Examlex
In a powerful scene in the classic film, To Kill a Mockingbird; Atticus Finch, a small-town lawyer, is on the courthouse steps standing guard over Tom Robinson, an African-American prisoner whom he is defending. A mob of townspeople and local farmers approaches the courthouse, demanding that Atticus turn over Robinson; they are intent on administering their own form of vigilante justice. Suddenly, Atticus's young daughter Scout steps forward. She doesn't understand what's about to happen, and begins to address people in the crowd, "Hey, Mr. Cunningham. How's your boy? I like Walter, but I haven't seen him in a while." As Scout innocently addresses a number of individuals in the crowd, they begin to leave one by one, until the whole lynch mob is disbanded. Scout's behavior disrupts the __________ that might have led to a lynching.
Coracobrachialis
A muscle in the upper arm that facilitates flexion and adduction of the arm.
Pectoralis Major
A thick, fan-shaped muscle situated at the chest of the human body which aids in the movement of the shoulder joint.
Deltoid
A large, triangular muscle covering the shoulder joint and responsible for lifting the arm and giving it a range of motion.
Biceps Brachii
A muscle located in the upper arm responsible for flexing the elbow and supinating the forearm.
Q10: . Julia, who forgot to return her
Q40: Based on information presented by the authors
Q83: _ is to one's current partner as
Q90: Informational social influence is to _ as
Q102: Deindividuation refers to the loosening of normal
Q116: Cognitive dissonance theory suggests that when you
Q134: Milgram found that about _ percent of
Q173: The atrocities at Abu Ghraib prison are
Q186: There is a(n) _ correlation between the
Q203: You belong to a study group that