Recent Changes for "The perfect paper" - Davis Wikihttp://daviswiki.org/The_perfect_paperRecent Changes of the page "The perfect paper" on Davis Wiki.en-us The perfect paperhttp://daviswiki.org/The_perfect_paper2009-10-26 04:16:05WilliamLewisRevert to version 3 (die spammer die). <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for The perfect paper<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 1: </td> <td> Line 1: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> You've worked hard, or maybe you haven't, but there it is -- a little bundle of 12 point Times New Roman double spaced exactly to the page limit joy. It's spell checked, grammar checked, and maybe even proofread. Your name, ["Reg Card" student ID], and ["Discussion Sections" section] number are written clearly on the front page. Every copied portion <span>from a [http://www.superiorpapers.com/ custom essay] </span>is perfectly cited -- but you know it will be suspected, upon first glance, of ["Student Judicial Affairs" plagiarism] because there's no way on earth ''they'' expected somebody to write such a great paper. But what do ''they'' know anyway? -- The characters in the play were entirely flawed and in completely new ways. The data was insufficient for the expected and historical grounded findings. The proof depended upon something equivalent to the ["Mathematics" Axiom of Choice] and nobody's going to trust the ["Mrak Hall" establishment] after reading this ''freaking beauty of a paper''. You smile as you walk toward class, seeing your ["Davis Wildlife" classmates] frantically waiting in line at the ["Olson Hall" Print Station]. You drop your paper off and wink at the ["Teaching Assistants" TA]. As you leave you hear a lone voice, far off in the hallway: </td> <td> <span>+</span> You've worked hard, or maybe you haven't, but there it is -- a little bundle of 12 point Times New Roman double spaced exactly to the page limit joy. It's spell checked, grammar checked, and maybe even proofread. Your name, ["Reg Card" student ID], and ["Discussion Sections" section] number are written clearly on the front page. Every copied portion is perfectly cited -- but you know it will be suspected, upon first glance, of ["Student Judicial Affairs" plagiarism] because there's no way on earth ''they'' expected somebody to write such a great paper. But what do ''they'' know anyway? -- The characters in the play were entirely flawed and in completely new ways. The data was insufficient for the expected and historical grounded findings. The proof depended upon something equivalent to the ["Mathematics" Axiom of Choice] and nobody's going to trust the ["Mrak Hall" establishment] after reading this ''freaking beauty of a paper''. You smile as you walk toward class, seeing your ["Davis Wildlife" classmates] frantically waiting in line at the ["Olson Hall" Print Station]. You drop your paper off and wink at the ["Teaching Assistants" TA]. As you leave you hear a lone voice, far off in the hallway: </td> </tr> </table> </div> The perfect paperhttp://daviswiki.org/The_perfect_paper2009-10-26 03:10:15angelmurrei <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for The perfect paper<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 1: </td> <td> Line 1: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> You've worked hard, or maybe you haven't, but there it is -- a little bundle of 12 point Times New Roman double spaced exactly to the page limit joy. It's spell checked, grammar checked, and maybe even proofread. Your name, ["Reg Card" student ID], and ["Discussion Sections" section] number are written clearly on the front page. Every copied portion is perfectly cited -- but you know it will be suspected, upon first glance, of ["Student Judicial Affairs" plagiarism] because there's no way on earth ''they'' expected somebody to write such a great paper. But what do ''they'' know anyway? -- The characters in the play were entirely flawed and in completely new ways. The data was insufficient for the expected and historical grounded findings. The proof depended upon something equivalent to the ["Mathematics" Axiom of Choice] and nobody's going to trust the ["Mrak Hall" establishment] after reading this ''freaking beauty of a paper''. You smile as you walk toward class, seeing your ["Davis Wildlife" classmates] frantically waiting in line at the ["Olson Hall" Print Station]. You drop your paper off and wink at the ["Teaching Assistants" TA]. As you leave you hear a lone voice, far off in the hallway: </td> <td> <span>+</span> You've worked hard, or maybe you haven't, but there it is -- a little bundle of 12 point Times New Roman double spaced exactly to the page limit joy. It's spell checked, grammar checked, and maybe even proofread. Your name, ["Reg Card" student ID], and ["Discussion Sections" section] number are written clearly on the front page. Every copied portion <span>from a [http://www.superiorpapers.com/ custom essay] </span>is perfectly cited -- but you know it will be suspected, upon first glance, of ["Student Judicial Affairs" plagiarism] because there's no way on earth ''they'' expected somebody to write such a great paper. But what do ''they'' know anyway? -- The characters in the play were entirely flawed and in completely new ways. The data was insufficient for the expected and historical grounded findings. The proof depended upon something equivalent to the ["Mathematics" Axiom of Choice] and nobody's going to trust the ["Mrak Hall" establishment] after reading this ''freaking beauty of a paper''. You smile as you walk toward class, seeing your ["Davis Wildlife" classmates] frantically waiting in line at the ["Olson Hall" Print Station]. You drop your paper off and wink at the ["Teaching Assistants" TA]. As you leave you hear a lone voice, far off in the hallway: </td> </tr> </table> </div> The perfect paperhttp://daviswiki.org/The_perfect_paper2005-04-22 22:50:49PaulIvanovlol - typo in the perfect paper :) <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for The perfect paper<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 1: </td> <td> Line 1: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> You've worked hard, or maybe you haven't, but there it is -- a little bundle of 12 point Times New Roman double spaced exactly to the page limit joy. It's spell checked, grammar checked, and maybe even proofread. Your name, ["Reg Card" student ID], and ["Discussion Sections" section] number are written clearly on the front page. Every copied portion is perfectly cited -- but you know it will be suspected, upon first glance, of ["Student Judicial Affairs" plagiarism] because there's no way on earth ''they'' expected somebody to write such a great paper. But what <span>t</span>o ''they'' know anyway? -- The characters in the play were entirely flawed and in completely new ways. The data was insufficient for the expected and historical grounded findings. The proof depended upon something equivalent to the ["Mathematics" Axiom of Choice] and nobody's going to trust the ["Mrak Hall" establishment] after reading this ''freaking beauty of a paper''. You smile as you walk toward class, seeing your ["Davis Wildlife" classmates] frantically waiting in line at the ["Olson Hall" Print Station]. You drop your paper off and wink at the ["Teaching Assistants" TA]. As you leave you hear a lone voice, far off in the hallway: </td> <td> <span>+</span> You've worked hard, or maybe you haven't, but there it is -- a little bundle of 12 point Times New Roman double spaced exactly to the page limit joy. It's spell checked, grammar checked, and maybe even proofread. Your name, ["Reg Card" student ID], and ["Discussion Sections" section] number are written clearly on the front page. Every copied portion is perfectly cited -- but you know it will be suspected, upon first glance, of ["Student Judicial Affairs" plagiarism] because there's no way on earth ''they'' expected somebody to write such a great paper. But what <span>d</span>o ''they'' know anyway? -- The characters in the play were entirely flawed and in completely new ways. The data was insufficient for the expected and historical grounded findings. The proof depended upon something equivalent to the ["Mathematics" Axiom of Choice] and nobody's going to trust the ["Mrak Hall" establishment] after reading this ''freaking beauty of a paper''. You smile as you walk toward class, seeing your ["Davis Wildlife" classmates] frantically waiting in line at the ["Olson Hall" Print Station]. You drop your paper off and wink at the ["Teaching Assistants" TA]. As you leave you hear a lone voice, far off in the hallway: </td> </tr> </table> </div> The perfect paperhttp://daviswiki.org/The_perfect_paper2005-04-22 18:29:36PhilipNeustromlink <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for The perfect paper<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 3: </td> <td> Line 3: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <span>-</span> ''HEY -- does anybody have a stapler?'' </td> <td> <span>+</span> ''HEY -- does anybody have a <span>["Campus Staplers" </span>stapler<span>]</span>?'' </td> </tr> </table> </div> The perfect paperhttp://daviswiki.org/The_perfect_paper2004-12-18 21:18:42PhilipNeustrom <div id="content" class="wikipage content"> Differences for The perfect paper<p><strong></strong></p><table> <tr> <td> <span> Deletions are marked with - . </span> </td> <td> <span> Additions are marked with +. </span> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> Line 1: </td> <td> Line 1: </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> <td> <span>+ You've worked hard, or maybe you haven't, but there it is -- a little bundle of 12 point Times New Roman double spaced exactly to the page limit joy. It's spell checked, grammar checked, and maybe even proofread. Your name, ["Reg Card" student ID], and ["Discussion Sections" section] number are written clearly on the front page. Every copied portion is perfectly cited -- but you know it will be suspected, upon first glance, of ["Student Judicial Affairs" plagiarism] because there's no way on earth ''they'' expected somebody to write such a great paper. But what to ''they'' know anyway? -- The characters in the play were entirely flawed and in completely new ways. The data was insufficient for the expected and historical grounded findings. The proof depended upon something equivalent to the ["Mathematics" Axiom of Choice] and nobody's going to trust the ["Mrak Hall" establishment] after reading this ''freaking beauty of a paper''. You smile as you walk toward class, seeing your ["Davis Wildlife" classmates] frantically waiting in line at the ["Olson Hall" Print Station]. You drop your paper off and wink at the ["Teaching Assistants" TA]. As you leave you hear a lone voice, far off in the hallway:<br> + <br> + ''HEY -- does anybody have a stapler?''</span> </td> </tr> </table> </div>