Two Kinds" focuses on the mother/daughter dynamic. Because Jing Mei's mother lived an extremely difficult life in China, she pressures Jing Mei to excel in America where it is much easier for a girl to be successful. The problem is that Jing Mei's mother defines success for her daughter as being exceptional at something. Thus, Jing Mei must take piano lessons in order to <span>become </span>a child protegee.
The title refers to Jing Mei's mother's statement that there are two kinds of daughters in the world--those who obey, and those who rebel. For Jing Mei, as an adult, she can see a little bit of both in herself and is mature enough now to see what her mother was trying to do <span>for </span>her.
D: When I stood at his front door.
Works for you???
Relocation because the animals don't deserve to die. In any case, who are humans to judge when another species exceeds its limits? I mean, humans have literally infested the Earth everywhere, and yet most people would consider it immoral and unethical to decrease the human species' numbers by murdering a large portion of people, why should we feel different towards animals who have not wronged us, and unlike us, are not destroying Earth.
The Sherman Act, or Sherman Antitrust Act, prevents monopolies and conspiracies from fixing prices, fixing bids, or dividing a market between competitors. The Sherman antitrust act tries to prevent the rising of price, to protect consumers from abuse, to foster a competitive marketplace and legitimately successful business and to avoid unilateral agreements which are anticompetitive and attempts to monopolize the market.