User Details For: proof_of_death

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  • Copied

    http://www.uni.ca/history.html
    • 09/02/2003
    • 19:03:59
    • Score: 4 out of 4 people found this comment useful.
  • Much copied

    much copied right from http://www.med.unipi.it/patchir/bloodl/bmr/blood_op.htm
    • 09/02/2003
    • 18:14:12
    • Score: 5 out of 5 people found this comment useful.
  • Run spellchecker

    theres many misspellings in that one paragraph; i would not turn it in that way ;)
    • 09/02/2003
    • 17:55:20
    • Score: 5 out of 5 people found this comment useful.
  • Good job there buddy!

    http://www.superioressays.com/Papers/Novels/BLACK_BOY_ANALYSIS.PHP
    • 09/02/2003
    • 17:43:53
    • Score: 4 out of 4 people found this comment useful.
  • Part copied

    this one is not as easy to find, but it does include plaigerism. A smart teacher might find it. a dumb teacher might not. ure call"Steven Vincent Benet referred to Robert E. Lee as a "riddle unread." Certainly, that was the case in the South during the post Civil War period. Within just a few years of the war's end, Robert E. Lee the man had become a mythic figure for many Southerners, and some were even so bold as to suggest a measure of divinity. As early as 1868, Fanny Downing referred to Lee as "bathed in the white light which falls directly upon him from the smile of an approving and sustaining God." (Downing, Fanny, "Perfect Through Suffering." The Land We Love 4 (January 1868): 193-205.) This saintly imagery was elaborated and reinforced by others. John W. Daniels who served on General Jubal A. Early's staff wrote: "The Divinity in his bosom shone translucent through the man, and his spirit rose up to the Godlike." (Jones, Rev. J. William, D.D. Army of Northern Virginia Memorial Volume. Richmond: J.W. Randolph and English, 1880, p. 122.)"copied from:http://www.wfu.edu/~matthetl/south/relee.html
    • 16/01/2003
    • 22:12:08
    • Score: 4 out of 5 people found this comment useful.