An Inspector Calls – Controlled Assessment Draft An Inspector Calls‚ a play set in 1920‚ written by J.B Priestley‚ has many dimensions‚ many agenda’s and many outlooks on life and society. J.B Priestley uses the characters within this book to portray his message indirectly‚ even the tiniest of details have an array of meanings behind them‚ for example‚ the lighting and how they should be‚ intimate and soft until the inspector arrives and the lights turn sharper causing the whole atmosphere to change
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Lyndon B Johnson or LBJ was a very unusual man‚ driven by power and a desire to help people. Johnson said some people want power “Simply to build prestige‚ to collect antiques‚ and to buy pretty things. Well I wanted power to give things to people-all sorts of things to all sorts of people‚ especially the poor and the blacks.” (Pg. 6) Johnson grew up in Texas born to Sam Johnson‚ a Texas state representative‚ and Rebekah Baines‚ who had prominent Texas ancestors. Undoubtedly this upbringing contributed
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between black civil rights protesters and state police groups had occurred beforehand‚ but one particular attack on the protesters in Selma‚ Alabama pushed the ordeal into a serious state. This state of strife caused the President at the time‚ Lyndon B. Johnson‚ to urge Congress to force the end of racial segregation by allow all men of color to vote. Expressing this through his speech “We Shall Overcome”‚ delivered to Congress on March 16‚ 1965‚ Johnson was able to sway congress to pass the Voting
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W. E. B. Du Bois William Edward Burghardt Du Bois was born on February 23‚ 1868‚ in Great Barrington‚ Massachusetts‚ to Alfred and Mary Silvina (née Burghardt) Du Bois. Mary Silvina Burghardt’s family was part of the very small free black population of Great Barrington‚ having long owned land in the state; she was descended from Dutch‚ African and English ancestors. William Du Bois’s maternal great-grandfather was Tom Burghardt‚ a slave (born in West Africa around 1730) who was held by the Dutch
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Cox‚ Du Bois‚ and Ida B. Wells-Barnett all had similar ideas. They all experienced racial segregation related issues whether it pertained personally to themselves or not. The topics they discuss are important to our society today because they inform us on issues of the past that persist today and give us insight on the progress we have or have not made. We can compare our personal experiences in our lives with theirs‚ and recognize how fortunate we are not to have gone through some of the exact struggles
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Lyndon B. Johnson and the civil rights movement My figure is Lyndon B. Johnson was born in Texas in 1908 and died in Texas in 1973. He was a U.S. vise president in 1960 for President John F. Kennedy‚ and then he became our 36th president in 1963‚ when John F. Kennedy was assassinated. Johnson initiated the “Great Society” social service programs. After Pearl Harbor‚ President Roosevelt helped Lyndon win a commission in the U.S. Naval Reserve as a lieutenant commander. He flew on mission and was
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While writing a paper for his English class‚ Langston Hughes‚ the only African American in the class‚ explores equality in a stream of conscious‚ three paragraph poem. In “Theme for English B‚” Hughes expresses that all races influence each other and should be treated and considered equal as Americans. Hughes discusses the similarities between the different races in America and writes his paper questioning if “its that simple” to overcome segregation issues. After telling of his African American
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The Civil Voting Rights Act increased African-American voting rights and political power in the south. Born August 27‚ 1908 in central Texas‚ Lyndon B. Johnson was the oldest of 5 children. In 11th grade Johnson was elected class president. In 1926‚ he enrolled at SWTSTC and became involved with campus politics. From 1928-1929 he took a break from school the teach Mexican-American kids at the Welhausen
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On July 2‚ 1964‚ just 5 months before the presidential elections‚ Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964‚ which prohibited discrimination in many areas of AMerican life and essentially ended segregation. Having opposed many similar bills in the past‚ Johnson was bombarded by scrutiny claiming that he signed the act only to appeal to voters. However‚ Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act not because of politics‚ but instead because he agreed with the civil rights movement‚ he
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President Lyndon B. Johnson was a key figure in a crucial time in American politics and civil rights movement. He was a liberal who had grown up poor in the state of Texas and this translated well with the American people. Furthermore‚ Johnson early childhood was a prelude to be his greatest ideals that defined his administration and dreams of the Great Society (Germany‚ 2009). President Johnson was in the forefront of social justice but did not see justice as just a race issue; he saw it as a class
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