Thursday, June 4, 2009
20: What's your favorite number and why?
My favorite number is 8. This is my favorite number because it's the month I was born in. And when I was 8, it was the very first time I actually left Florida to vacation in Canada. This was a sign I was growing up into a big kid to me.
19: What's your favorite word and why?
My favorite word is pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis. This is my favorite word because its the longest word in the english language according to wikipedia. It's my favorite because it's easy to say but confuses the person listening to the word.
18: What's your favorite quote and why"
My favorite quote is "Never give up." Giving up means failure and failure is something you can't be proud of. I rather be a winner and be able to gloat.
16: What's your favorite color?
My favorite color is green because I just like it. I can't explain but it's probably because it stands out so much and the first thing tocatch my attention.
14: Kristallnacht Annotated Bibliography
"Kristallnacht." Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia. 2009. Grolier Online. 15 May 2009 . Kristallnacht was a planned and carefully executed intensification of Adolf Hitler's campaign against the Jews. A young Jewish man in Paris killing a German diplomat caused the launched Kristallnacht. The Kristallnacht attacked 7,500 businesses, caused dozens of murders, and the burning of more than 170 synagogues.
Harran, Marilyn, Kuntz, Dieter, Lemmons Russels, Micheal, Ashley, Pickus, Keith Roth, John. “The Holocaust Chronicle”. Lincolnwood, Illinois. Louis Weber. 2000. Kristallnacht ended the illusion that anything resembling normal Jewish Life was still possible in the Third Reich. Its violence also smashed some Nazi illusions for the shattered glass that littered the streets symbolized the high cost that the November pogroms had exacted for Germany.
Harran, Marilyn, Kuntz, Dieter, Lemmons Russels, Micheal, Ashley, Pickus, Keith Roth, John. “The Holocaust Chronicle”. Lincolnwood, Illinois. Louis Weber. 2000. Kristallnacht ended the illusion that anything resembling normal Jewish Life was still possible in the Third Reich. Its violence also smashed some Nazi illusions for the shattered glass that littered the streets symbolized the high cost that the November pogroms had exacted for Germany.
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