...Modernism’s Relation to Early Film In The Cabinet of Caligari women are portrayed in a way that matches up with Modernism concepts. Dr. Olsen’s daughter is kidnapped and the men quickly hurry to rescue her. This scene shows how Dr. Caligari makes no attempts to resist savagery, in film men often must come to the rescue of women, and the savagery exemplifies why there are boundaries and standards in the world. Dr. Olson’s daughter, Jane, puts herself on Dr. Caligari’s radar when she comes looking for her father. Caligari is using a sleepwalking man, Cesare, to commit murders in the town. Jane goes searching for her father, for no reason other than her curiosity and anxiety, and gets herself in trouble for it. In Modernism, searching for answers can be dangerous as one can see glimpses into the savage world, as Jane does with Caligari and Cesare. As we’ve seen over and over in this course, such as in Heart of Darkness, the savage world is truly too much for a civilized person to handle and leads to many problems. In this case, even though she wasn’t directly searching for knowledge on savagery, Jane’s inquiry helps get her kidnapped. Jane is kidnapped from her sleep. In Modernism sleep is often associated with being g able to see the truth as well as viewing one’s hopes, fears, and desires. While it’s impossible to know what Jane was dreaming about she is quickly awakened into a quick nightmare. However, this “nightmare” helps the truth about Caligari soon become known. Cesare...
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...Officer Palafox was dispatched to 347 Bay Ridge Drive, Daly City on the report of domestic violence. I observed the following issues when we arrived on scene; • Officer Palafox drove passed the target address and then stopped in a position which exposed his back potential shooting positions from the residence. • I exited our patrol vehicle and stood behind a parked vehicle for cover, several houses from the address. Officer Palafox stood behind me, using a residential mail box as cover. Officer Palafox asked me if I was standing in cover “Just in case”. I responded that our vehicle was parked in an unsafe location. He then proceeded to go back to the vehicle and move it. This exposed him to the same unsafe situation for a second time. • While waiting for a cover unit, the garage door opened to the target residence and a vehicle began backing out. A female exited the vehicle and looked over...
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...Is Meg presented simply as a comic fool? In The Birthday Party, Pinter makes Meg a fool so that the audience can feel above her. The establishment of the audience’s feeling of superiority is, for me, best exemplified in the discourse between Meg and Petey: PETEY. ‘there’s a new show coming to the Palace….’No singing or dancing’. MEG. ‘What do they do then?’ PETEY. ‘They just talk (pause)’ MEG. ‘Oh’. This device ridicules Meg, as the audience obviously comprises a group of people who enjoy shows in which ‘they just talk’. Pinter therefore uses mockery of class and lack of intelligent understating as a comedic device with Meg. Pinter uses dramatic irony to push this, like Meg’s speech in Act 2, which confirms her naivety. This conforms to conventional clichés of the comedy genre, in which class and social aspects are frequently used. Studies have shown[1] that the middle class use comedy to assert social authority as a form of veiled snobbery, suggesting that Meg is simply a comic fool. However, I see Meg less as a simple source of humour but more as a moving representation of isolation. A lot of the humour when Meg is portrayed as a comic fool, and thus the conforming to the comic genre arises out of her general social awkwardness. The non-sequiturs and awkward pauses highlight her social ineptitude, contrasting deeply the mellow tones of Petey, like in the discourse: ‘PETEY: Yes, it gets light later in winter’, to which Meg replies simply ‘Oh. (Pause) What are you reading...
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...and preservation of the evidence while it is in their possession. Initial Collection * Before any evidence is removed from the crime scene, there should be an evidence custodian designated as the person in charge of initiating and maintaining all evidence. This person needs to document the crime scene location, as well as his time of arrival. There should also be a crime scene log established, witness list and documentation of identification, arrival and departure times of all law enforcement crime scene personnel. Record Keeping * The investigator who handles the evidence initially should affix her name, badge number and assignment to the package containing the evidence. When the evidence leaves the officer's possession, a record should be made in her case notes identifying to whom the evidence was given, the date and time, and the reason it was turned over. A signed receipt should be obtained from the person accepting the evidence and another signed receipt should be obtained when the item is returned. When the item is returned, the officer should examine the item and determine if the item is in the same condition as when it was discovered DNA Evidence * DNA evidence can have a critical role in determining a person's guilt or innocence. Many states now require permanent storage of any DNA collected at crime scenes. The chain of custody documentation for biological matter collected at a crime...
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...Author Note This paper is being submitted March 9th, 2014 for Mr. Zimmerman’s ENC 1102 English II course. Poetry Essay Death. Death is the ultimate end of a living creature or a process. With death, once what was can never be again, just a mirror or similar shadow. Death is the final scene and emotional goodbye. Even though depressing, death is both necessary, and sometimes rewarding in a sense of cleanse and beginning of a new state. PARAGRAPH Mid-Term Break is a poem relating to my theme by the death of a young boy. This poem happens to capture the normal reaction to death, although shown differently by random people. The father taking it the worse, “In the porch I met my father crying – He had always taken funerals in his stride.” The boy was seemingly confused by death, and what it actually was to behold until the end of the poem. “He lay in the four foot box as in his cot. No gaudy scars, the bumper knocked him clear. A four foot box, a foot for every year.” A hard line to read as we learn in the end that he was a young boy, while his brother realizes that death is definitely not forgiving. He also notices that death is not always violent or shocking in appearance, but cold and unchangeable due to the pale and empty look of his brother. A very sad poem and challenging time for family and friends. PARAGRAPH Let Evening Come is a less depressing poem relating to death. It is more of a poem in acceptance of death, and reaffirmation that it is normal and ok. Death...
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...Club IT which is owned and operated by Ruben Keys and Lisa Tejada, the club is doing well but need help with some strategic objections. They both graduated with degrees in Business Administration in 2000, and decided to follow their dream to open a nightclub. Club IT is a new hot spot for both young adults, and middle age to enjoy fine dining and good music. It is located downtown’s Chicago, IL. Club IT is one of the hottest new clubs to hit the Chicago area. Ruben and Lisa has put a lot of time an effort into remodeling the club, by doing so it has brought a certain quality to its visitors. Club IT, brings a different scene in the downtown area. Ruben Keys and Lisa Tejada are current musicians themselves, which brings musical background to the club. Ruben and Lisa were able to open the club of their dreams because of their extensive background in business administration, Their main purpose for Club IT is to “offer the general public live music, DJ’s, dance space and refreshments that suit your lifestyle,” (Wiley, 2005). Without the proper knowledge of data management, the structure of the club could be at risk for failure. Owners Ruben and Lisa decided to hire an intern to evaluate information, and to provide input to Club its growth and develop a strategy that will uplift the club’s communication externally but internally as well. This will allow Ruben and Liza to be able to view several aspects of different possibilities to find customers and furthermore, through...
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...Putting a person in a specific, parallel environment will define how they will grow and change to adapt to their new surroundings. Some will change and adjust rather easily while others may not be so lucky and have to struggle to make their lives better. In times of hardship and poverty, the determined will do anything they can for relief, money, power and overall success. Three films that demonstrate this are The Grapes of Wrath, El Norte, and City of God. In these films, characters struggle to find their idea of “paradise” or their “Promised Land”. The Grapes of Wrath is a film about a family who is forced off of their farms and out of their home due to the immense draught that has plagued the Midwest during the Great Depression. The actors in this film were not made up to look like the typical perfect Hollywood type. They look like real farmers and hardworking people and the lighting is manipulated to show this. The family, the Joad’s, travel from Oklahoma all the way to California when they hear about the jobs and opportunities out there. Throughout their journey they face a lot of difficulties in keeping their supplies and money at a constant flow. They stop to work small farming and harvesting jobs along the way but never make enough money. They keep their hope alive and the family close so that no one is left behind as they finally reach a dreary camp for people to find work. The main character, Tom, who was just released from prison, gets into a fight with...
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...The Problem: The problem surrounding Mattel Inc., one of the world’s largest toy companies, is their mismanagement of international subcontractors and vendors and the production of certain toys (the manufacturing process), as well as their inability to adapt their marketing strategy or product to the constantly changing “demographic and socioeconomic trends” (Ferrell, et. all 466). This is supported by Mattel’s legal battle with Carter Bryant and MGA, their forced recall of certain toys that were manufactured overseas, and the increasing rate at which traditional toys are becoming less appealing to today’s young audience. Essentially, Mattel’s mismanagement and oversight lead to violations in terms of ethical and social responsibilities and safety standards. Issues Relevant to the Problem: Mattel’s problem of mismanagement can be divided into several issues that need to be considered: legal issues, international supply chain issues, and an increase in technology-based toys. In regards to legal issues, Mattel has been involved in prolonged litigation with Carter Bryant and MGA over a breach of an employment contract and copyright infringement. Due to Mattel’s poor management of its overseas manufacturers, in which unauthorized subcontractors and third-party suppliers were hired and unsafe materials used, several toy products were recalled. Advances in technology and changes in socioeconomic and demographic trends have created marketing, privacy, and product development issues...
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...social interactions and the development of restricted repetitive patterns and behaviors, interests, and activities. Emma is very invested in her son’s diagnosis and had him in behavioral therapy and speech therapy, which improved his communication. On top of all of his medication, Emma works really hard to pay for Jess his social skills tutor, which Jacob meets with twice a week. It here where Jacob works on improving his social skills and how he expresses himself to others. Jacob has an intense interest in forensics and thus likes to visit crime scenes that he finds out from his police scanner. One day, Jacob goes to the house that Jess is house sitting for his weekly meeting, and it is here where he finds Jess dead and thus decides to frame Jess’s boyfriend that he loathes as the murderer but in fact she slipped out of the shower when she was startled by seeing Jacob’s brother Theo in the house. The police show up to the crime scene after Jess’s boyfriend reports her missing however Jess’s body was not in the house and the police decided to begin investigating her disappearance. It is here with Jacob finds himself in trouble with the law because of his strong interest with forensics. After receiving an anonymous tip, police find Jess dead in a forest with Jacob’s favorite blanket wrapped around her leading them straight back to Jacob for questioning. When questioned by the police, Jacob’s Asperger’s force him to answer questions truthfully and accurately because he is unable...
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...A Forensic Nightmare Shepherd Leach CRJ311 Dawn George March 25, 2013 The Enrique Camarena case was one of many mistakes on the part of the corrupt Mexican government. Evidence was improperly collected, scenes were contaminated and much evidence was lost or destroyed. The United States did what they could do and collected what they were able to collect to try and solve his murder and the murder of another agent. This paper will discuss the evidence that was collected, the steps that the investigators followed the many mistakes that were made and what was done well and what could have been done better. In the end the case was tried and the right people were convicted and the mystery solved. The case begins in February of 1985 with a man being shoved into the backseat of a small car from in front of a restaurant where Mr. Camarena was to meet his wife for lunch. This is also when the first of the mistakes in this case were made. A couple of well known drug traffickers were detained as suspects and then allowed to go, only to have it come out later that the Primer Comandante of the Mexican Federal Judicial Police was paid a six figure bribe for allowing the drug traffickers to go. The forensic evidence found in the case of Enrique Camarena was that of a small piece of burial sheet, a piece of rope, a portion of a pillowcase, lab reports, hair, fingerprint and soil samples and some fibers from a nylon rug or carpet. Most if not all the evidence was...
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...Kimberly Tucker, Chris Salt, Ashley Solomon Case 7: Mattel: Overcoming Marketing and Manufacturing Challenges 11/01/2010 Marketing Management 6800 Section 004 The Problem: The problem surrounding Mattel Inc., one of the world’s largest toy companies, is their mismanagement of international subcontractors and vendors and the production of certain toys (the manufacturing process), as well as their inability to adapt their marketing strategy or product to the constantly changing “demographic and socioeconomic trends” (Ferrell, et. all 466). This is supported by Mattel’s legal battle with Carter Bryant and MGA, their forced recall of certain toys that were manufactured overseas, and the increasing rate at which traditional toys are becoming less appealing to today’s young audience. Essentially, Mattel’s mismanagement and oversight lead to violations in terms of ethical and social responsibilities and safety standards. Issues Relevant to the Problem: Mattel’s problem of mismanagement can be divided into several issues that need to be considered: legal issues, international supply chain issues, and an increase in technology-based toys. In regards to legal issues, Mattel has been involved in prolonged litigation with Carter Bryant and MGA over a breach of an employment contract and copyright infringement. Due to Mattel’s poor management of its overseas manufacturers, in which unauthorized subcontractors and third-party suppliers were hired and unsafe materials used, several...
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...1. [I]f you can't be good you can at least be careful." Act 1 Jamie summarizes the advice he gave to his younger brother. 2. "None of us can help the things life has done to us." Act 2, scene 1 Mary tries to excuse her son Jamie for his faults, but her comment reveals her attitude to herself as well. 3. "I hate doctors! They'll do anything-anything to keep you coming back to them. They'll sell their souls! What's worse, they'll sell yours, and you never know it till one day you find yourself in hell!" Act 2, scene 2 Mary gives vent to her anger. 4. "The past is the present, isn't it? It's the future, too." Act 2, scene 2 Mary expresses her depressed vision of how people are slaves to what happened in the past. 5. "If he's ever had a loftier dream than whores and whiskey, he's never shown it." Act 3 Tyrone speaks about Jamie. 6. "Everything looked and sounded unreal. Nothing was what it is. That's what I wanted-to be alone with myself in another world where truth is untrue and life can hide from itself." Act 4 Edmund speaks of his feelings as he walked home in the fog. 7. "I was set free! I dissolved in the sea, became white sails and flying spray, became beauty and rhythm, became moonlight and the ship and the high dim-starred sky." Act 4 Edmund tells his father about the ecstasy of some of his experiences at sea. 8. "For a second you see-and seeing the secret are the secret. For a second there is meaning." Act 4 Edmund talks about the meaning of his peak experiences...
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...Crime Scene Reconstruction Devry University Kemisha Askew October 20, 2012 The topic I am writing about is Crime Scene Reconstruction. Crime Scene Reconstruction is the use of scientific methods, physical evidence, deductive reasoning and their interrelationships to gain explicit knowledge of the series of events that surround the commission of a crime. Crime Scene Reconstruction looks at the physical evidence and attempts to determine “What Happened? And how did it happen?” The reason why I have selected this topic is because I find it intriguing how physical evidence is broken down, evaluated, and reconstructed to actual tell how a crime occurred and what happened in the process. There are many television shows I watch daily that portray the crime scene investigation process in a certain light this is another reason why I chose this topic. I’d like to find out firsthand what actually goes on in the reconstruction process versus fictional exploitations of it on television. Crime Scene Reconstruction looks at the physical evidence and attempts to determine “What Happened? And how did it happen?” A similar method that is used is Criminal Profiling. Criminal Profiling is the application of psychological theory to the analysis and reconstruction of the forensic evidence that relates to an offender’s crime scenes, victims and behaviours. Crime Scene Reconstruction is the use of scientific methods, physical evidence, deductive reasoning and their interrelationships to...
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...Crime scene processing is the actual act of processing the crime scene in the field. The processing refers to the whole job of examining, photographing, quickly drawing, and using field ways of doing things to identify, (figure out the worth, amount, or quality of), document, process and collect physical, testimonial and fingerprint (event(s) or object(s) that prove something). Processing a crime scene needs/demands great attention to detail and detail. To preserve(event(s) or object(s) that prove something), proper steps must be taken in time-based order. The steps employed to do enough to test/evaluate any crime scene are, quite basically, to interview, examine, photograph, sketch and process a crime scene. There are (more than two, but not...
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...Does it change throughout the story? How? (2 marks) 6. What are Liam’s potential character flaws? Give three examples from the text. (3 marks) 7. Explain the term foreshadowing. How does Liam handle the two hikers on their way to the lake? Why? What does this incident foreshadow? (3 marks) 8. What announcement does Liam make when they reach the lake? Describe Gabriela’s reaction. (2 marks) 9. How does Gabriela want to deal with the grizzly sow in front of her? How does she expect Liam to cooperate? (2 marks) 10. What is Liam’s reaction during the bear attack from Gabriela’s point of view? (1) 11. How does Liam explain his reaction to Gabriella in the hospital? (1) 12. Describe the final scene between Gabriela and Liam in the hospital. What is the importance of the title “Bluffing” for this scene? (3 marks) 13. The story is told both in the present and in past tense. The author includes several instances of flashbacks. Give two examples of flashbacks from the text. (2 marks) 14. How is conflict created in the story “Bluffing”? (3 marks)...
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