s implausible although that’s exactly what DJ considered. Her parents thought she was insane, doing this just to show her parents she was like her older brothers. Whereas DJ’s reasoning came from training Brian, a hired hand on the farm. Coach Ott, a family friend sent Brian over for the summer to help out on the farm under one condition, if DJ would train him. Now Brian is a rival football player from Hawley, which caused some conflict. While training him in secrecy, he reminded her how much she loved the game. So, she of course had to ask the coach and still try out like the others. Her determination got her to where she wanted to be, a linebacker on the Red Bend football
In the article "Don’t blame the eater" written by Zinczenko, he argues that fast food is the main reason why so many teenagers are suffering from obesity in United States. He explains that many companies will use advertisements to deceive customers. For example, a company’s website offers a chicken salad with less than four hundred calories per serving; however, they don’t label everything that the salad has In the first label. They will use separate labels in the products that the salad has on it, so the costumer gets confused and thinks that he is actually eating a four hundred calories salad that is "healthy". However, he is actually eating a seven or more hundred calories meal.
Jordan is also faced with the question of whether to go to her dream school, Alabama, and be used as a trophy girl or go to a smaller university, Michigan State, and be able to actually play
Destiny English 1301 Section No. 60 Mrs. Etherington December 12, 2014 Milkweed by Jerry Spinelli: Final Discussion Question #9 The story Hansel and Gretel remind Misha about holocaust because of Janina. Hansel and Gretel is about a brother and sister on who was left out in the woods and runs into a house that is supposed to take out of their hunger because its decorated full with candy. Its like an sign of hope, but instead inside they meet an old women who wants to get rid of them. She tell them all kinds of torture that she wants to do to them, and tries to trick them into the oven.
He never knew he would be so acclaimed in the town as one of the best coaches in the city, but this success was not alone his. His team’s dedication and hard work were behind the team’s success; according to him, his guidance has led the team to emerge out as the best among others.
Did you know that Martinsburg switched from a countryside town to a bustling city in less than a century? In the story, McJobs, by Eric Schlosser, Eric verbalizes about how life in Martinsburg transmuted greatly over time. Martinsburg is a city in West Virginia that is now known as “the fastest growing city”. It used to be a town by the countryside and is now a boisterous city. The underlying messages about life in Martinsburg that Schlosser seems to be alluding at are that the opening of fast food restaurants in Martinsburg led to less stable jobs, overpopulation made it more city like, and it was overworking teenagers.
In the story “So I ain’t no Good Girl “written by Sharon Flakes. I felt like the scene was very realistic, the characters made the scene very realistic by the way they were acting. The author described the scene pretty good when she said: “if I scream at him the whole street could hear me”. I can also relate to the scene in my everyday life. A boy and his girlfriend where at a bus stop with some other girls, And Raheem starts to act a little flirter with the good girls who made his girlfriend kind of upset about the situation, so she tries to talk about it, but he got mad at her and ended up making out with the good girl.
Ribbons (2011) is a free verse poem by ali cobby eckermann that effectively illustrates the thematic concern of having a dual national identity and being part of aboriginal - australian culture. The poet accomplishes this by a soulful tale, leaving behind the people she knew best and expressing herself being “tied” to the land forever, outlining her lifelong spiritual bond with the land and its people. eckermann reveals that a firm bond is established between her and the land wherever she may be through poetic devices and techniques such as poetic structuring, repetition, symbolism, and characterisation. Characterisation of the children as being young “anangu” is shown in stanza 1 of ribbons. Anangu, the defining term for australian aborigine is reflected in the children identifying their national identity as being part of australian and aboriginal culture.
For the duration of his essay “The Stranger in the Photo is Me”, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and professor Donald M. Murray depicts his train of thought while flipping through an old family photo album. While describing his experience, Murray carries the reader through the story of his childhood, describing snapshots of some of his favorite memories growing up. Throughout the piece, he shifts back and forth between a family oriented, humorous tone and a nostalgic, regretful one and by doing so, he parallels the true experience of looking through a family photo album. Murray expresses a more serious tone while reflecting on a certain photograph of him in uniform from the beginning of World War II and goes on to explain how in his opinion,
On September 11, 2001, tragedy struck the city of New York. On that fateful day, two airplanes were hijacked by terrorists and flew straight into the twin towers. Each tower fell completely to the ground, taking thousands of lives with it and injuring thousands more. Not only did that day leave thousands of families without their loved ones, it also left an entire city and an entire country to deal with the aftermath of the destruction. Poet, Nancy Mercado, worries that one day people will forget that heartbreaking day.
Defining Heritage In the short story, “Everyday Use,” Alice Walker defines and explores the concept of heritage in the African- American culture. The story was first published in nineteen seventy three as part of the short story collection, In Love and Trouble. “Everyday Use” tells the story of a mother and her two daughters who have conflicting ideas with their heritage and culture.
‘Be Music, Night’ by Kenneth Patchen is an intriguing piece of literary art. A picture is painted of human interaction with Earth immediately. The manner in which humans fall into her beauty and vastness is apparent in even the first lines of Patchen’s poem, but why is this important? “Be music, night, That her sleep may go Where angels have their pale tall choirs” This choir is brought on by our musical mother nature.
Dee is a girl who lived with her mom and her sister Maggie, but she wasn’t like them at all, she was different than her sister and her mother. Mama was collecting money to take Dee to school in Augusta. Dee liked to be fashionable, she always wanted nice things. Dee changed allot in the story, she changed after she went to study in school.
People always suggest others to be themselves. To not care about what others have to say about you. People try to ignore society 's opinion about them, not realizing the importance it plays in identity. For a person to feel identified, they must have similarities or differences, and some type of involvement. Identity involves a combination of how you see yourself and how others see you.
Everyone defines and identifies themselves in different ways. Whether it’s by our names, our religion, or our sexuality, we all have something different that make us unique and that we identify ourselves as. In Alice Walker’s short story “Everyday Use,” an African American woman tells the story of her daughter Dee’s long awaited visit. Upon her arrival the mother and her other daughter, Maggie, discover some drastic changes in Dee: she has changed her name to Wangero, she has also arrived with a mysterious man who calls himself Asalamalakim, and has adopted an African style of dress; all of this in an effort to depict what she sees as her heritage. During the course of her visit, Dee tries to take several items important to her family’s heritage.
She is kind to all the people she comes across, and rarely goes against other people’s expectations