By comparing the freedom movement to the flight of an airplane in MLK's Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech, King recognizes all of the people who made the movement possible. When talking about the flight, he mentions all of the personnel, not just the pilot but all of the ground crew who are rarely seen, that make the flight successful. He is pointing out that the freedom movement couldn't have been successful without all of the people in the background.
<span>Interactive sites where users write about personal topics and comments to a threaded discussion are called Blogs.</span>
Answer: Bicycles enable African girls to attend school despite their busy schedules.
Answer:
It would be hard to find a European city that has a worse reputation than <u>Bartovia's</u>, with crime, rubbish, graffiti and dereliction featuring in every description over the last 60 years. With unemployment running at 11% and the city government essentially bankrupt, there are few bright spots in <u>Bartovia's </u>future. One of the few, however, is a new venture run by Sergio Leone, who has returned to the city of his birth to try and make the impossible a reality. Along with tanning (the process of treating animal <u>skins</u> to produce leather), dyeing has a long and glorious history in Bartovia. The difference today, though, is that <u>Sergio Leone's</u> mission is to bring to a centuries-old tradition the very latest bleeding-edge technology.
If I bolded and underlined the word, it means I either added one or took it out. I added 3 and took out 1. Skins is the one I took out, the rest I put in.
Let me Know I I am right. :)
Upton Sinclair, Ida Tarbell and Frank Norris were amont the first journalists to publicize immoral, corrupt practices of large industries during the Progressive Era.
Upton Sinclair was an American writer who won the Pulitzer Prize. In 1904, Fred Warren, editor of the socialist newspaper Appeal to Reason, commissioned him a report on the bad practices of the food industry that would become the novel The Jungle, an unprecedented sales success and a huge international commotion. As a consequence, President Theodore Roosevelt received the author in the White House and put in place laws to ensure the quality of food for human consumption.
Ida Tarbell was an American professor, writer and journalist, considered one of the main "muckrakers" of the Progressive Era. She is known for her research on John D. Rockefeller and the Standard Oil Company; her investigations exposed the unfair monopolistic practices carried out by the company until the Supreme Court decided to dissolve the monopoly.
Frank Norris was an American correspondent and novelist. Between 1895 and 1896, he worked as a correspondent in South Africa. Between 1896 and 1897, he was assistant editor of the San Francisco Wave. During the Spanish-American War, Norris was a correspondent in Cuba for McClure's magazine, being critical of American interventionist policies in the war.