Jesus Is Alive CommunityCalamagui 2nd Ilagan‚ IsabelaAs of October 2011 | | | | | | | | | | NAME | GENDER | AGE | BIRTHDAY | CELL LDR. | CP# | REMARKS | 1. | LASAM‚ MARY JANE | F | | | | | | 2. | BARASI‚ AMALIA | F | 31 | | | 09061023844 | | 3. | BAUTISTA‚ CAMILLE KATRINA | F | 15 | | | 09267791043 | | 4. | BULAN‚ ABBY | F | | | | | ** | 5. | BUQUEL‚ MARY- JANE | F | 16 | | | 09262681892 | | 6. | CANCERAN‚ ROSALIA |
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Irish immigrants were a really really big part of the culture change. The largest wave of immigrants came from Ireland because of the famine in their land. Everyone ate potatoes over there‚ so when the crop got a fungus and they died‚ it was a huge problem for the Irish. A whole lot of people ended up dying from the lack of food. A lot of the Irish that came to America couldn’t do anything. They weren’t talented and they had no skills and no money. Mostly they lived up north in cities. They faced
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MY DISCOVERY OF IRELAND WHAT MAKES IRISH CULTURE POPULAR WORLDWIDE? ’I am of Ireland‚ And the Holy Land of Ireland‚ And time runs on‚’ cried she. ’Come out of charity‚ Come dance with me in Ireland.’ William Butler Yeats My first encounter with Ireland and its culture was rather trivial. I saw some Irish dancing and was fascinated by its rigor‚ energy‚ and emotional charge. I am not a dancer myself but Irish dances that I saw on TV made me want to get on my feet and start tap-dancing
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As famine led to civil turmoil in central and western Afro-Eurasia‚ bands of pastoral nomads from the Inner Eurasian plains increasingly endangered the societies of the riverine cities. Transhumant herders advanced on the cities seeking provisions for themselves and their herds. The ability of nomads and transhumant herders to adapt more quickly to the changing environmental conditions became the facilitator for the rise of new territorial states‚ which would adopt new skills that allowed them to
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Jordan Marsh The first group of the old immigration I would like to discuss is the Irish. During the old immigration and they were treated as wild animals. They had to deal with poor wages for jobs and were discriminated against for their actions and beliefs. They left their homeland because of food shortages that caused starving and poverty. The potato famine caused many of these issues. They were hated and treated badly and had to deal with civil unrest‚ severe unemployment
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Patrick’s Asylum. Almost all the children were sick‚ but the nuns called for brave and god-fearing souls to care for the most severely affected. That was the purpose of this place‚ “to gather and care for the Irish children‚ while waiting to place them in honest and charitable homes.6 The nuns asked only those truly willing to accept such a task‚ “it should be given freely and for the love of Jesus Christ.”7 The Sisters of charity fed and clothed these children
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Introduction Tonicity refers to the concentration of solutes in a solution (Lab 6-7). There are three stages of tonicity: Isotonic‚ hypertonic and hypotonic. Four unknown solutions were given and labeled as followed: Solution A‚ Solution B‚ Solution C‚ and Solution D. Since potato cells were used for this type of experiment‚ in an Isotonic solution the solute and water concentration are the same as inside the cell in which the isotonic solution contains 0.9% NaCl. In other words‚ water moves in and out
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Famine‚ Affluence‚ and Morality Notes Peter Singer opens his argument by introducing the reader to a famine in Bengal setting up his first premise that starvation is bad (Singer 631-632). He then suggests for his second premise that if it is possible to stop something bad from happening‚ then we should do all we can to stop it as long as it does not cause something else just as bad to happen. Singer says that if everyone donated five pounds‚ then there would be sufficient funds to help relieve
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Osmosis using potato cores and sucrose solution 1.0 Abstract This experiment’s ultimate goal is to find the water potential of the potato cell. This was achieved through placing potato cores in different concentrations of sucrose (0.2%‚ 0.4%‚ 0.6%‚ 0.8%‚ 1.0%‚ 2.0%‚ 3.0% and 4.0%) solution and to observe how much water was gained or lost through osmosis to reach a prediction of the concentration within the potato cell. The results displayed that the concentration of sucrose within the potato cell is
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of a Potato Mishal Hasan Abstract Students in Biology find it difficult to understand the concept of tonicity and osmolarity in a real time situation. In this investigation‚ several concentrations of sucrose were used to determine the osmolarity of a potato. It was found that the concentration of sucrose was close to 3.6 in the potato used showing that it was isotonic. Anything above caused the potato to gain weight showing that it was a hypotonic solution and anything below caused the potato to lose
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