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    Baseball In The 1940's

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    What was major league baseball like in the 1940’s? Integration was a controversial issue in the 1940’s. Many of the major league teams were interested to know more about integration which impacted many factors. The impact of black players on the field was significant. They were brought over from the Negro leagues an aggressive style of play. Black players soon established themselves as major league stars. The impact that black baseball players had in the 1940’s was powerful because it sparked the

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    In the very beginning of‚ Trail of Tears‚ set the tone of the whole entire movie. The struggle of being born an Indian. John Ridge was a gifted young man and his parent knew so they did everything possible to see that he got a white man’s education. He earned a law degree and eventually married a white man’s daughter. However‚ he was still an Indian. No matter what he did‚ he could never escape the fact that he was an Indian. He would never be good enough. Even an uneducated‚ illiterate white

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    El Amanda By Victor Jara

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    5. Victor Jara constantly sung about united people. He sung about a lot of struggles Chileans face living in Chile. For Example in one of his songs “ I Remember Amanda” he sings about a girl name Amanda and losing her loved one to the mountains. Many people did not return to the factory. In Eduardo Galeano and Isabel Allende they discuss Latin America as a region that is placed for others to constantly use to their benefit. In the song El Aparecido‚ it talks about having been crucified. I believe

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    Differences Between Baseball and Football The nineteen-sixties for baseball was yet another trying time for Americas past-time. Americans were always on the go and needed a sport to keep up with the fast-paced lifestyles of the sixties; baseball was anything but fast-paced. In fact‚ in 1968 when the Mets played the Astros‚ the game lasted six hours and six minutes without either team scoring a run (Baseball‚ 2010). Baseball at this time also found itself without hitters‚ which seemed to always bring

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    Many times‚ white Americans do not understand Native American culture and tradition‚ and when they attempt to change those traditions‚ they are being disrespectful to the culture. In “The Problem of Old Harjo” by John Oskison‚ the white Americans do not understand that the Native American culture accepts polygamy as a marriage option and does not find it to be sinful. The white Americans in this specific story attempt to follow the rules of the bible‚ one of which is monogamy. These white Americans

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    The next idea they tried‚ that affected baseball as it is known today‚ was the night game. The Minor Leagues held their first night game in 1930‚ and attendance was up 2000%. When the Major Leagues finally followed suit‚ in 1935‚ attendance was up 117% (History.com Staff). Night games became more and more popular from there. One of the suggested reasons night games were so popular was that because people couldn’t afford to skip a day of work (Vorel). They could‚ however‚ afford to go to one

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    Many of Ricardo Nazario y Colon’s poems focused on the theme of prejudice. In multiple different poems he points out how the people make he feel unworthy and unwanted. In “Dalton” he explains‚ “This not so Pleasantville is being transformed by Latinos who dared to live the dreams advertised by the same people professing no dogs and no Mexicans allowed” (42). Then in his poem‚ “Silence In The Mountains”‚ it says “I just wish- I could stop feeling dirty. That my sense of worth was higher. That every

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    Separate But Equal‚ Is It Fair? Although people say “Separate but Equal”is fair‚ is it really? In fact most of the time it’s not necessarily fair. Back then African Americans were treated unfairly in more ways than one. They had separate seating sections at baseball games. Instead of sitting in seats they would have to stand on boxes. Each person only got one box‚ often leading to children not being able to watch the game due to the wooden fence that stood in front of them. Plus‚ it doesn’t look

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    The Roosevelt Corollary In 1823‚ President James Monroe called for an end to European intervention in North and South America by introducing the Monroe Doctrine. This meant that Europe was unable to further colonize in the Western Hemisphere. In response‚ America agreed not to interfere with European relations. Almost a century later in 1904‚ President Theodore Roosevelt presented the Roosevelt Corollary‚ which was an extension to the Monroe Doctrine. This extension gave the United States the right

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    Everyday Use Analysis

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    In Alice Walker’s "Everyday Use"‚ the three main characters are necessary in revealing the underlying concepts of the story. The critic Timothy Sexton asserts that the older daughter‚ Dee‚ is the "embodiment of the struggle for a unifying identity" (par. 4). In contrast with Dee‚ the critics Houston A Baker‚ Jr. and Charlotte Pierce-Baker consider Maggie to be a guardian of history‚ or "griot" (164). On the other hand‚ David White describes Mama as having an "inherent understanding of heritage

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