End cover

End cover
End cover
Where can i find a front end cover for my Celica?


I am trying to find a car mask for my 00 Toyota Celica GT, but all i find is a one fits all. I've seen the specific one for Celica's but cannot seem to find one. Any suggestions?

www.abestpart.com
if you cant find it here call the number they will help you tell him that eva told you about the website

Linkin Park - In The End Cover Acoustic by Caiogasp & Thyago



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What is on the back cover of The End?


Okay, I am very confused. What is on the back cover of A Series of Unfortunate Events' The End?

The End is the thirteenth and final book in A Series of Unfortunate Events by Lemony Snicket. This book is the only book in the series without an alliterative title.

Contents [hide]
1 Plot summary
2 Afterward
3 Themes and symbolism
4 Cultural references and literary allusions
5 "Le Voyage"
6 Cover images
7 Translations
8 References

[edit] Plot summary
The book opens with Count Olaf and the Baudelaire orphans on a boat, constructed by Bertrand Baudelaire ( Violet, Klaus, and Sunny's father), leaving behind the burning Hotel Denouement. After surviving a storm, they find themselves on a coastal shelf. Shortly after, they find an island and meet a little girl called Friday. Count Olaf, who had previously proclaimed himself king of Olaf-Land, threatens the girl with a harpoon gun. Friday is undisturbed and refuses Olaf on the island, but invites the orphans to come to the colony. Along the way, she describes what the islanders do with their time--all year long, they build an outrigger on the shelf, and once a year the water rises high enough to totally submerge the shelf and allow the outrigger to set sail. This is known as Decision Day, and on this day anyone who wants to leave can board the ship and sail away. The Baudelaires are welcomed into an island colony, where it finally seems that there is no treachery whatsoever. The island facilitator, Ishmael, introduces the Baudelaires to the strange island customs. Also, Ishmael has the islanders (most named after famous literary or historical castaways) introduce themselves to the Baudelaires.

Although Ishmael always tells the islanders "I won't force you", it soon becomes apparent that his decisions go largely unquestioned and his suggestions are obeyed like orders. Afterwards, a woman called Mrs. Caliban (Friday's mother) arrives and makes a toast to the "Baudelaire orphans" (despite their not having mentioned their lost parents) with the coconut cordial which everybody carries, but which the orphans themselves dislike.

After another storm, more objects wash up including a giant pile of books tied together in the shape of a cube, an unconscious and pregnant Kit Snicket, and the Incredibly Deadly Viper from Uncle Monty's collection. The island people arrive and Count Olaf tries to fool them with a bad Kit Snicket disguise (with the diving-helmet containing the Medusoid Mycelium tucked under his dress as his supposed baby). Strangely, the islanders immediately see through Olaf's flimsy disguise and cage him. They then debate whether the orphans should be expelled from the colony when they discover that the Baudelaires are carrying "contraband" items. Ishmael decides that the children, Kit, and Olaf should all be abandoned unless they agree to abide by the colony's rules. After everyone leaves, Olaf tries to tempt the children to let him out of the cage by promising to explain the many mysteries and secrets which they have been surrounded by since The Bad Beginning, but they ignore him.

That night, two of the islanders (Finn and Erewhon) sneak out to feed the children and ask them a favor. A group of discontented colonists are planning a mutiny against Ishmael in the morning, and the Baudelaires are told to go over to the arboretum where all the contraband items are collected, and find or make some weapons to use in the rebellion. Further, the mutineers refuse to help Kit (who recently regained consciousness and, though injured, hates the idea of contributing to yet another schism) unless the Baudelaires help them. They agree, and set off for the arboretum. The orphans discover a well-appointed living area, before they are in turn discovered by Ishmael. They learn that their parents were once the island's leaders and were responsible for many improvements meant to make island-life easier and more pleasant, but they were eventually overthrown by Ishmael, who believed that a strictly-enforced simple life (combined with the opiate of the coconut cordial) was the best way to avoid conflict. They also find an enormous book written by the many different people who had served as island leaders, including their parents and Ishmael, as a history of the island. Ishmael also makes references to many other people, including a girl with only one eyebrow and ear (possibly Josephine Anwhistle's mother-in-law, or the mother of Isaac Anwhistle) and Gregor Anwhistle. The book was titled A Series of Unfortunate Events.

The Baudelaires and Ishmael go back to the other side of the island, where the mutiny is already in full-swing. Count Olaf returns, still in disguise. After a brief exchange, Ishmael harpoons Olaf in the stomach, which shatters the helmet containing the Medusoid Mycelium, infecting the island's entire population at once. With Count Olaf slowly bleeding to death, the Baudelaires run back to the arboretum to try to find some horseradish to cure everyone. They learn that their parents had hybridized an apple tree with horseradish, allowing the fruit to cure the effects of the Medusoid Mycelium. With the Baudelaires on the verge of death, the Incredibly Deadly Viper offers them an apple. After sharing the apple and curing themselves, they then gather more apples for the island's inhabitants, only to discover that the island people have abandoned the mutiny and boarded their outrigger canoe, ready to set sail. Ishmael refuses to allow the apples on-board, though it is clear that he himself has already eaten one to cure himself, and the boat sails away to a horseradish factory to save everyone (It is hinted though, that one apple might have been sneaked on board to tide them over until they reach the factory).

Kit tells the Baudelaires the fate of the Quagmires, Hector, Captain Widdershins and his two stepchildren Fernald and Fiona. Kit explains that one of the male Quagmires, Quigley or Duncan, yell Violet's name before entering the question resembling machine. After reuniting on Hector's float, they are attacked by trained eagles, who pop their balloon and send them hurtling back to the ruins of the Queequeg. There, they are taken by the mysterious object shaped like a question mark (called "The Great Unknown" by the author, a euphemism for what comes after death). In turn, the Baudelaires confess their own crimes committed at the Hotel Denouement. At this point, Kit is about to go into labour. She seems to be dying of the fungus, but cannot eat the bitter apple due to the hybrid's unhealthy effects on unborn babies. She is still trapped on top of the cube of books (her Vaporetto (boat) of Favorite Detritus) but when the critically-injured and fungus-choked Olaf hears that she is still alive, he takes a bite of an apple and manages to get her safely down onto the beach, giving her a single soft kiss as he lays her on the sand and collapses, still conscious, beside her. Kit recites the poem "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes" by Francis William Bourdillon, answered by Olaf reciting the final stanza of Philip Larkin's "This Be The Verse" (this may be a hint that Olaf and Kit were once in love due to his final act of kindness). He then dies. The Baudelaires help Kit give birth to a baby girl. She then dies due to the Medusoid Mycelium, after asking the orphans to name the baby after their mother. Here The End ends with the Baudelaires becoming Kit's child's adopted parents. They bury Kit and Olaf, apparently next to each other, somewhere on the island.

== Chapter

[edit] Afterward
Other books by Lemony Snicket indicate that the Baudelaires do in fact reach the mainland and all three orphans survive and grow older. The Beatrice Letters makes reference to Sunny when she is older, and The Reptile Room speaks of Klaus, many years later, wishing he had pushed Count Olaf back into his taxi, while The Bad Beginning: Rare Edition mentions that Violet will return to Briny Beach a third time. As the younger Beatrice, in The Beatrice Letters, is searching for Violet, Klaus and Sunny, it can be presumed that she is separated from the Baudelaires at some point. (This is possibly mentioned in The Beatrice Letters, in the punch-out anagram which spells "Beatrice Sank," probably referring to the boat in which the children sail off in at the end of Chapter Fourteen.)

At the end of the book, there is an author and illustrator page, as usual, and a final image which depicts a lonely sea with the murky shadow of a question mark in the water. The author and illustrator page was the only instance that artist Brett Helquist and Author Lemony Snicket had swapped their billing places in the pictorial credits. Brett, dressed in Snicket's usual fashion, was photographed and on top, while Lemony, face exposed save for cucumber slices over his eyes, was drawn underneath—a comic depiction of Snicket, as he is shown relaxing beside a pool with a cocktail, when he (as are the Baudelaires) is usually depicted as terribly unfortunate. Their roles revert to their traditional billing places at the true conclusion of the book.

[edit] Themes and symbolism
This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims.
Please improve the article by adding references. See the talk page for details. (September 2007)

One of the special things about "The End" is that it is the 13th book in the series, and the last. The number 13 is seen as unlucky in western culture.

One of the overarching images of the book is a tree that produces bitter apples on the island where the Baudelaires are shipwrecked. The tree houses a 'library' or 'catalogue' of knowledge underneath its branches, and in fact in a hidden room underneath the tree itself. This, together with the friendly snake who provides the orphans an apple in their hour of need, and the discussions they have with Ishmael

1 comment to End cover

  • It's pretty much what it seems. There were two separate crashes that resulted in the injury.

    The most prominent case that resulted in a finding like that (though it's not squarely on point) was the attack on the World Trade Center. The insurers wanted to call that one a single incident even though there were two hits on the WTC towers, because their policies limited liability for each incident. They lost.