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Search results 2371 - 2380 of 4442 matching essays
- 2371: My College Plans
- My College Plans Business Computer Applications 7th Period Sunday, March 30, 1997 Created By: At first I never had wanted to go to college because I didn't like school, but now as I get older I realize that I ... when I graduate I will have 3 years of high school newspaper class plus, I would like to have some on the job training. I already have a lot of experience with all kinds of computer programs such as: Microsoft Works, Microsoft Word, Adobe Pagemaker 6.0, Corel 6.0, Netscape, Microsoft Internet Explorer, and Windows 95. I think that the combination of all these things plus a college degree will ...
- 2372: Comparison And Contrast Of Mac
- ... cause both men to perform evil deeds. With ambition and success comes a feeling of superiority. Both MacBeth and Kurtz are portrayed as men who think themselves to be above God. MacBeth knows that the crime of killing a king goes against the chain of being theory (definition: That men are put into classes by a higher power. Therefore, kings are put in their positions by God himself and no man ... in her pride of place/ Was by a mousing owl hawked at and killed" (Act II, sc. 4); just "hours dreadful and things strange," (Act II, sc. 4) are happening because MacBeth has committed a crime against nature. Kurtz responds to his surroundings quite differently. Instead of changing them, he is, in fact, changed by them. The isolation of the Congo and the blackness of the jungle force him to look ...
- 2373: Hamlet and King Lear: Villians
- ... is the final step. A character may have a thoughts of killing and may speak about killing but until the deed is done it is nothing. A character may speak no word of committing a crime but then do so; thus the importance of considering the actions along with the words of a character. Edmund typifies this scenario. Edmund reveals little to others about his true intentions. While in the public ... plan into action. He sets the stage for Edgar's complete fall from grace. Edmund's methodical destruction is what separates him from Claudius. Where Edmund calculates his destruction, Claudius's destruction is more a crime of passion. Claudius kills king Hamlet for the love of Gertrude but the killing ends there. Claudius has no intentions of killing Hamlet after he murdered his father. Instead Claudius attempts to gain Hamlet's ...
- 2374: Terrorism In The United States
- ... to lessen the burden of the task. Even though these SOF units are very successful, the United States government can do much more to combat terrorism. Present counterterrorist legislation is much too lax for the Computer Age, in that it does not account for security measures pertaining to all areas and events where masses of people gather. The U.S. government should make new staunch comprehensive legislation in order to successfully ... Terrorism and Counterterrorism. [Online] Available. http://www.ict.org.il/, 2/27/99. The Library of Congress. [Online] Available. http://www.loc.gov, 2/29/99. Maechling, Charles Jr. "Terrorism." Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia. 1998 ed. Computer Software. Security Resource Net's Counter Terrorism. [Online] Available. http://nsi.org/terrorism.html, 3/27/99. Special Operations.com. [Online] Available. http://www.specialoperations.com, 4/1/99. The Terrorism Research Center. [Online] Available ...
- 2375: Problems with Gun Control
- ... be evident because to right to bear arms is the Second Amendment. Again, the question must be raised, did our forefathers foresee a time when this freedom that they embraced would cause such wide-spread crime in our country. The perplexing question to ask is, how can we maintain our individual rights, and yet get the guns out of the hands of convicted felons, drug addicts, and people who are mentally ... on the sale of guns, without touching the Second Amendment. A large problem that has been addressed in Clede's article is that no matter what changes we make in the law concerning guns, the crime element in this country will always be able to obtain guns. Perhaps we should take a closer look at the manufacture of guns and why they are manufactured in such abundance when the number of ...
- 2376: True Sinners
- ... Her sin of deception is then lifted off her chest. Hester's vow of truth is then kept. Arthur Dimmesdale's sin was the same as Hester's. He is Hester's silent partner in crime. The guilty one who has confessed nothing in order to save himself. Actually, Dimmesdale is a coward, a man who is too weak to confess his guilt, even though he desires to greatly. As a way of self-punishment, Dimmesdale has created a supposed "A" on his own chest by beating himself. Dimmesdale has committed the crime of hypocrisy. He is a minister and every week gets up on his pulpit to hear his congregation's sins. Somehow, Dimmesdale is too weak to confess his own sin. By hiding it, his sin ...
- 2377: PORONO IN THE MEDIA
- ... experience it, then men, too, can fantasize about rape and not wish to commit it. In addition to the many other accusations against pornography, many in society believe that there is definite connection between organized crime and pornography. Although this may be true, the idea is largely over-exaggerated. The reasoning behind this theory is very simple, yet very shallow. Consider, that pornography is created by organizations and contains sexually explicit material that may be thought to be legally obscene in some areas. To make the connection, these anti-pornography organizations assume that the organizations (hence organized) that produce the legally obscene (hence crime) material, are operating illegally. It is obvious why pornography is attractive to criminals; just as anything that is banned or is made illegal, there is always someone who will pay the high black-market price ...
- 2378: Antigone
- ... tries to help her brother without worrying about what will happen to her. She says, "I intend to give my brother burial. I'll be glad to die in the attempt, -if it's a crime, then it's a crime that God commands" (Sophocles 4). She was also punished for doing what was right. Her epiphany came, hidden from the audience, before she hung herself. Creon's "nobleness" of taking in young Antigone and Ismene ...
- 2379: Aristotles Theory of Tragedy as Seen in Euripides Electra
- ... actions, only the way and speed at which he will achieve it. He also ignores the consequences of matricide before and during the act by referring to Clytemnestra negatively so as to diminish his forthcoming crime. Orestes hamartia, or error in judgment, is his decision to murder his own mother to avenge the murder of Agamemnon. Because of Apollos oracle to Orestes, he believes that it is his destiny to ... enough pity and fear to bring about a strong catharsis. Castor professes that Orestes will be leave Argos forever, be hounded by the Furies until he reaches Athens, receive a trial, be acquitted of his crime, and will finally find happiness later in life in a city that will take its name from him. Some pity is inspired in the audience in that Orestes will forever be parted from Electra and ...
- 2380: Belove Analysis
- ... guilt. I call it her "detached conscience" because in order to go on with life, Sethe needed to remove herself from her guilt. She removes herself so completely that her neighbors, already upset at her crime, isolated her because she seemed to feel no remorse for the awful deed. Sethe's stoic resolve continues until Denver loses her hearing, which was caused by Denver not being able to deal with hearing ... fighting it to make her life better. Beloved recognizes Paul D as the source of Sethe's strength, and makes Paul D even more uncomfortable than before. He uses his new knowledge of Sethe's crime as an excuse for moving out not much later. During the entire fight between Sethe and Paul D, he feels Beloved staring at him, adding to his discomfort. He is not comfortable with Sethe's ...
Search results 2371 - 2380 of 4442 matching essays
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