Jennie Finch is one of my most inspiring people i have heard of. She is a softball legend and she inspires girls so much that they can do anything boys can. Also she is so good at softball and very kind athlete. And she has won a lot of medals and she has her own softball line of bats, bags, etc... Jennie Finch is super inspiring to girls. She is so inspiring so women in girls because she is a great person and so good at softball. Also she is very inspiring because she is a very nice, kind and
you need to play my passion. I play softball, and I admire Jennie Finch because she loves softball just like me. Jennie is a famous pitcher, and I am a pitcher for my team, I would like to be just as fast and accurate as Jennie. Some day, I would like to meet Jennie and learn more about softball from her. Jennie was born on September 3rd, 1980, in La Mirada, California. She is the youngest of Doug and Bev Finch's three children. Jennie credits her family for most of her success. Jennie's mom was
Jennie Finch was an amazing softball player. From starting at the very young age of five, all the way to winning a gold medal in the Olympics; her softball career was quite successful start to finish. Finch has also created programs for young girls post Olympics and still continues to today. Finches softball career started at a very young age, it began soon after her fifth birthday when her parents signed her up for a T-Ball team. Throughout the years, she developed a strong love and passion for
Martial arts are known as the ultimate self-defence mechanism for not only kids and teenagers, but for adults and old men and women too. Most people nowadays think that martial arts are just a type of sport. But, whoever learns martial arts knows better that martial arts are more than just a type of sport. It cannot be denied that martial arts can give negative side effect if it is used in the wrong way, but, there are more advantages than disadvantages in learning martial arts. So, everyone should
When looking at results from the mountain area it is clearly evident that the spoon beaked bird was the most adapted to collecting the beans available in relation to the four bird species. The spoon beaked bird had a product difference of 58.75 between its closest competitors the fork billed bird with an average collection of 14.25 followed by the tweezer beaked bird with an average of 6.75 and finally the chopstick billed bird with a collection average of 1.25. Looking at these results it can be
character that I just had to choose her. In the novel, Calpurnia is described as “...All angles and bones”(Lee 6). Calpurnia was also nearsighted , and she had large hard hands. She had been working for the Finch family for a long time. On page one hundred and sixteen she says she grew up around Finch Landing, and she was always working there. Since Calpurnia has been with the family for a long time, and has been working for Atticus since he married, Atticus considers her as a part of the family. He shows
Joshua Rabideau 11/10/2016 BIOL 380 – Lab: Monday Black-Capped Chickadee Foraging Habits There are numerous organisms and interactions occurring within any ecosystem. Many times, the interactions between organisms and habitats are based on the energy needs of the organisms. In this experiment, a null hypothesis that the Black-capped Chickadee forages on various trees at random. Upon data analysis of the gathered information, it can be determined that the Black-capped chickadee were not choosing foraging
The Evil’s Tolls “Inside each of us, there is the seed of both good and evil. It's a constant struggle as to which one will win. And one cannot exist without the other.”--Eric Burdon. The book To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee, is based on the town of Maycomb during the great depression. Scout and Jem, two kids, were faced with many hardships throughout the book; like a court case involving wrongful discrimination and other evils they will overcome. It is clear that the theme the destruction of
In To Kill a Mockingbird, written by Harper Lee, it is vivid that gender roles were part of society in the 1930s. Scout Finch, a little girl, shows that being a girl doesn’t define her personality or actions. Although this book was published in 1960 and was set in the 1930s, the contention of gender roles is still prominent in today’s civilization. All the way through chapter five, it is well known that gender roles are a part of mankind during the Great Depression. Scout narrated, “I was not
Year 11 Stage 1 biology Bird Beak Summative Practical SACE# 798905X Aim: The aim of this practical investigation is to simulate the idea of adaption and evolution in times of drought in both valley and mountainous areas, through four common utensils representing four different types of bird beaks. Common dietary foods consumed by birds were substituted for toothpicks and beans. Hypothesis: In the valley were the toothpicks are found, the tweezer beaked bird will be the most affective at collecting
The Expectations of Maycomb County Aunt Alexandra a lady, who values the Finch name, wants her niece to see the Finch name that same way she does. In to Kill Mockingbird by Harper Lee, Scout dislikes Aunt Alexandra who tries to make Scout more ladylike which results in Scout following the social expectations of Maycomb County. Atticus ask for Aunt Alexandra to come over to his house. Aunt Alexandra agrees and starts to influence Jem and Scout, but mainly Scout. Scout hates that she does this, but
aspect of the American Dream. To Kill a Mockingbird explores the idea of freedom in America during the 1930s, while using bird motifs as various symbols, specifically for freedom. Throughout the novel, bird metaphors show the freedom of the three Finch siblings and also describe the physical appearance of Bob Ewell as he walks up to the stand. Birds are
To Kill a Mockingbird is essentially a novel about growing up under remarkable circumstances in the 1930s in the Southern United States. The story covers a compass of three years, amid which the fundamental characters experience huge changes. Scout Finch lives with her sibling Jem and their dad Atticus in the invented town of Maycomb, Alabama. Maycomb is a little, affectionate town, and each family has its social station contingent upon where they live, who their guardians are, and to what extent their
To Kill a Mockingbird - Courage "Courage is when you know you 're licked before you begin, but you begin anyway and you see it through no matter what" According to Atticus Finch, an honest lawyer in Harper Lee 's novel "To Kill a Mockingbird" courage is not a man with a gun in his hand. "Real courage" is when you fight for what is right regardless of whether you win or lose. Atticus fits into this definition of what "real courage" is and demonstrates it several times throughout the novel
amount of melanin in your skin automatically decreases the value of a person? In Harper Lee’s novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, Atticus Finch takes on a case where the amount of melanin in your skin matters to the jury, not the truth. With Scout Finch as our narrator, we learn the important elements of the before and after occurrences before the trial and each lesson the Finch children learn in between. Mark Twain’s article, Moral Cowardice expounds in the one daring man that has enough courage to do what
Do What Is Right, Not What Is Easy In the 1957 MGM film Twelve Angry Men, juror’s number 8 and 9 were the two most effective leaders. Juror number 8 stands out the most out of the 12 jurors; he is a leader and a hard worker because he refuses to give up until the other jurors face the truth. Juror number 9 is the second-in-command when it comes to justice and sympathy. Juror number 9 says “Gentlemen, that’s a very sad thing – to mean nothing. A man like this needs to be quote, to be listen to” (Juror
a mockingbird.’” (119) These famous words Atticus Finch said in To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee, portrays that because the mockingbird doesn’t hurt anyone, and because it only helps people, it is a sin to kill it. To be a mockingbird, you can’t hurt people, you can’t infringe on other people’s property, and you can’t be a bad person. People who are like mockingbirds only help others in their endeavors. This is why I believe that Atticus Finch, Tom Robinson, and Arthur “Boo” Radley are all portrayed
Does society outcast those who defy its norms? Are unique and special individuals tossed aside in favor of rule following drones? By looking at different literature such as To Kill a Mockingbird, Boy Erased, and The Handmaid 's tale it is clear that people are often treated as outcasts when they defy societal norms. In To Kill a Mockingbird Maycomb treats mixed-race children like outcasts because they aren’t one race or the other. In Maycomb, both white people and people of color hold animosity
Dependence On Individuality: Animal Imagery in Charles Baxter’s “Gryphon” People should be free to express their individuality. A person, whose existence is dependent on the community and the boundaries set by the community, will never have the ability to move above the common existence. In the story “Gryphon” by Charles Baxter, Tommy, an elementary school student in the rural community of Five Oaks believes that his life is boring, but he is convinced by the uniqueness of substitute
1. Though there is an incredible amount of important characters in the novel, to me, the most significant character in Part 1 of To Kill a Mockingbird is Atticus Finch. His actions and treatment towards everyone and everything caused me think the most in comparison to the other characters. For instance, Atticus makes an important decision to defend Tom Robinson, a black man, in trial during Chapter 9, thus leading to harassment towards his family not only from school, but even from their own neighbor