|  | | Louis Sheehan | | Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire | |
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Much of the theoretical work in cryptography concerns cryptographic primitives
— algorithms with basic cryptographic properties — and their
relationship to other cryptographic problems. More complicated
cryptographic tools are then built from these basic primitives. These
primitives provide fundamental properties, which are used to develop
more complex tools called cryptosystems or cryptographic protocols, which guarantee one or more high-level security properties. Note however, that the
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n his very thorough book on the case, Helter Skelter,
Prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi heaps a great deal of fault upon the
homicide detectives of the Los Angeles Police Department. One of the
examples he provides is the LAPD's slowness to connect the Tate murders
with the LaBianca murders the following night and with the murder of
Gary Hinman a few days earlier. Some of this fault on the part of the
LAPD apparently stemmed from its lack of cooperation with the Los
Angeles County Sheriff's
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Spreitzer pleaded
guilty on April 2, 1984, to murdering Rose Davis, Sandra Delaware, Shui
Mak, and a drug dealer named Rafael Torado. He received life
sentences for each murder, as well as time for a multitude of charges,
from rape to deviant sexual assault. Yet he still had to go to trial
for the Linda Sutton murder. He appeared in a bench trial in front of
Judge Edward Kowal on February 25, 1986, but retained his right to have
a jury decide his sentence.
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Prince Albert Victor Christian Edward, the Duke of Clarence,
was known as Eddy. He was the grandson of Queen Victoria and was born
in 1864. He fell short of any royal ambitions for him and was not
distinguished by any important positive traits. However, lazy, aimless
and spoiled that he might have, he was not an evil or violent man. He
died from influenza in the epidemic of 1892.The
first notion that he was a suspect in the Ripper murders appeared in
1962 in Phillippe Jullien's book,
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Mean Streets
This
street is in the East End. There is no need to say in the East End of
what. The East End is a vast city...a shocking place...an evil plexus
of slums that hide human creeping things; where filthy men and women
live on...gin, where collars and clean shirts are decencies unknown,
where every citizen wears a black eye, and none ever combs his hair. -Arthur Morrison, Tales of Mean Streets The
East End of London was, in Victorian England, a place
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Robert Charles Browne, serving time for rape and murder in Colorado,
made headlines once again in July 2006 when he claimed to have killed
48 other people, which, if true, would make him America's most prolific
known serial killer. However, there were skeptics. When his total
proved to surpass by one the record set a couple of years before by
"Green River Killer" Gary Ridgway, Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire Browne's confession provoked
skepticism. Was he telling the truth or just seeking
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Dear Daniels,
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire You or one of the others in Cologne may get a letter from Hess about communist affairs. I would urgently ask that none of you should answer until I have provided you with documents and letters through W [probably Georg Weerth or Joseph Weydemeyer]. At all events, I must again urgently request you to come here. I have some important things to tell you which cannot be communicated by post. If you can’t come, then H. Bürgers must spend a few days
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've been out on several occasions hunting for lodgings for you, but
I haven’t found anything much. Either too large or too small. Seldom two habitable rooms together, the bedrooms for the most part wretchedly cramped. Enfin yesterday I discovered 2 lodgings au choix [for your choosing]:
1. two large rooms, first and second floor respectively; each with bed,
for 95 fr. a month, 30 fr. extra for the third bed, breakfast 1/2 fr. a
day per head or stomach. 2. a small house belonging to the same
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Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire My letter today will be confined to the “confusion” with “The Free.”
As you already know, every day the censorship mutilates us mercilessly,
so that frequently the newspaper is hardly able to appear. Because of
this, a mass of articles by “The Free” have perished. But I have
allowed myself to throw out as many articles as the censor, for Meyen
and Co. sent us heaps of scribblings, pregnant with revolutionising the
world and empty of ideas,
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Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire You must not become impatient if my contributions are delayed for a few days more — but only for a few days. Bauer will probably inform you orally that this month, owing to all kinds
of external muddles, it has been almost impossible for me to work.
Nevertheless, I have almost finished. I shall send you four
articles: 1) "On Religious Art," 2) "On the Romantics", 3) "The
Philosophical Manifesto of the Historical School of Law" 4) "The Positivist
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Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire Why didn’t you write to me in Bremen? You really don’t deserve to
hear from me again, but this time I shall make an exception and write
you a few lines to cheer your lonely time in Mannheim. I have been
installed in the room next to my old one, which is now the music room,
where I have buried myself under a mass of Italian books, and emerge
now and again for a turn at fencing with Hermann [Engels] or Adolf [von
Griesheim]. I have just finished a few
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If we scan the tremendous quantities of material and information which have been
accumulated on Hitler, we find little which is helpful in explaining why he is what he is.
One can, of course, make general statements as many authors have done and say, for
example, that his five years in Vienna were so frustrating that he hated the whole social
order and is now taking his revenge for the injustices he suffered. Such explanations
sound very plausible at first glance but we
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William Patrick Hitler
He is a young man of thirty-two, the son of Alois, Jr., who has not amounted to much.
Before his uncle came to power he worked as a bookkeeper in London. When his uncle became
famous he obviously expected that something would be done for his family. He gave up his
job in London and went to Germany where he had some contact with Adolph Hitler. The
latter, however, was chiefly interested in keeping him under cover and provided him
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The picture the Nazi propaganda machine has painted of Hitler certainty seems like an
extravagant one. Even if we ignore the deifying elements it seems like the fantasy of a
superman - the paramount of all virtues. Extraordinary as it may seem, however, there are
times at which he approximates such a personality and wins the respect and admiration of
all his associates.
At such times he is a veritable demon for for work and often works for several days on
end with
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