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Search results 3381 - 3390 of 4442 matching essays
- 3381: Aum Shinkyria
- ... people s minds, make his wishes come true, see through solid objects, enter the fourth dimension, talk to God, etc. He pulled together a large following by leafleting and street corner proselytizing. He also had computer, book, and noodle stores in which he would recruit members. By recruit I am of course referring to Asahara drugging and brainwashing a person into believing that Asahara was their king. He had begun the ...
- 3382: Bruce Lee
- ... s discipline is easily seen in this quote about problems that occurred on the set of Enter the Dragon. Another problem was that the martial arts extras- most of whom were members of the Chinese crime syndicate, the Triads, would sometimes challenge Bruce to a real fight. For the most part Bruce would ignore it (30). Bruce s discipline can also be seen in the amount that he practiced his martial ...
- 3383: Cathrine The Great 2
- ... and obey the empress. Catherine began to have less freedom and was isolated by Elizabeth slowly everyone that she knew were sent away. The empress dismissed one of Catherine s maids, Maria Zhukova, whose only crime was that she had been completely devoted to her mistress. Shortly after Catherine s first chamberlain, Zahar was also dismissed. (Troyat 56). Catherine was also forbidden to write to anyone without going through the College ...
- 3384: Clinton Impeachment
- ... even us, the people, which means his faulty action is not impeachable according to the rules of the Constitution. (Burkert) (Matalin, 41) Aside from the fact that the Constitution can only pledge impeachment for high crime, misdemeanor, treason, and bribery, President Clinton was unfairly investigated. My interviewee preached that the Congress needs to get their priority straight. He disliked that fact, when the world was in a global combat, when Russia ...
- 3385: Costly Mistake
- ... talk. As he read down the list of things that I had to do for diversion, my jaw dropped as did my mothers it seemed like they where putting me on probation for a federal crime or something. I signed the paper, it being my only choice besides jail and gave it to my lawyer, bitterly thinking that I was getting an unfair deal. Since that day, I have had to ...
- 3386: Costly Mistake 2
- ... talk. As he read down the list of things that I had to do for diversion, my jaw dropped as did my mothers it seemed like they where putting me on probation for a federal crime or something. I signed the paper, it being my only choice besides jail and gave it to my lawyer, bitterly thinking that I was getting an unfair deal. Since that day, I have had to ...
- 3387: Charles Dickens 4
- ... lifestyle (Internet Site #5). Dickens also criticizes his society on the issue of the death penalty. He was strongly opposed to this idea. He believed that taking a person s life did nothing to prevent crime (Internet Site #6). The most obvious incorporation of this belief into his books is in Great Expectations. In the beginning of the book, he shows the brutality of Magwitch, but he makes the reader recognize ...
- 3388: Divid Berkowitz
- ... point-blank range. This reign of terror lasted 13 months, resulting in six deaths and seven serious injuries Police had no witnesses. no suspect. and no motive until the discovery of a letter at a crime scene. It read in part, " I am a monster. I am the Son of Sam love to hunt" and claimed that his father. "Sam", ordered him to kill, after abusing him violently. A second "Son ...
- 3389: Edgar Allan Poe
- ... that baffle everybody involved. In the end Poe reveals that the murders were not homicides, but in actuality killings by an escaped gorilla. This story created the eccentric amateur criminologist and his worshipful assistant, the crime that baffles police, the wrongly suspected person, the motif of the locked room, and the surprise solution. Poe may have very well gathered the ideas for his detective story from reading the headlines. American newspapers ...
- 3390: Edgar Allen Poe
- ... obsession of a man with an old man΄s eye. The narrator in the story tries to convince us that he΄s not mad, but only he is very careful by planning and executing the crime. Over all the story is about a man obsessed with an old man΄s eye and the fact that he cannot bare to even look at it. His hatred toward the eye drives him insane ...
Search results 3381 - 3390 of 4442 matching essays
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