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Zee and his friends are angry that their old haunt has been replaced by stores that are off-limits to them and storekeepers who treat them with distrust. To let the merchants know what he and his friends think, Zee paints graffiti on the wall of the hardware store. After the wall is repainted, Zee decides to repeat the vandalism, but this time with more artistic flair. A store owner catches him in the act and threatens to call the police--unless Zee agrees to repair the damage. Also available in Spanish.
The Transformative Play 'The Big Picture' by Carl Stillitano, is a political thriller about a megalomaniac who manipulates his way to world domination through a media takeover. The play revolves around the character of Richard Gent, a megalomaniac businessman who is ambitious and patriotic. He is shown in his lavish study, engaging in a conversation with his brother-in-law, Eric MacNamara. Richard expresses his dissatisfaction with the current administration's control over the media and discusses his plans to acquire CNN from Time Warner. Eric raises concerns about the financial risks involved in the deal and the moral obligation to shareholders. The conversation becomes heated as Eric questions Richard's motives and decisions. The play explores themes of power, media manipulation, personal relationships, and the consequences of political decisions. It delves into the complexities of ambition, loyalty, and the pursuit of legacy. The characters' interactions reveal their conflicting perspectives and the challenges they face in navigating their personal and professional lives.
Music Appreciation for the Elementary Grades: Book 1 will introduce children to seven different composers, dating from 1685 to 1828 (Bach, Handel, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Paganini and Schubert). Each composer's childhood and adult life are vividly described in individual biographies. Every important incident is mentioned and every detail of the stories is true. Each book contains written music and delightful pictures throughout. It is more than the human side of these books that will make them live, for in the music the great masters breathe. This book includes a variety of hands-on activities such as: geography lessons, history lessons, recipes, instrument studies, music vocabulary, hand ...
The Transformative Play 'The Big Picture' by Carl Stillitano, is a political thriller about a megalomaniac who manipulates his way to world domination through a media takeover. The play revolves around the character of Richard Gent, a megalomaniac businessman who is ambitious and patriotic. He is shown in his lavish study, engaging in a conversation with his brother-in-law, Eric MacNamara. Richard expresses his dissatisfaction with the current administration's control over the media and discusses his plans to acquire CNN from Time Warner. Eric raises concerns about the financial risks involved in the deal and the moral obligation to shareholders. The conversation becomes heated as Eric questions Richard's motives and decisions. The play explores themes of power, media manipulation, personal relationships, and the consequences of political decisions. It delves into the complexities of ambition, loyalty, and the pursuit of legacy. The characters' interactions reveal their conflicting perspectives and the challenges they face in navigating their personal and professional lives.
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They had come down to St. Augustine for very different reasons. Zephyr Williams got there first, to work for the Granada Street Scrutineer and to keep quiet. That is what Zephyr was born to do and in St. Augustine, he thought he had found the perfect place in which to do it. Bookworm came there to become calm and to develop attractive creases around his eyes. But if that failed he could always throw himself into the ocean. Desperate for success after years of false promise followed by self-imposed inertia, Nikki Hart was certain that St. Augustine was the intersection of her late parents utopian village and Martin Luther King, Jr.s beloved community. Instead, she found, well, Bookworm and Zephyr.
Zee and his friends are angry that their old haunt has been replaced by stores that are off-limits to them and storekeepers who treat them with distrust. To let the merchants know what he and his friends think, Zee paints graffiti on the wall of the hardware store. After the wall is repainted, Zee decides to repeat the vandalism, but this time with more artistic flair. A store owner catches him in the act and threatens to call the police -- unless Zee agrees to repair the damage.
Dance and literature seem to have much in common. Both are part of a culture, represent a culture, and subvert a culture. Yet at the same time, they appear to be medial antagonists: one is kinetic and multimedial, the other (often) verbal and seemingly mono-medial. What happens, however, when both meet; when movement is integrated into the literary world or even replaces verbal communication? Dance is artistic and popular, traditional and innovative, bodily and ephemeral. It holds cultural and kinetic information in a nutshell and thus brings movement and cultural history into a text. Shakespeare’s plays, Restoration comedy, 19th century caricature, popular and elitist theatre, all make use of dance as special means of signification. Thus, this study explores dance in British literature from Shakespeare to Yeats, and illustrates the many ways in which these two forms of artistic expression can enter into various kinds of intermedial encounters and cultural alliances.
Twelve-year-old Natalie Nelson has written a powerful school story. It's a short novel called "The Cheater," and her best friend Zoe is certain it should be published. All Natalie has to do is give the manuscript to her mom, an editor at a big publishing house. However Natalie doesn't want any favors from her mom. Still, Zoe won't drop the idea. Spurred into action, Natalie invents a pen name for herself and Zoe becomes a self-styled literary agent. But if the girls are to succeed, they'll need support from their wary English teacher, legal advice from Zoe's tough-talking father, and some clever maneuvering to outwit the overbearing editor in chief of Shipley Junior Books. Andrew Clements, the best-selling author of Frindle, The Landry News, and The Janitor's Boy, delights his audience with this story of two irrepressible girls who use their talent, ingenuity, and a little cunning to try to make a young writer's dream come true.