| Papers [1-2] of 2 | Search results on "PEOPLE FRAZER": |
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People vs. Frazer, 2002. An examination of a case involving a charge of child molestation. 1,413 words (approx. 5.7 pages), 5 sources, MLA, $ 47.95 »
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Abstract This paper examines how on August 30, 1999, the California Supreme Court announced its decision in People vs. Frazer and by a 4-3 majority, the Court upheld the state?s revised statute of limitations for child molestation offenses. The case began on October 21, 1996, when the Mendocino County District Attorney charged Raymond Lawrence Frazer with one count of lewd conduct with a child under age 14. It discusses the history of the case, the issues involved and the Court?s opinions (both the majority and the dissent).
From the Paper "The Municipal Court Judge held in Frazer?s favor and dismissed the charge, finding that the law as enacted did not apply to crimes committed before January 1, 1994. (The Judge ignored the amendment that applied the law retroactively.) The District Attorney appealed to the Superior Court, which accepted the state?s statutory interpretation, but still held for Frazer because it found the retroactive application of Section 803(g) constituted an ex post facto law. The Court of Appeals affirmed the Superior Court?s decision on that ground, so the District Attorney appealed to the California Supreme Court."
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Death, Dying and Immortality, 1990. This paper discusses psychological, mythological, cultural and religious views about death, dying and immortality base on the ideas of Ernest Becker, Joseph Campbell, James Frazer and Elizabeth Kubler-Ross about denial, heroism, transference, humanism and 2,700 words (approx. 10.8 pages), 7 sources, $ 95.95 »
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From the Paper "Since the beginning of time, man has pondered the problem of death and dying.
The attitudes of various religious groups toward death appear to both reflect and determine attitudes of persons within the dominant culture. In primitive societies, where religion and culture were for all practical purposes the same thing, death was tied to life in a cyclical way. That is, death would lead to rebirth or resurrection in one form or another. In this connection, Frazer describes primitive rituals connected with the agricultural and seasonal cycles that in some measure sought to discover meaning in the cycles of human life as well. One such European folk festival, which is designed to ward off ill luck, involves what Frazer refers to as "Burying the Carnival."
On the evening of Shrove Tuesday, the Esthonians make a
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