Arts & Humanities: History: “Question: What are some connections between Islam and World history? Why is it important?” plus 4 more |
- Question: What are some connections between Islam and World history? Why is it important?
- Question: How can I restate "The Black Panther Party affected the Civil Rights Movement by giving African Americans a negative connotation."?
- Question: Were white people as bothered by the murders of Jesse Washington and Emmett Till as they were by the murder of Trayvon Martin?
- Question: Would iTunes be able to get my history back for my iPod touch?
- Question: Why the Neolithic Revolution IS NOT a turning point?
| Question: What are some connections between Islam and World history? Why is it important? Posted: 19 Oct 2014 07:32 AM PDT I have to write a 5 paragraph essay on it and I dont know what I should write for the three paragraphs (I already got the conclusion and intro) (I have to also include the 5 areas of social studies); Geography, economics, government, culture, and history |
| Posted: 19 Oct 2014 06:50 AM PDT
Update : My intention is to connect all their negative aspects and show how they had a positive effect on the movement. I would like the original statement above to reflect this, but in a positive way. |
| Posted: 19 Oct 2014 06:17 AM PDT There were mixed reactions to Emmett Till. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/till/filmmo... Jesse Washington: In the days after the lynching, newspapers fiercely condemned the event. Within a week, news of the lynching was published as far away as London. A New York Times editorial opined that, "in no other land even pretending to be civilized could a man be burned to death in the streets of a considerable city amid the savage exultation of its inhabitants". In the New York Age, James Weldon Johnson described the members of the lynch mob as "lower than any other people who at present inhabit the earth". Although many southern newspapers had previously defended lynching as a defense of civilized society, after Washington's death, they did not cast the practice in such terms. The Montgomery Advertiser wrote that, "no savage was ever more cruel ... than the men who participated in this horrible, almost unbelievable episode". In Texas, the Houston Chronicle and the Austin American criticized the lynch mob, but spoke highly of Waco. The Morning News of Dallas reported the story, but did not publish an accompanying editorial. In Waco, the Times-Herald refrained from editorializing about the lynching. The Waco Morning News briefly noted their disapproval of the lynching, focusing their criticism on papers they felt had attacked the city unfairly. They cast the condemnatory editorials in the aftermath of the lynching as "Holier than thou" remarks. A writer for the Waco Semi-Weekly Tribune defended the lynching, stating that Washington deserved to die and that blacks should view Washington's death as a warning against crime. The paper later carried an editorial from the Houston Post condemning the lynching, characterizing the column as part of an attack on the city. Some Waco residents condemned the lynching, including local ministers and leaders of Baylor University. The judge who presided over Washington's trial later stated that members of the lynch mob were "murderers"; the jury's foreman told the NAACP that he disapproved of their actions. |
| Question: Would iTunes be able to get my history back for my iPod touch? Posted: 19 Oct 2014 06:13 AM PDT Would iTunes be able to get my history back for my iPod touch? I was searching for project facts and assumed that it would be in my history searches. It's gone. Would iTunes help me? If not, what else? |
| Question: Why the Neolithic Revolution IS NOT a turning point? Posted: 19 Oct 2014 06:05 AM PDT We have to write a argumentative essay which is about "Why the Neolithic Revolution IS NOT a turning point?" I found bunch of informations about it is the turning point, but I can't find any websites which are explain why it's not... anyone can explain this? could you also give me the website please? |
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