LABORATORY REPORT EXERCISE #5 INTRODUCTION TO THE COMPOUND LIGHT MICROSCOPE, PLANT AND ANIMAL CELLS Name_______________________________Section_____Teacher______________Date________ PRE-LAB QUESTIONS - answer the following questions using your textbook and valid internet sources. Be sure to cite your sources at the end of the prelab. You can type your answers to all questions except #1 and #9 directly into this document and then submit via Canvas. Type the answers for #1 and #9 at the end of the document. 1.
Copper Transformations Prelab Questions Three metals ions are Magnesium, Iron, and Nickel. Iron is used in the sea with iron rich minerals, for substances. Iron was also used in the formation of earth.
For example, before entering Manzanar they had dinner together every night and stayed a close knit family that depended on the patriarch of the family. Once the bomb hit and all Japanese were moved to Manzanar, she tried her best to keep that culture alive. Jeanne took notice of this. For example, during dinners in the mess hall Mama tried everything she had to keep the family sitting and eating together. But despite her yearning, it all started slowly tearing the family apart.
Nilaja Sun’s No Child… is a comedy play about a group of delinquent students that are required to learn and perform a play within six weeks. The characters in the play are what makes the story unique. Each character seems to bring reason to the title of the play in their own way. All of them have their own personality that makes the play enticing to read or watch being performed. The title No Child… means that no child is what they are expected to be.
This further expands on the meaning by showing the contrast of how little the Congolese care for others’ appearances when compared to the American view. The Congolese shared their view on appearances near the beginning of the novel when describing Mama Mwanza and Mama Nguza. The Americans think Orleanna became tainted while she was in the Congo. Even though Orleanna used to live in Bethlehem, the other residents of the town don’t view her the same way as they did before she went to the Congo. Adah even commented on their reception: “...welcome home the pitiful Prices!
Her religious views are almost nonexistent throughout the novel, so she never comes to terms with if it is something she does or does not believe in. Besides her clinging to American civilization, she has nothing guide her through the darkness, and never even attempts to learn how to. She doesn 't let herself connect to anyone, except for the only other American in the village, Eeben Axelroot. Because of this, she cannot grow and adjust, only remain in the same spot she had when they had first arrived in the Congo. Turning away from a darkness that one does not want to face is a perfect way to stay in the same spot that you have been for your whole
Comparison of three alternative bolus materials to Superflab in providing the maximum dose buildup (Dmax) Many superficial tumors are treated using 6 Megavoltage (MV) photons, but often require a bolus to bring the depth of maximum dose closer to the skin surface. A bolus may also be used to compensate for uneven skin surfaces or irregular contours in the patient. The depth of maximum equilibrium describes the depth in which the maximum dose of the formulated radiation is deposited (Washington & Leaver, 2010). Bolus material should be flexible, pliable, and tissue-equivalent.
Placing “Me” before “We” in Anthem During the 20th Century, communism was the main source of government in Russia. Ayn Rand opposed everything that Communists stood for. She believed in individualism and wanted to express her own thoughts. She based her book, Anthem, on her life in Russia and the struggles she endured.
However both woman had endured abuse and are victims of a male dominated society. Nora the wife of a banker and a mother of three children seem to have it all. Her family lives in a fancy well-furnished home and they seems to well of financially, and her husband loved her very much. However the reader soon find out that he is an egotistical controlling man that sees Nora as an absent minds child.
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 can’t seem to bare on having the image of being invisible to others who do not understand where she is from. Somehow she likes to be different from her surrounds, because she understand and speaks two different languages, but she cannot find the comfort she always wanted. A sense of unity towards her family and the people around her is the comfort of expressing on what she feels and
Throughout society and literature, there are various gender roles that once established, they became a norm which led to many characters and views to blindly follow such roles. Despite that, there are people and authors alike who try to break down gender roles and try get others to rid themselves of traditional gender roles. One such author is Noelle Stevenson, the creator of the graphic novel Nimona, which follows the story of a supposed young girl who can shape shift while being the sidekick of the notorious villain Ballister Blackheart. Stevenson, though breaking away from the majority of gender norms, still purposely includes some inside of Nimona herself, such as the ‘damsel in distress’ trope. This is due to Stevenson attempting to show her readers that
Nora on the surface seems to be the epitome of a 19th-century wife, but the audience quickly realizes that she defies gender expectations with the forged loan and eventually with her separation from Helmer. Helmer not only fits perfectly into his masculine role but blindly
The author feels as though she gets berated for her inability to speak Persian and her skin color as shown in the first paragraph when she says, “My overseas relatives say that I don’t even look Iranian anymore, as though it has faded out of me like the color from a pair of old jeans.” She was excited to have the opportunity to learn as much as she could from her cousin Nina but the opportunity changed into the author criticizing Nina and forcing her views on her. Mona Maisami never acknowledged the irony in her attitude toward Nina after how badly she felt from the family making jokes at her expense. It can be deduced that Maisami does not see the problem with the way she handled the entire situation and because of this, she came across as selfish and insensitive.
The notion of change surrounds human nature. Society changes as the people within it begin to learn and adopt innovative ideas. The creation of these ideas stem from the mind of the people and require society to accept the new change only if society changes their beliefs to do so. In Flannery O’Connor’s short story “Everything That Rises Must Converge,” O’Connor writes about one of the largest changes to every take place to American society: The Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s. O’Connor creates a story of a struggling young white family, torn apart by the transforming ideas of culture and racism.