In the court case The People of the State of Colorado v. Sandra L. Jacobson, Jacobson is convicted of homicide. The homicide resulted from her truck colliding with a taxi cab while she was driving under the influence. There were two passengers in the taxi at the time of the collision and both were killed. Jacobson appealed the court’s decision on the basis that the trial court did not allow her attorneys to gauge whether or not the jury had become biased due to mid-trial publicity that included inadmissible information. On the fourth day of the trial, the Court was made aware of the fact that a local television network would be covering the incident that led to this trial on its evening news program.…
Whitney Houston was born August 9, 1963 in Newark, New Jersey. Whitney was an American actress. Whitney was also a singer who went from gospel to pop stardom. Houston started off singing when she was 15 with her mother while trying to get a record deal of her own. At age 19 she was discovered in a nightclub by Clive Davis.…
Parmelee asked her something very important. “If you will be my companion and help me with the light duties, I will make you my heiress.” Rachel had a choice to make. She thought of the childhood that she grew up in and how all that money could help her family.…
The mother reported that the reason for the evaluation is because she wants to reside with the child in London and the father wants the child to be raised in New York City. Ms. Hesterberg reported that the parents met in 2010, in London. The mother reported that she was working in business and she wanted to explore a different field. She found a strip club, just for fun. She was a stripper in the strip club.…
She learned to adjust in an environment where everyone get too comfortable working with each other by expressing their emotions about their work daily. She is part of Dunkin Donut family that made her to continue her career. She has people who support each other by listening to each other and continue through the worst days with customers. Second of all, Rachel shared most of emotional metaphor that she experiences at Dunkin Donut and most of them are realistic and negative. She has one metaphor that explains the love/hate relationship of the employees with customers at Dunkin Donuts.…
When recognizing the power struggle between a mother and daughter during adolescent years, readers are able to gain a deeper understanding into the theme of coming of age, and the role it plays in Judy Blundell’s What I Saw and How I Lied. Evie and her mom Bev have been close their whole lives. The loss of Evie’s father forced them to live alone, inevitably, making them rely on each other. Now, Bev has remarried to Joe, a soldier who fought in WWII, and Evie is just beginning her teenage years.…
Considering Mrs. Spinner’s symptoms, and the diagnostic criteria provided in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorders-5 (DSM-S), she meets criteria for depersonalization/derealization disorder. Depersonalization/derealization disorder is characterized by the presence of persistent or recurrent experiences of depersonalization, derealization, or both (Criterion A). Individuals experiencing depersonalization may have feelings of unreality, detachment, or as if they were being an outside observer of their own thoughts, feelings, sensations, body, or actions (p. ). Similarly, symptoms of derealization may include feelings of unreality or detachment; however, this feelings should be experienced with respect to the individual’s direct surroundings, where objects can be experienced as unreal, dreamlike, foggy, lifeless, or visual distorted (p. ). In the case of Mrs. Spinner, she clearly presents both depersonalization and derealization symptoms.…
The likely diagnosis would be depression. Depression can make you feel irritable, like how Tony feels. For instance, he went to his sister's room after his sister annoyed him, and he threw her dolls on the ground. People living with depression lose interest in things they used to enjoy; for example, Tony has a difficulty focusing on reading, which he previously enjoyed. Depression can often lead you to isolate one from family and friends.…
The play Inherit the Wind gives the story of a lawyer, Henry Drummond, who comes to Hillsboro to defend a man, Bert Cates, on trial for teaching evolution. Cates’ lover Rachel Brown is someone who firmly believes in God and her father’s teachings. Throughout her childhood, she grew scared of her father and became a faithful woman. She was taught that ideas of evolution that weren’t in the Bible were wrong. Over the span in which Cates was jailed and his trial, she started to grow and realize the nature of the world.…
While the adults talked and talked and talked, the children would play and play and play. And just like the other children, Quinn was learning about sharing and caring and playing nice. In fact, sharing could be hard and the other children would argue and cry and scream so loud! But the adult sometimes didn’t know that Quinn wanted to share because she was so quiet. When they noticed they would say, “Oh Quinn, don’t be shy!…
After dropping off the rest of the children, the driver returned to the girl’s house, picked her up while she was home alone and lectured her on her views. When Rachel’s parents learned of their daughters experience, they were horrified and demanded the school take action. However, the school dismissed…
Happiness is the ultimate goal in life for many people. It is a sign of success and prosperity which are qualities that society pressures everyone to achieve. But how does one obtain authentic well-being in confining situations? In his play, A Doll’s House, Henrik Ibsen demonstrates that if an individual lives in restrictive circumstances that force them to conform to a superior’s desires, they must mature and pursue genuine happiness in order to gain freedom and discover their identity. Nora, the protagonist, is a young woman who secretly breaks the law to save her husband’s life even though he treats her like a child.…
Nora Helmer could be argued to be the “Doll” in the play “A Doll’s House” by Henrik Ibsen. She was spoiled by her father while growing up and now by her husband Torvald which, at first leads Nora to have a lack of reality and a sense of immaturity with childish tendencies and a lack of understanding the law. We watch how Nora slowly begins to learn how to think like an adult and become independent as the play unfolds. Her interactions with the members of the cast proves how much of an unrealistic view Nora has on her actions. Nora was sheltered her entire life and which can only lead to the question if she will be able to fend for herself and learn what it is to be a responsible adult.…
Her mannerisms and actions better align with a young child, not a grown woman. Nora’s behavior is continually depicted as happy. Nora is illustrated as laughing and humming. She could be viewed as very disconnected from the world, like many children, she is perceived as oblivious to the space around her. Nora’s stage prompts aid her appearance of a child when they direct her to laugh and hum at even inappropriate times.…
This middle ground is relatable for any child growing up. These childlike qualities e.g crying and not understanding that she has grown too large makes Alice more sympathetic. The reader can understand her frustration and…