Friday, September 19, 2008

Homework 9/19/08

Period 1
Post vocabulary paragraph on blog as a COMMENT
Fill out Narrative summary worksheet

Period 3
Fill out Narrative summary worksheet and Timeline assignment

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

alyssa schmidt [period 1]

I would never go to college to study in criminology. I just wouldn't be able to handle that. I would fear that I wouldn't be able to decriminialize some of my clients. And I would have to incriminate others. And if there was a test, i would surely forget what approbation is. Plus, having to disprove other people would be hard. I would always hope that my client would have excessive amounts of probity. I might end up with a reprobate. And if i lost a case, and the other criminologist was smug, i would have tons of recrimination against myself.

Anonymous said...

Anna Rowell period 1

In my criminology class we were discussing wheather or not California should decriminalize using cell phones while driving. The discussion turned into an argument and recrimination were flying. A student named Tom said" you can't drive and talk on the phone at the same time". Another student, Mary replied harshly with" you can't drive at all!" Someone else interrupted with a probity and said" I know I cant talk on the phone and drive." Tommy a complete reprobate said " you guys are stupid I only got into a couple of accidents while on the phone but i'm okay." To me that incriminates that cell phones should not be able to be used while driving. At the end of the discussion/arguement our professor spoke to us with apporbation.

Anonymous said...

While criminology class was going on, Felix couldn’t help but daydream about his future job. He imagined himself trying to decriminalize activity that didn’t involve murder. Deep in his dream he saw himself in a courtroom trying to incriminate a citizen of Mexico. When Felix made a certain recrimination against the reprobate immigrant, the offender’s lawyer chose to disprove of her client. As Felix and the offender’s lawyer gave their last fight about the case with such probity that the judge finally came to a conclusion of the offender being deported back to Mexico. Even though approbation wasn’t held after the decision it was quite a relief that the offender wasn’t charged for anything. All the sudden the professor came around the corner and tapped Felix’s desk, which brought him back paying attention to class.


-A.T period 1

Anonymous said...

When I was about ten years old, I wanted to study criminology to decriminalize my neighborhood. I would always hear my parents complain of how bad it was in our neighborhood and how they hated for us to live their. Though as I grew up I learned that it was hard to incriminate a person, sometimes it takes years for an evidence to show up. Many of the attorneys have to deal with reprobates and judges have to disprove with the little evidence they have. This causes stress on many both attorneys and judges. Besides the people being reprobates, they didn’t show probity and many choose to show recrimination. Which makes it even harder. So that’s why I’ve chosen another way to help, by becoming a nurse.

Anonymous said...

The reprobate was accused of commiting one of the worst crimes commited in the last five years. The prosecutor, using his probity, used incriminating evidence against the defendant. The defendant's lawyer tried to decriminalize him by using evidence of his acts of approbation. He was trying to disprove that his client had any motive to commit the said crime. After looking into the evidence, by using criminology, the jury was convinced the defendant did not commit the crime. After the trial, the prosecution had a lot of recrimination against themselves.

Anonymous said...

Jameson was a person who used to live in the ghetto and was a reprobate. He decided to turn his life around and help out the world and decriminalize the streets by becoming a lawyer and study criminology. One of his clients was an ongoing case of recrimination and not one lawyercould incriminate his crime. But he helped the jury and reached a verdct and disproved his client with the truth, so they signaled its approbation. He also showed the court what a probity he is.

Anonymous said...

A Criminology major studied a case about a probity lawyer who was trying to decriminalize a reprobate gang member. However, the opposing side had a gun that could possibly incriminate the gang member of murdering a woman. The gang member’s lawyer recrimination stated they had an eye witness that saw the woman shoot herself. The client’s lawyer received approbation when a suicide note was found and disproved the murder theory.

Anonymous said...

To be a detective, you have to study criminology. Their job is to decriminalize criminals from communities. In the courtroom they have to incriminate to put criminals in jail. Sometimes it will be a recrimination instead of he truth. If the prosector whens, they have a approbation. Because the disprove that the criminal is guilty. It will be bad if the criminal swear that he is probity. If he os she lies, they are a reprobate.

Anonymous said...

Period 1

I am currently studying criminology in SDSU; mysteries interest me specially figuring the out. We just got an assignment to choose to decriminalize or incriminate our client with the facts given to us. When I talked to my client he answered with such probity, i couldn't help but to choose to decriminalize him. There was also another student that was against us and our judge was our principle. As I gave my facts for why my client was innocent the other student was trying to disprove my client wasn't innocent. Gave facts that made it seem like my client was a reprobate. I recriminated the students facts, causing a low murmur of approbation.