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Kidstars I'll start with the Roller Coaster. First, when I was in the queue, I was very excited. Then when I was about to take my seat, I became seriously scared. Seeing it might be fun, but riding it can be one of the most frightening experience one can ever have. The Roller Coaster is designed in such a way that you'll feel like you'll fall down any second. I had my eyes closed almost for the entire ride! Yes, I was THAT scared. There was Alice in Wonderland's…wonderland. It was a maze made of bushes. There was a Spade card with a funny face. It had a hole in the middle of its face and body, for people to put there face inside it and take photographs! My favourite part was the Winnie the Pooh musical. It was a story about finding Piglet who got lost in the woods. When Pooh, Tigger, Piglet and the other characters started singing, the audience started singing along as well. They were coming and shaking our hands and let me tell you, they were extremely soft and comfy. Some people started dancing too. Another ride was a water ride through a cave on a boat. It was a journey through different countries of the world, introducing their different cultures. The interesting thing was that the song, 'It's a Small World,' was being played in each of the countries' languages. There were dancing dolls, each wearing its country's traditional costumes, like the Indian ones were wearing sarees and the Japanese ones were wearing kimonos. And at the end of the journey, there was a signboard with Goodbye written in almost about 20 different languages. The most spectacular show was the Disney Parade. It was started off with Mickey and Minnie Mouse. There was a large green dragon and smoke was coming out of its nose every five seconds. There was Cinderella in the pumpkin carriage, Snow White, Beauty and the Beast, Rapunzel with her long hair, many other princesses. Aladdin, Peter Pan and Tinkerbell and Little Mermaid were also there and it ended with Mary Poppins. The funny thing was that though it was raining, with or without an umbrella, nobody was moving from their places, the parade wasn't cancelled and flashes from cameras were still continuing. Everyone without umbrellas were soaking wet, including us. It only proves how fantasy characters from Disney pages can come into real life and make us forget about everything. Through these theme parks, Disney has given life to lifeless forms and won millions of hearts- both young and old, coming from far and wide. By Sanjana Rahman History's Mysteries: The Salem witch trials The History Among them was Reverend Parris's servant Tituba who spilled the beans and confessed of being a witch. Had she been silent the investigation would have ended and the accused could have been free with only a mere reprimand. Following Tituba's account, the witch hunt began in full swing in which the Putnams along with Reverend Parris were most active. Thus more and more people were captured and those who denied the allegations were either hanged or sentenced to life-time imprisonment. Giles Corey was pressed to death with stones because he showed contempt as well as refused to accept that he had any hand in the proceedings. Others like John Proctor also fought back the contentions against him made by the girls. He was hanged while his pregnant wife was spared. The Mystery The mystery in the incident lies whether justice was rightly delivered since the trial was based on spectral evidence and not on real proof. If you've read Arthur Miller's “The Crucible”, you'd know that Abigail Williams was the main antagonist who started all this to get back to John Proctor with whom she had an affair. It is clearly mentioned in the book that it was Abigail and the girls who practiced witchcraft and not the citizens who were accused of it. The book also cites jealousy of the Putnams against their rival landowners for which they took the account into their advantage and blamed whoever they thought was a menace (scholars established this as the main motive of the outbreak). The reason for Reverend Parris's involvement was thought to save his own skin because if he backed out then the citizens of Salem would point at his own blood and thus his ministry would be lost. By the time many of the accused were released and the judges who convicted them asked for pardon, judgment of the nineteen were already delivered. The question of whether a fair trial in this case was ever possible will always remain. Reference: “The Crucible” and www.law.umkc.edu By Faria Sanjana Laff lines The secret From forms Keep those beasts away "Really!?" she said, "Mice to elephants, eh." sounding a bit skeptical. Myth Box: Quetzalcoatl Quetzalcoatl is an Aztec sky and creator god. The name is a combination of quetzal, a brightly colored Mesoamerican bird, and coatl, meaning serpent. So many know him as the feather headed serpent/snake and was connected to the plant Venus. He was also the patron god of the Aztec priesthood, of learning and knowledge. Today Quetzalcoatl is arguably the best known Aztec deity, and is often thought to have been the principal Aztec god. He organized the original cosmos and participated in the creation and destruction of various world periods. Quetzalcoatl ruled the fifth world cycle and created the humans of that cycle. The story goes that he descended to Mictlan, the underworld, and gathered the bones of the human beings of the previous epochs. Upon his return, he sprinkled his own blood upon these bones and fashioned thus the humans of the new era. He is also a god of the wind, as well as a water-god and fertility-god. He is regarded as a son of the virgin goddess Coatlicue and as the twin brother of Xolotl. As the bringer of culture he introduced agriculture (maize) and the calendar and is the patron of the arts and the crafts. In one myth the god allowed himself to be seduced by Tezcatlipoca, but threw himself on a funeral pyre out of remorse. After his death his heart became the morning-star, and is as such identified with the god Tlahuizcalpantecuhtli. In dualistic Toltec religion, the opposing deity, Tezcatlipoca ("Smoking Mirror"), a god of the night, had reputedly driven Quetzalcoatl into exile. According to yet another tradition he left on a raft of snakes over the sea. In any case, Quetzalcoatl, described as light-skinned and bearded, would return in a certain year. Thus, when the Spanish conqueror Hernán Cortés appeared in 1519, the Aztec king, Montezuma II, was easily convinced that Cortés was in fact the returning god. The Aztec later made him a symbol of death and resurrection and a patron of priests. The higher priests were called Quetzalcoatl too. By Nishita Aurnab She is... One more cigarette For Sadia, |
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