Chapter Three Summary Slater introduces chapter three with telling us that David Rosenhan was greatly ill towards the end of his life. Slater later tells us that Rosenhan and eight of his friends fake they’re way into different mental hospitals just by saying “I’m hearing things”. In fact, Slater wanted to see how the psychiatrist can see the sane from insane. Later, Robert Spitzer gave Rosenhan rude criticism about his experiment.
In chapter 5 of Bad Boy, Walter talks about baseball, meeting his dad and his brothers. In the summer of 1947 Walter was excited that they let Jackie Robinson and Larry Dobby into Major League Baseball. Walter would gather all of his neighborhood friends to watch baseball with him. Soon Walter’s biological father moved to Harlem, because his wife had family there. Walter never considered his biological father his dad because he never acted like it.
At the beginning of the novel the main character Louis, an Akanbi Indian, lives a simple life selling baskets he and his mother make from ash trees. Louis’s father who had been a logger had gone on a routine logging trip years ago and never returned, leaving Louis and his mother to fend for themselves. Louis and his mother were traveling from town to town selling their baskets and living off the land when they were approached by a white man who wanted to recruit Louis for the union army. Louis’s mother was reluctant to let him join but, the pay would allow them to buy land where they could farm and settle down, eventually she gives in. Louis joins and is assigned to the 69th Irish brigade, known for its pride and bravery in battle.
Serpico, the New York City cop who couldn’t be bought by nobody. Serpico is a book that tells a story about a cop that works in New York, that wouldn’t take any brides from anybody and who had to deal with a very corrupt police department. There was a big gambling problem going on in New York and there was nothing being done about it so Serpico being such an honest cop decided he would try to get rid of the problem. In the following book report over Serpico, by Peter Maas, I will summarize the book’s contents and give my thoughts over the book.
Victor Rios begins chapter six by describing the way the Latino boys he studied used masculinity as a rehabilitative tool. He describes how the boys are constantly “questioning” each other’s manhood as a way of proving their own masculinity. “The boys’ social relations with one another and with community members were saturated with expressions and discourses of manhood” (pg.125). Rios continues to describe the affects criminalization and its gendered practices has influenced these young boy’s mentality of what it means to be masculine. In chapter six, the author explains that although the boys had easy access to weapons, they rarely used them because of their clear understanding the consequences associated with such violence.
The book 5.41, Randy Turner and John Hacker, is a story of a great devastation that hit the town of Joplin, Missouri on the 22nd of May 2011, where humanity saw the destructive tornado that hit their town, and people lost a large number of townspeople. It was the place of a great amount of people who survived the most catastrophic tornado they had seen in their lifetime. The President of the United States, the Governor of Missouri, a Catholic priest and a Methodist minister gave speeches to the people of Joplin after the tornado was struck about a week later, and what did they need to hear from them that people of Joplin had to strive to help their neighbours b looking out to each other, they had to have faith in themselves that were strong
Danielle L. McGuire’s At the Dark End of the Street, “an important, original contribution to civil rights historiography”, discusses the topic of rape and sexual assault towards African American women, and how this played a major role in causing the civil rights movement (Dailey 491). Chapter by chapter, another person's story is told, from the rape of Recy Taylor to the court case of Joan Little, while including the significance of Rosa Parks and various organizations in fighting for the victims of unjust brutality. The sole purpose of creating this novel was to discuss a topic no other historian has discussed before, because according to McGuire they have all been skipping over a topic that would change the view of the civil rights movement.
x What did you think about the concepts presented in Chapter 12, in Brown, regarding the role of parents? Did you agree or disagree? Which one of the concepts presented is something you could apply to your coaching situation currently? Your posting is worth 10 points.
Out of the six chapters, I prefer to write about Chapter One: The Duel and Chapter Two: The Dinner. This book was very intriguing and helped to understand the post-revolutionary America and the lives of the founding brothers and what they went through. Chapter One: The Duel was a well-known duel in American history. Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton. July 11, 1804 is the exact date when the duel happened.
Eric Packer (Robert Pattison) is a billionaire young broker. In the book he’s described as someone cold and frivolous. In a chaotic day, he decides to travel around the city in his super technological limousine. He spends all day trying to get a haircut, and ends up at the salon of the poor neighborhood in which he grew up. The same day he decides to invest all his money, and all the money of the people who trusted him, in a risky bet against the yen.
The author, Woods, aimed to prove that the court system should be looking more carefully when deeming a guardian appropriate to care for a vulnerable elder. “Guardians must act under the strictest standards of care and accountability-and the court has responsibility for oversight” (Woods, 2012).The goal of thoroughly examining the guardian is to reduce the likelihood that abuse will occur later on. A “Five-Plus-Five” formula was developed to help guardians protect the rights of the vulnerable elderly who need cared for. There are five questions that should be asked prior to appointing a guardian and after the guardianship is implemented.
Chapter six is the summary of an argument that began in the very first chapter of the book
Intro: From 1940 to 1945, Allied Bombers fought tirelessly in the grey skies of Germany in a campaign known as Bomber Command. Bomber Command during World War 2 was a very controversial topic due to the effectiveness and morality of the overall campaign. Some historians like W.A.B. Douglas and B. Greenhous argue that Bomber Command was ineffective as its strategic air offensive was intended to win the war, or at the very least to shorten it significantly by destroying production facilities, which it failed at doing. Contrary, Richard Overy believes that Bomber Command was decently effective as the bombers were supposed to help the infantry and navy take down the Germans collectively, and they did by 1945.
Yoon Bumi likes fairytales. Bumi is also crazy, which is why it is very, very important that the book be accounted for at all times. This, like many things, falls to Ghost. He doesn’t mind; fifteen years is long enough for it to be more a habit than conscious effort. He is leader.
The novel Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut explores the effects of war, specifically the Dresden Bombing. Kurt Vonnegut explains that he had experienced the Dresden Bombing personally and had gone through the harsh situations and conditions that he creates throughout the novel to represent the Dresden Bombing. The Dresden Bombing is one of the greatest man-caused massacres in history and had a huge effect on World War 2. Vonnegut creates the character Billy Pilgrim to explore the effects of war on physical and mental health. The novel is an authentic demonstration of the Dresden Bombing and its effects on American soldiers during the World War 2.