Wednesday, November 15, 2006

In Cold Blood Journal 3

After the murders are revealed it goes into the trial of the case. The trial was held at the Finney County Courthouse. It kind of was an unfair trial becasue the judge and jury new all of the victims. It goes into the the lawyers and the courtcase. The prosecution of the trail was based on the confessions that Perry Smith had given to the police. Also all of the evidence that was found was a huge break in the case. The police found eveidence such as footprints from the killers and stolen items that they had taken from the Clutter house.
Smith and Hickock tried to pled temporarily insanity. But a court doctor had proved that the two men were legaally sane. According to Kansas law this meant they understood right from wrong while committing their crimes. They even broufght in expert witnesses to testify against the men. They said that they were sane while committing the crimes. Smith and Hickocks lawyers filed appeals and wanted thme to be admitted into a psyscheatric hospital but that was quicly denied.
They were sentened to death row, and just five years after they were in prison both of the men were executed by being hanged from the gallows, for the murders againts the Clutter family. The men even had a last meal and both of them requested to eat shrimp, french fries, garlic bread, ice cream and strawberries with whipped cream. Both of them dieing at a young age. Hickock was 33 years old at the time of his death and Smith was 36.

in cold blood journal 2

A large part of the book involves the psychological relationship of the two felons that committed this senseless crime.
Two ex-convicts on parole from the Kansas State Penitentiary committed the robbery and murders of the Clutter family. They had heard from a fellow prisoner, Floyd Wells, who had once worked for the Clutters, that there was a safe at the ranch where Herbert Clutter kept large amounts of cash. They belived it was up to thousands of dollars in cash. The things that were told to these two men was absolutly wrong, becasue Herbert did all of his business in checks.
The two killers were Richard Hickock and Perry Edward Smith. Richard Hickock was a life time conman. He was very intelligent and had an excelletn memory. He was basically a man with the gift of gab. He could please anyone with his words. His childhood was pretty much normal with good parent but theye definatly not the wealthiest they were quite poor. Growing up it was obvious that he was a sociopath. He treated his family and friends horrible. Subjecting them to a lifetime of misdeamenors. Ironically he always returned home for acceptance, and a job for a normal chance at life. But he kept going back to his old ways. Richard Hickock was know for of fordging checks and petty theft. It got to the point where that way of life was just normal to him.
Perry Simth grew up in a good family and his parents were rodeo performers. He was half Cherokee Native American and half Irish American.He was short and dark and also partialy injuerd from a motorcycle accident and in constant pain from the damage done to his legs. As a result of his accident, he became addicted to aspirin and did not see the seriousiness of his addiction. He was also very intelligence, artistically and musically. Early in his childhood his mother took him away away from his father and they moved to San Francisco. Because Perry's mother was a single mother and had a hard time raising her childeren he did not receive a very good education.UNfortantly perr's mother became a huge alcholic and later died becasue of her addiction. Soon after that perry's other siblings had commmited suicide and was soon forced to move in an orphanage. Growing up people did not accept him and he suffered from constant rejection. He blamed others for his misfortune and soon put his anger towards others.

Thursday, November 09, 2006

In Cold Blood Journal 1

In Cold Blood starts out with the setting. The innocent and humble county of Holcomb, Kansas. Which is a consistantly dull town in western Kansana. In Holcomb everyone knows everyone and everything about each other due to the small town atmosphere. Holcomb is a place where people seldom remember to lock their doors at night or just dont care to do it because of the false sense of security they feel they have in their small town.
Then we go into the specifics on the memebers of one of the ordinary families of Holcomb, the Clutters. The Clutters were not the richest family in Holcomb but had no finacial prolems of any sort. The clutter familiy consisted of four members, the husband, wife, one daughter, and one son. Mr. Cuttler was a well natured man of good status and statrure. He was very loyal to his community, church and family. He was a clean man never smoked or drank achol in his life. He was also very handy owning a farm and built the house they lived him from scratch. Herbert Clutter's wife was a very well spoken, clean cut housewife. But unfortunatly she had a round of seroius little nervous spells. She had been having these health problems for up to 6 years. The family was well known of her little condition but no one ever really mentioned it to each other.
The Clutter's farm was a very successful business and had quite a few workers and handymen that helped out with the livestock and the grounds of the farm. Becasue of this the workers got to know the Cutter family very well over he past months they had been working for them. They found out that the clutter family was very wealthy and had money in a safe at their house.
By this point the author, Truman Capote gets into the detail of the family and how the farm works and how the workers play a large part of the plot. The workers of the farm are the ones who visciously moruder the Clutter family. Capote starts to get into the complicated minds of the two parolees who together commit a mass murder, an act they never would have been capable of individually. The murders that are committed play a huge effect on the Holcomb community.

Monday, September 25, 2006

The Lottey

The Lottery
By Shirley Jackson

My short story the lottery takes place in a village that consists of about three hundred people. Even though it gives you no date besides it’s the morning of June 27th. The story obviously takes place in the past because the village is independent the crops they grow are the food they eat. On this Particular evening everyone in the town is gathering at the center. For a lottery of some sort, Waiting for the lottery to happen everyone is making there own little piles of rocks. It doesn’t really fill you in with all the details but gives little hints that something odd is happening.

Mr.Summers the owner of the coal mine comes to the center and asks if everyone is there and ready. Then he sets a black box with little pieces of white paper on a stool in front of everyone. They are told one by one to come grab a piece of paper and go back to your spot but not to look at it yet. Then when told to look at the paper quite whispers went through the crowd, "where is it", and "whose got it". Then all the papers where blank except one the one with the black spot made by Mr.Summers the night before with a piece of coal. It was Tessie Hutchinson who had it and when the crowd saw this suddenly they were upon hurling rocks at her head as she screamed for them to stop.

I personally liked the story a lot. Just because I knew something weird was happening but I didn’t see that ending coming at all. It really kept me guessing. I definitely don’t agree with the theme of the story though. Which is that human sacrifice is necessary for plentiful crops. The subject of the story, being lottery’s or old traditions. You can tell this story takes place a long time ago because humans still believed in such crazy superstitions as this one. I also think the author was trying to reveal just how much human beliefs and superstitions have changed over the years.

One of my favorite movies is a documentary call Darius Goes West.
The subject of this movie is taking a 15 year old west across America because he has never left Athens. The theme of this movie is to raise awareness for DMD. Which is a serious disease that affects many of today’s youth. It is a disease where you would be lucky to make it the age of 20. Logan Smalley the person, who put this movie together, did an extreme job on delivering the theme to the viewer. He did this by talking with professors on the topic and taping there whole trip across the U.S. showed just how hard it s for the handicapped to get around, then also by talking with other kids and their parents who had the same disease.

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

The Beach by Myles Shepley


It was great to spend this past summer at the beach in Destin, Florida. As soon as we got there, the second you step out of the car, you can feel the warmth of the sun all over your body as if were less than a hundred yards away. Once we got unloaded and ready to go down to the beach, the warm pure white sand feels so soft to the bottom of your feet as you sink in ankle deep with every step. It feels almost as if it’s massaging your feet with every step. Then after laying on the sand for a while soaking up the warmth of the sun you go into to the cool ocean water to cool off which feels so reliving after sweating so much lying in the sun.

There’s nothing like waking up in the morning at the beach stepping out onto the balcony an looking out over the beautiful ocean crystal clear blue water far as the eye can see. Then when you get someone else up and ready to go down to the beach you head down. As soon as you get there you see all the gorgeous girls walking around in their little bikinis. The type of girls that look like they might be Dallas Cowboy’s cheerleaders. But best of all my favorite thing to see at the beach is the expression on my brothers faces the whole time we are there which is just happiness it’s awesome to see us just having so much fun.

Another one of my favorite things at the beach is dinner. After hanging out at the beach all day laying in the hot sun with nothing but fluids in your stomach when it comes dinner time you can smell the food before it even starts cooking. The smell of a good steak and baked potatoes one night, then fresh salmon and shrimp another night well it just smells like a little bit of heaven. Waking up in the morning to the smell of the salt-water aroma its just so relaxing. Then as soon as you get down to the pool area and beach the smell of sunscreen and sun tan lotion hits you harder than a brick to the face.

When you get up in the morning you can almost taste the humidity in the air pretty much instantly making you want to quench your thirst. Down on the hot beach after lying out just sweating like a dog the taste of that ice cold drink flowing down your throat its just so soothing. When dinner time comes around you are so happy because you have nothing but the bitter taste of salt water in your mouth from wrestling around in the ocean all day. Eating a good sirloin steak or fine piece of salmon hot off the grill the taste is just literally mouth watering.

In the morning the sound of the waves hitting up against the shore might just be the most relaxing sound I know. At night time if you leave the patio door open and hear that relaxing sound as you fall asleep its so peaceful it will have you asleep in no time. The whole trick where you put a seashell to your ear to hear the ocean it just doesn’t do the real sound justice at all. Also another relaxing sound is the sound of laughter coming from all my brothers and friends just having a good time you feel as if nothing could go wrong. Then comes time to leave and you have to put up with the sad agonizing sound of my little three-year-old niece crying her heart because she wants so badly for this time to never end. But it has to at least until next year.

Jeanne Huston's It Can't Be Helped

It Can’t Be Helped is a story where the author Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston is the main character of the story. She is a very young Japanese girl, so the story is about how hard it was for her growing up here in the United States during the 1940’s with world war two going on. She loses her father real early in life because he gets taken away to prison. This happening was real hard on her family because he was the backbone of the family. He made all the decisions, he got food on the table, and he was just a jack-of-all-trades as they refer to him in the story.
She started off living in Ocean Park, near Santa Monica in a big house where they were the only Japanese family in the neighborhood. Her father liked it that way, but when he got taken away her mom not knowing what to do moved them to terminal island where it was a lot poorer it was a ghetto. Her house nothing more than a mere shack. They had family there that was the Jeanne’s Aunt an Uncle that was there reason, I believe, for them moving there. This was Jeanne’s first time ever being around other Japanese or going to school with them. And she was terrified of them because they where a lot tougher and meaner kids than her brother and her. Her brother and her would meet up after school and decide if they should run straight home or spilt up and take off. "At the time it seemed like years but in fact we had been there for two months", Jeanne commented. But the navy decided to clear Terminal Island completely. They were given forty-eight hours to clear out.
At this time in the story it shows just how strong a woman her mom is. What happens is the second-hand dealers are walking around just offering embarrassing prices for the goods on the island from the people, most of the time the people would take the money just because they needed it so bad and because they only had forty-eight hours to clear the island. When they offered Jeanne’s mom fifteen dollars for a three hundred dollar china set she got so angry that she smashed everyone of the dishes on the floor hurling near the dealer. This might not have been the best reaction, but I think it defiantly shows character in the fact that she wouldn’t settle for just any price.
The government then moved them to another little ghetto this time in downtown Los Angles. Here she experienced a lot of racism for example even in school she said her teacher would ignore or and would never help or with her work. They finally would make their third and final move. Her and all her brothers were relived to get out of downtown L.A because recently there had been numerous attacks on the Japanese there. They were moved to a camp called Manzanar where everyone was Japanese and greeted them as they got off the bus.
The author’s reason for writing this story I think was to share her experiences with the wold so we would know and have some understanding of how hard it was her and her people growing up with the war going on. Jeanne and I quote said, "writing about Manzanar was a way of coming to terms with the impact of the experience on her whole life." I think it was just something that was bottled up for so long and writing about it was a way to get it off her chest.
I am not to sure exactly what the author intended the reader to come away with after reading this story. But I know I came away with a sense of just how easy I got it in life. Sure life’s not perfect but after seeing what she went through growing up being forced to move every few months and having no say so in where that move is either and just seeing that she overcame all this. That just lets me know whatever obstacles in life I may come across I think I will be able to deal with it.
Summary
I picked my second article because it’s about something I do all the time. It’s all about poker and how it’s not as innocent as it looks. I personally think the article is ridiculous. They go so far as to say gambling could lead to drug use, unprotected sex, and criminal activity. That’s just absurd, I mean if gambling could lead to those things you could write an article with just about anything saying it would lead to criminal activity.
Then they give you all these statistics. Such as people who gamble before the age of twenty are three times as likely to come addicted to gambling, 50% of people who gamble before the age of twenty will become binge drinkers, and 75% of the people will smoke weed. Where did they even get these crazy statistics I know didn’t check every person whose gambled before the age of twenty.
The article is for the most apart about gambling addiction being a problem. I can agree with that. Gambling addiction can lead to many problems such as owing money and stealing to pay off these debts. I just think the article takes it a little bit far saying gamblers will most likely binge-drink and smoke weed.
Quotes & Questions
The first quote that really stood at for me was, that experts say television is one of if not the main reason for so many teens playing poker. Which I would guess is probably true.
The second quote that stood out was that people who gamble early in age would most likely be binge-drinkers and do criminal activity. I think that’s non-sense.
The first question I would ask is. Where did they get those statistics that, 50% of people who gamble before the age of twenty will become binge-drinkers, and 75% of the people will smoke weed? Because I don’t think it could be accurate
Another Question would be Is that guy who wrote this really just mad because he’s no good at poker?
Main Idea
The main idea of the article is that gambling addiction is a serous problem.
It says gambling can lead to spending money that was suppose to be for other things on gambling such as rent, insurance, collage money
It says gambling can lead to stealing to pay off debts.
It also says gambling can lead to missing important events like school

Monday, August 28, 2006

The Da Vinci Code

The first 40 pages in the Da Vinci Code are about the main character a professor named Robert Langdon. And they find his friend dead in a museum but he did so much strange stuff to his bod and surroundings as he died as if to leave a message or something and the police asked Mr. Langdon to help figur oout what it all ment.

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

John updike's A&P

Short story

A&P
By John Updike

1. My short story A&P is mainly about a cashier named Sammy at a grocery store real close to the beach. On this day he noticed three good looking young ladies come into his store with nothing but their bathing suits on. And it seemed as if everybody in the store noticed and it was obviously all that Sammy noticed. In the story it is all from Sammy’s point of view. So it goes through with him watching the girls and what they pick up and we just kind of get opinions about the girls from the things they look at in the store, how they carry themselves, and just the way they walk. But eventually they get to Sammy’s register to check out when the manger walks in and approaches the girls and says to them, "girl’s this isn’t the beach" and at first this kind of embarrasses them but then you can tell he starts to offend them when they start arguing, but as they are walking at Sammy has a split decision to quit because of the way his manager embarrassed those girls it obviously angered him. He walks out the store and said, " I felt how hard the world was going to be to me hereafter."
For the most part I thought it was a well-written story. You really get to know Sammy and the way he thinks because the writer express’ himself so well. I like how at the ending his comment about how hard it would be hereafter. What I got from that is well when he quit it was a pretty big deal for him and he wanted the girls to see him do it but after it was done and over when he walked out the store it mattered to know but himself. As for myself I don’t know if I would have reacted so harshly. It wouldn’t have bothered me that much. But I guess that’s why Sammy’s the main character and not Myles.
Sammy was a 19-year-old who I think is still trying to figure out which he really is. I think is a good pretty innocent kid you can tell just from the way he didn’t know why the kids where always buying so much pineapple juice in the story it hints at making screwdrivers most 19 year olds would know stuff like that buy now and you can tell just by the way he admired the girls that his mind wasn’t corrupt or dirty or anything crazy like that.
The manager of the store I think was your average stereotypical manager, you don’t really how any power but thinks Hess the king of the world or something just looking for anything to be wrong.
The 3 girls in the story are pretty typical as well I think. There is one that I kind of think as the leader who they refer to as queenie. "That’s the one I would go for", but he likes the other kind of chunky one the best you can tell she kind of knows she a little fat to because she messes with the cookies then puts them back and goes over to the diet snacks and the third girl they don’t really go into shes just kind of there tagging along it refers to her as the kind of girl that his real pretty but will never be the prettiest.

Simile- A figure of speech in which two essentially unlike things are compared, often in a phrase introduced by like or as, as in "How like the winter hath my absence been" or "So are you to my thoughts as food to life" (Shakespeare). Example do you think theres really a mind in there are a buzz like a bee in a glass jar.
Metaphor- A figure of speech in which a word or phrase that ordinarily designates one thing is used to designate another, thus making an implicit comparison, as in "a sea of troubles" or "All the world's a stage" (Shakespeare). Example by the time I got her feathers smoothed.
Personification- Giving something other than a person human qualities.
Allusion-The act of alluding; indirect reference: Without naming names, the candidate criticized the national leaders by allusion.

Hyperbole-A figure of speech in which exaggeration is used for emphasis or effect, Example could sleep for a year or this book weighs a ton.
Irony-The use of words to express something different from and often opposite to their literal meaning.
An expression or utterance marked by a deliberate contrast between apparent and intended meaning.
A literary style employing such contrasts for humorous or rhetorical effect.