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Search results 11131 - 11140 of 14167 matching essays
- 11131: "Put Yourself in My Shoes"
- ... have been more deeply affected. The story's final lines show us a man who looks like a deer caught in deadlights: "He did not answer. Her voice seemed to come to him from a great distance. He kept driving. Snow rushed at the windshield. He was silent and watched the road. He was at the very end of a story". "Put Yourself in My Shoes" seems as Carver's way ...
- 11132: The Police Exception and the Domestic Abuse Law
- ... enforcers in the country. With this law, this officer would not be allowed to continue his services for his county and his fellow police officers. Many people feel that this officer is being done a great injustice and should be allowed to continue his otherwise flawless career as an officer of the law. Interesting. One simple conviction could ruin the lives of every cop in the country. Hard working, one-time ...
- 11133: The Effects of Race on Sentencing in Capital Punishment Cases
- ... of them sounds no echoes beyond the chambers in which they die. Such an illusion is ultimately corrosive, for the reverberations of injustice are not so easily confined (As cited in Lacayo, 1987, 80). With great effort, the judicial controls can begin to battle the racial bias of Americas Judicial system but to completely eliminate such a bias, the people involved in the judicial process must learn to look past the ...
- 11134: Jack Londons Apparent Conflict
- ... writer and philosophers, has written such pieces as The Odyssey, the fable of a common man who challenges elements he has no control over, and successfully overcomes them to achieve glory. Jack London, while a great philosopher in his own way, does not write about common mortal men overcoming fate, but instead focuses on many different categories of struggles, including man versus man, man versus nature, and man versus society. Examples ...
- 11135: Reviving The Death Penalty
- ... convicted killers before they were put to death make it curious to know what made them speak out against killing right before they lost their own life". On the side of capital punishment are many great thinkers in our history, Rousseau, Kent, Lincoln, Jefferson, Washington, Locke, and Hobbes' (Draper 113). French philosopher Montesquieu went as far as to say "The death penalty shall be prescribed as the medicine for a social ...
- 11136: The Effects of Race on Sentencing in Capital Punishment Cases
- ... of them sounds no echoes beyond the chambers in which they die. Such an illusion is ultimately corrosive, for the reverberations of injustice are not so easily confined" (As cited in Lacayo, 1987, 80). With great effort, the judicial controls can begin to battle the racial bias of Americas Judicial system but to completely eliminate such a bias, the people involved in the judicial process must learn to look past the ...
- 11137: Jane Eyre 3
- ... him, for she will never be treated as an equal and he will always try to control and repress her. Nevertheless, she almost gives in to St. John's will to become a missionary, his "great work," his "foundation laid on Earth for a mansion in Heaven (399-400), because it gives her a sense of purpose. Jane's dreams, however, are "many-coloured charged with adventure, with agitating risk and ...
- 11138: Pedophilia: Causes and Typologies
- ... government even went so far as to declare a public holiday honoring young prostitutes(Kahr, 1991). Sex with children in the modern era is alive and well, the power of an older person is so great that their young victims often never tell of the horrors that they have endured. There is also a pedophile enhancement movement, with confessed pedophiles insisting that their behavior is not wrong or immoral. Organizations dedicated ...
- 11139: Methods of Execution
- ... methods, they must have little regard for their citizens that they prefer them to suffer in excruciating pain than they die in a quick and easy without remorse. The United States for example has shown great concern for their citizens by having all methods used be remotely humane. They have even removed electrocution from a few states and replaced it with things such as lethal injection, even though electrocution is much ...
- 11140: Medical Malpractice
- ... Nolo Press, 1994. ( Internet: Fed up #32. Compensate Medical Malpractice Victims) n "Government to Rally Support Against Physicians' High Insurance Costs" Canada News Wire. [Toronto] 12 Dec. 1995. (Internet) n Taylor, John Leathy. Medical Malpractice. Great Britain: John Wright & Sons Ltd., 1980. n Law, Sylvia and Steven Polan. Pain and Profit: The Politics of Medical Malpractice. New York, NY.: Harper and Row Publishers, 1978.
Search results 11131 - 11140 of 14167 matching essays
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