Monday, May 11, 2009

CONGRATS!
YOU WIN!
THE HARD PART IS OVER!!

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Terms & Names: Chapter 30

The Sunbelt: the region running from coast to coast along the southern US which is close to the equator and therefore receives optimal sunlight and warmth to grow things. 

Immigration Act of 1965: abolished previously instated historical nationality quotas. 

"A city divided and proud of it": 


Biotechnology: technology as used in medicine, agriculture, and food science. 

Silicon Valley: center of high tech businesses in southern california. 

United Farm Workers: Founded by Philip Cruz, union of farmworkers.

Silent Spring: a book written by Rachel Carson, 1962, widely credited with helping launch the environmental movement.

Environmental Protection Aency: charged to regulate chemicals and protect human health by safeguarding the natural environment: air, water, and land.

All in the Family: broke ground in its depiction of issues previously considered unsuitable for U.S. network television comedy, such as racism, homosexuality, women's liberation, rape, miscarriage, breast cancer, menopause and impotence.

M*A*S*H: series concerning a group of fictional characters who served at the fictional 4077th Mobile Army Surgical Hospital during the Korean War.

Star Trek: science fiction entertainment series, created a cult phenomenon and has spawned many pop culture references.

Ted Turner: an American media entrepreneur and philanthropist, known as founder of the cable television network CNN.

Political Correctness:a term applied to language, ideas, policies, or behavior seen as seeking to minimize offense to gender, racial, cultural, disabled, aged or other identity groups

"Secular humanism:" a humanist philosophy that upholds reason, ethics, and justice, and specifically rejects the supernatural and the spiritual as the basis of moral reflection and decision-making.

Clarence Thomas: supreme court justice, judicially conservative, much debate over his appointment.

Anita Hill: former colleague of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. She is best known for testifying under oath at Thomas' 1991 Senate confirmation hearings that her supervisor Thomas had made provocative and harassing sexual statements.

National Aeronautics and Space Administration: responsible for the nation's public space program.

Refugee Act of 1980: federal law that reformed United States immigration law and admitted refugees on systematic basis for humanitarian reasons.

Imigration Reform and Control Act of 1987: provides for the legalization of illegal aliens who meet certain requirements

Cesar Chavez: a Mexican American farm worker, labor leader, and civil rights activist who, with Dolores Huerta, co-founded the National Farm Workers Association, which later became the United Farm Workers.

Franchising: methods of practicing and using another person's business philosophy.

Bill Gates: an American business magnate, philanthropist, author, and chairman of Microsoft.

Earth Day: day designed to inspire awareness and appreciation for the Earth's environment.

Acid Rain: precipitation that is unusually acidic. It has harmful effects on plants, aquatic animals, and infrastructure. Acid rain is mostly caused by human emissions of sulfur and nitrogen.

Three Mile Island: site of the worst civilian nuclear accident in United States history, location of a nuclear power generation plant.

Saturday Night Live: weekly late-night sketch comedy and variety show filmed in New York City.

The Bill Cosby Show: n American situation comedy that aired for two seasons on NBC from 1969 until 1971.

MTV: cable television network based in New York City and launched on August 1, 1981, original purpose to play music videos guided by on-air hosts known as VJs.

Multiculturalism: a theory of racial, cultural and ethnic diversity that applies to the demographic make-up of a specific place

Afrocentrism: a world view which emphasizes the importance of African people, taken as a single group and often equated with "Black people", in culture, philosophy, and history

Camille Paglia: an American author, teacher, social critic and dissident feminist.

The Closing of the American Mind: Allan Bloom's criticism of University and primary education of American Youth.

OJ Simpson: football star, acquitted of the murder of Nicole Simpson and Ron Goldman after a lengthy, highly publicized criminal trial.

Tiger Woods: famous black golfer who won a lot of tournaments, breaking racial barriers and such-not.

Affirmitive ActiON: policies that take race, ethnicity, or gender into consideration in an attempt to promote equal opportunity.

Chicanismo: a cultural movement begun in the 1930s in the Southwestern United States by Mexican Americans to recapture their Mexican, Native American culture.

Rodney King: an American who, on March 3, 1991, was the victim in an excessive force case committed by Los Angeles police officers.

Stonewall:

Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrom (AIDS): a disease of the human immune system caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), large social implications because of the connection to homosexuality.

New Right: a conservative political movement that coalesced through grassroots organizing in the years preceding the 1964 presidential campaign of

Jerry Fallwell: an American evangelical Christian pastor, televangelist, and a conservative commentator.

Neoconservatives: political philosophy that emerged in the United States. It supports using U.S. power, including military force, to bring democracy and human rights to other countries, seeing this as virtuous or even morally obligatory.

Brance Dividians: Protestant sect that originated in 1955 from a schism in the Davidian Seventh Day Adventists, 1993 siege on their property near Waco, Texas, by the ATF and the FBI, which resulted in the deaths of 82[1] of the followers of David Koresh.

Henry Louis Gates, Jr.: literary critic, educator, scholar, writer, editor, and public intellectual.

Tailhook: a device attached to the empennage (rear) of an aircraft. It is used to achieve rapid deceleration after landing, usually aboard an aircraft carrier.

Proposition 209: California ballot proposition which amended the state constitution to prohibit public institutions from considering race, sex, or ethnicity.

Asian Pacific Planning Council: objective is to enhance economic growth and prosperity in the region and to strengthen the Asia-Pacific community.

Indian gaming regualtion Act: law that establishes the jurisdictional framework that governs Indian gaming.

American Indian movment: led protests advocating Indigenous American interests, inspired cultural renewal, monitored police activities and coordinated employment programs in cities and in rural reservation communities across the United States.

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Terms & Names: Chapter 29

Lyndon Baines Johnson: served as president from 63-69, succeeded Kennedy after the assasination, democrat, designed "Great Society" legislation (included Medicare/Medicaid, civil rights laws, war on poverty), escalated US involvement in Viet Nam,

Civil Rights Act of 1964: outlawed racial segregation in schools, public places, and employment.

Equal Employment Opportunity Comission: created by the Civil Rights Act of 1964, investigated racial discrimination in cases of employment, helped enforce the CRA of 1964.



Title VII: prohibited all discrimination based on anything for employment.

Medicare and Medicaid: Medicare- government funded healthcare for the elderly, medicaid- government funded healthcare for the poor.

Barry Goldwater: Arizona (R) senator, inspired resurgence of conserative movement, "Mr. Conservative," crusades against federal government, labor unions and welfare state.

Freedom Summer: aka Mississippi Summer Project, 1964 effort to register as many blacks as possible for the vote in Mississippi.

Voting Rights Act of 1965: outlawed voter discrimination, outlawed prerequisites for voting.

Great Society: a set of domestic reforms initiated by Lyndon B. Johnson, with two main goals- elimination of racial discrimination and poverty, education, medical care, urban stuff, transportation.

Office of Economic Opportunity: agency responsible for carrying out War on Poverty legislation.

Head Start: part of the US Health and Human Services deal that provides education, health, nutrition, and parent involvement with low-income students, and families.

Community Action Program: local agencies that helped to carry out the empowerment of poor.

Losing Ground:

Domino Effect: idea that if communism spread to one Asian country, they would all become communist.

Tonkin Gulf Resolution: congressional approval of Johnson's right to begin war in Viet Nam, but not a full on declaration of war.

Ho Chi Minh: communist leader in Viet Nam.

General William Westmoreland: commanded American military in Viet Nam.

Rolling thunder: US bombing attacks on Viet Nam.

Search and Destroy: Viet Nam military strategy, deploy military groups for a special mission, go in, accomplish mission and get out again.

Operation Ranchhand: policy of spraying herbicides over Viet Nam, which consequently ended up killing people too.

Hawks and doves: Hawks were those that supported US involvement in Viet Nam, doves opposed it.

Students for a democratic society: students of the New Left, lots of protesting and activism.

teach-ins: professors would lecture on contemporary issues and have open discussion and not limit the parameters of the discussions.

In loco parentis: refered to the acting of professors at college as the guardians of college students.

Hippies: youth movement of the counter culture, anti vietnam war, into drugs, sex and rock and roll.

Bob Dylan: singer, songwriter, iconic of the youth counter-culture movement.

The Beatles: British invasion, revolutionized the music scene.

Martin Luther King Jr.: civil rights leader, believed in nonviolent noncooperation.

Black Power: civil rights movement emphasizing racial pride and black political power and other things.

Stokely Carmichael: civil rights leader, initially an integrationalist, but then part of black power movement.

Selma: Alabama, site of large voting rights movement, then sight of large march for civil rights.

Malcom X: militant, black power civil rights leader.

Watts Riots: 6 day long, large-scale race riot in LA, California.

Black Panther Party: political party created to increase black power and pride.

James Brown: black singer and dancer, very influential to music scene.

Tet Offensive: turning point in the Viet Nam War, Viet Kong and North Viet Namese forces attacked South military and civilians in an effort to inspire the South to become fed up with the Americans and want them out.

Robert Kennedy: worked closely with JFK on Cuban Missle Crisis, Attorney General and then New York Senator.

Richard J. Daley: democratic "boss" of Chicago, last of the big political bosses, thought to have possibly unfairly supported Kennedy in 1960 election.

Abbie Hoffman: politicial and social activist, started Youth International Party (YIPs)

Ralph Nader: perenial presidential candidate, environmental, independant.

Hubert Humphrey: Johnson's VP, from minnesota, pro-civil rights democrat.

Richard Milhouse Nixon: president, watergate scandal, president during Viet Nam war, pretty good guy, economics- price controls, off gold standard, foreign policy extremely successful.

George Wallace: populist, southern governor of Alabama, democrat, pro-segregationist, opposed Nixon.

Curtis Lemay: Wallace's running-mate, head of air force during WWII.

Family Assistance Plan:

Stagflation: inflation and stagnation occur at the same time, hard to get rid of, counterintuitive.

New Federalism: move back to the idea that states should have predominant rights, not federal government.

Earl warren: Supreme court justice, liberal rulings,

Miranda v. Arizona: Supreme court ruled that testimony obtained under interrogation is legit only if the prisoner was informed of their rights to things.

Dandridge v. Williams:

Civil Rights Act of 1968: expanded on previous acts and prohibited discrimination concerning the sale, rental, and financing of housing based on race, religion, national origin,

Warren Burger: Supreme court justice, conservative, but was part of many very progressive decisions during term.

Roe v. Wade: supreme court decision which stated it was legal for women to choose abortions.

National Organization for Women: largest feminist organization in the US

Equal Rights Ammendment: never passed, proposed elimination of any type of discrimination based on sex.

Phyllis Schlafly: conservative, opposed feminism.

Henry kissinger: political scientist and diplomat, national security advisor, Nixon's secretary of state,

Detente: process by which previously hostile nations scale down tensions.

Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT I): first of two disarmament talks between US and Soviets,

Vietnamization: 1969-75, the goal was to buy time and build up S. Vietnamese power, so they could defend their own nation.

Nixon Doctrine: statement by Nixon at Guam that said that the US now expected its allies to be responsible for their own military defense

Kent State: killing of students by US troops while protesting.

Jackson State: killing of students by US troops while protesting.

Khmer Rouge: communist ruling party of Cambodia, Nixon attacked them for a while.

Daniel Ellsberg: american military analyst who released the Pentagon Papers.

Christmas bombing: aka operation linebacker, areal bombardment of N. Vietnamese communist points.

My Lai: massacre of S. Vietnamese by US forces in 1968.

George McGovern: rep, senator, pres nominee, noted opposer of the Viet Nam War, worked against global poverty and hunger.

CREEP: committee to reelect the president, under Nixon, way illegal measures.

Watergate: scandal in which people associated with the Nixon presidency broke into the Democratic headquarters and some other places and were caught.

Judge John Sirica: presided over Watergate Scandal case,

Twentysixth Ammendment: standardized voting age at 18 years.

Spiro Agnew: Nixon's VP

Gerald Ford: (served 1974-77) prez after Nixon, signed Helsinki Accords, worst economy since the Great Depression.
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Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Questions: Chapter 28

1. Trace the history of the civil rights movement from the Brown v. Board of Education decision to the March on Washington. Note important events and leading personalities as you go. Offer a concluding assessment of the importance of the leadership of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Brown v. Board of Education, 1954: desegregated schools
Rosa Parks and the Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1955–1956- MLK Jr.
Little Rock 9- 1957
Sit-ins, 1960
Freedom Rides, 1961, John Lewi, Charles McDew; Bernard Lafayette; Charles Jones; Lonnie King; Julian Bonds, Stokey Carmichael
Voter Registration Organizing- Amzie Moore, Aaron Henry, Medgar Evers
Integration of Mississippi Universities, 1956-1965- Clyde Kennard
Albany Movement, 1961-1962-
Birmingham campaign, 1963-1964
March on Washington, 1963
Dr, Martin Luther King was invaluable to the movement, inspiring as well as providing the most effective protest method-- nonviolent noncooperation.


2. Argue for or against this statement: Dwight Eisenhower was a great president. Support your position with a complete analyses of his policies and achievements, noting both foreign-polic and domestic issues.
I feel he was a good president, he oversaw the cease-fire of the Korean War, kept up the pressure on the Soviet Union during the Cold War, made nuclear weapons a higher defense priority, launched the Space Race, enlarged the Social Security program, and began the Interstate Highway System. He had the american people in mind with all of his actions.


3. Trace the course of America's policy, both private and public, toward Vietnam from 1954 to 1963. Who do you think deserves greater blame for escalating the war, Kennedy or Eisenhower? Explain your response.
Eisenhower made American participation contingent on British support, and because they didn't support Vietn War, he became convinced that the political risks outweighed the possible benefits, Eisenhower decided against the intervention. The Republic of Vietnam was created largely because of the Eisenhower administration's desire for an anti-communist state in the region, who coined the domino theory. I believe the Gulf of Tonkin initiative was reason enough to stat Eisenhower was more to blame than Kennedy in escalating war efforts.


4. "John F. Kennedy is the most overrated president in American history." Discuss whether you agree or disagree with this statement, with reference to the events and policies of his presidency.
I do not agree with this statement. During his presidency, Kennedy dealt handily with the Bay of Pigs Invasion, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the building of the Berlin Wall, the Space Race, the African American Civil Rights Movement and early events of the Vietnam War. Furthermore, were he not as renound for his accomplishment he would not have been reelected, nor would he have been assassinated on November 22, 1963, in Dallas, Texas.
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Tuesday, April 14, 2009

DO NOT FORGET:

The CRITICAL REVIEW papers for the outside reading books are DUE TOMORROW for D Block and THURSDAY for A Block!

Pick a book. Read the spark notes. Write essay using these directions:

The critical review for your book shall be typed (double spaced) with 12 point type. Include the information specified below. Edit your drafts and keep a copy of your final effort. Final drafts should be 2 to 3 pages in length. Your paper should be 7 paragraphs in length after the bibliographic data. Use one paragraph for each of the following points.

1. Give the bibliographic data for your book using MLA format. Place it at the top of the first page.

2. Describe the book in general terms. What subjects does it cover? What years does it span?

3. Identify the major thesis. The major thesis would reflect the author's general point of view or belief.

4. Explain the author's main contentions and discuss them giving evidence (concrete details and analysis).

5. What were your chief objections and summarize any shortcomings. If you find errors, mention important ones.

6. Address the following:
a. How does the book change your conception of the topic?
b. What additional work needs to be done in order to clear up any doubtful points?
c. What gaps still need to be filled?

7. Give information about the author (background, experience, other books written).

8. End your critique by summarizing your opinion of the merits and faults of the book.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Questions: Chapter 27

1. The cold war was a period of disagreement and military build up between Russia and the US. It was caused by disagreemetn because they were communists and we were capitalists.

2. Tey are the same thing. It was a policy that the US adopted to contain Soviet communist expansionism. Focused on the need for National Security.

3. Truman set up a program to determine whether people in his administration were loyal to capitalism. It was implemented as part of Truman's containment plan.

4. Creation of the CIA, Air-force, and department of defense. The Marshall Plan fostered economic recovery in Europe, and fought communism. NATO was the US/Britain and CO. pact. Berlin Blockade failed.

5. Republican nomination: Dewey, Dem nomination: Truman, Progressive: Wallace, Dixicrats: Thurmond. It was unusual because it looked like like the democrats were doomed, but Truman pulled out an unlikely victory.

6. The fact that China, the most populus country and Russia, the largest country had both become communist, scared Americans. NSC-68 was aimed at bolstering public fear and developed a freedom v. slavery philosophy.

7. The Korean war was a war against Kim's communist government in Korea, because the communist country of North Korea was attacking a capitalist country, americans focused on anticommunism.

8. because americans were afraid of communist power, they limited the power of labor unions, limited the way they could boycott and made them swear they were not communist, HUAC went after communists in Hollywood because they were influencial.

9. He was the leader of the FBI during the policy of containemtn, he had broad power to uncover subversion, he could write his own list and detain any subversives in a national security emergency. '

10. Epitimized by the conviction and murder of the ROsenbergs. Used as scapegoats to explain how soviets made a nuclear weapon so quickly. McCarthyism was when McCarthy accuse people of being communist.

11. He expanded social security, civil rights, created a national healthcare system, reapealed the Taft-Hartlye Act, and subsidized farming more heavily, compromised programs like healthcare because congress was republican controlled.

12. The main victory for civil rights during Truman's administration was the desegregation of the army, navy, and marines. The desegregation of baseball also was a civil rights success although Jackie Robinson had to endure many racial insults.

13. The development of suburbs brough a feeling of affluence to American Society. The weere seen as "a people of plenty" Families were encouraged to do things together. Mothers were blamed for the increase in youth crime rate.

Terms & Names: Chapter 28

Nikita Kruschev: Stalin's successor, denounced Stalin's militarism and talked of peaceful relations with capitalist countries. 

Massive Retaliaiton: Eisenhower administration's doctrine. Gambled that he threat of US nuclear weapons would check Soviet expansion. 

Fulgencio Batista: Cuba's corrupt dictator tat was applauded by the US, CIA secretly trained his security forces. 

Fidel Castro: leftist politician that overthrew Batista in Cuba, tried to curtail Cuba's dependance on the US. 

U-2 Incident: Soviets shot down a U-2 spy plane over their territory, causing a 1960 Paris summit meeting to fall apart. 

John Foster Dulles: Eisenhower's Secretary of State, talked about anti-communism aimed at "liberation" rather than containment. 

Richard Nixon: Eisenhower's vice president, toasted Cuba's Fulgencio Batista and called him "Cuba's Abraham Lincoln."

Gamal Abdel Nasser: overthrew Egypt's corrupt monarchy, wanted to spread "positive neutralism" to other nations, nationalized the Suez Canal after US pulled their support. 

Suez Crisis: Britain attacked Egypt to retain control of the Suez Canal, Americans pulled out financing for the Aswan Dam. 

Eisenhower Doctrine: the president's pledge to defend Middle Eastern countries from aggression by communist nations. 

Ho Chi Minh: communist leader that took over Indochina, won rebellion and established Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam. 

Geneva Peace Accords: removed French fores from Indochina, divided it into Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia. US refused to sign it. 

Ngo Dinh Diem: leader of the pro-US government in South Korea. Unpopular, became more and more dependent on US intervention. 

Domino Theory: theory that once one asian country became communist, all the others would soon follow suit. 

Open Skies Proposal: Eisenhower's proposal that allowed US and Soviets to fly over each other's territories to make sure military reduction was really happening. 

Highway Act of 1956: costly construction of a network of super highways justified with national security considerations. 

C. Wright Mills: sociologist that disagreed with popular view that other groups had power against giant corporations.  

John Kenneth Galbraith: celebrated Harvard economist that wrote The Affluent Society and believed groups had power against corporations. 

The Organization Man: by sociology William Whyte claimed corporate business created conformity, criticized many aspects of big business. 

Pluralism: the dominant view that no single group could hope to dominate the political process in the US. 

Norman Vincent Peale: protestant minister who linked religious faith with peace of mind, became popular figure and sold lots of books. 

Chuck Berry: black singer who merged Southern Hillbilly music with St. Louis blues. 

Dwight MacDonald: US writer, social critic, pilosopher, political radical, had popular magazine, preached pacifim and individual anarchism. 

Elvis Presley: former truck driver, turned into a pop singer, thrilled young admirers, trou bled older generation. 

The Blackboard Jungle: hit movie about gang of interracial students that terrorized teachers and mocked adult authority. 

Tootle the Engine: children's book in which train was made to conform in order to be normal adn prosperous, advocated following others. 

Earl Warren: former Republican governor from California, appointed as a chief justice. 

Brown v. Board of Education: declared state mandated segregation of public shools unconstitutional, encouraged equal rights.  

Southern Manifesto: signed by 100 House and Senate members, declared desegregation, was against states' rights of the South. 

Rosa Parks: arrested in Montgomery, AL, for defying local bus segregation , sparked boycott of public transit.  

Reverand Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.: ATL, formed SCLC, leader of Civil Rights movement. 

Civil Rights Act of 1957: established new procedures for expending lawsuits on right to vote cases, created commission on civil rights. 

Southern Christian Leadership Conference: formed by MLK and other black ministers, demanded desegregation of public facilities and registered black voters. 

Orval Faubus: Arkansas segregationist governor, sent in Arkansas National guard to block mandated desegregation of schools. 

Termination/Relocation: termination got rid of native american tribes and made indians US citizens. Relocation encouraged native americans to move and seek urban jobs. 

Bracero Program: brought Mexicans in on short-term contracts to work on agricultural jobs, many stayed in US after contracts expired. 

Operation Wetback: starting in 1950, policy targeting undocumented Mexican workers by rounding them up and deporting them. 

"Redlining:" banks and loan institutions refused to give funds for home buying and business starting in "decaying" areas- ie racial discrimination. 

"The Projects:" publicly built housing in cities. Had few amenities, last resort for those with low incomes and no future for advancement. 

Barry Goldwater: ruggedly handsome, won AZ senate in 1952, spokesperson that opposed Ike's insufficiently conservative policies. 

William F. Buckley, Jr.: publisher, Roman Catholic, wrote God and Man, at Yale. Attacked antireligious tilt in US higher education. 

National Review: founded partly by Buckly, weekly magazine that attracted talented writers, avoided extremist opinion, wanted to build up right wing. 

National Defense Education Act of 1958: gave federal money to support college level programs in science, engineering, foreign language, and social science. 

John F. Kenedy: Harvard graduate, military honors, socialite, won presidency in 1960, "New Frontier," program. Catholic democrat. 

Jacqueline Bouvier: Kennedy's wife. Huge media figure, dressed stylishly and mingled with movie stars, fluent in many languages. HOT. 

Flexible Response: FDR's plan to spend more on defense to battle communism, mutual deterrence at strategic, tactical, conventional. 

Peace Corps: created by JFK to send young americans around the world on development projects to undercut communism. 

Alliance for Progress: last minute  Latin American policy gave $20 million to countries that instituted land reform, hoped to get away from dictators, FAIL. 

Berlin Wall: after JFK refused to give West Berlin back to the soviets, they built a wall and shot down people trying to escape. 

Bahia de Cochinas (Bay of Pigs): EPIC FAIL, cuban exiles attempted Cuban overthrow with US help, fostered anti-Yankee sentiment because CIA was involved. 

Robert McNamara: JFK's Secretary of Defense. 

Cuban Missile Crisis: Soviets sent nuclear weapons to Cuba, US freaked out beut came to peace agreement by taking nukes out of Turkey. 

Area Redevelopment Bill: gave federal grants and loans to areas that had been passed by economic growth of post-war years. 

New Frontier: JFK's policy on civil rights, higher minimum wage, national defense, and tariff reductions. 

Freedom Riders: civil rights activists, rode busses around the country, risking riots to get the bus systems integrated. 

Sit-in Movement: many young black activists sat at public places and demanded to be served the same as whites. 
 
March on Washington: 200,000 integrated marched to the Lincoln Memorial, demanded broader rights agenda, put pressure on government. 

Birmingham: Dogs and high powered hoses used on desegregationists, church bombed, people began to riot and police killed kids. 

The Feminine Mystique: published by Betty Friedan, helped spark new feminist movement, fought domestic life and lack of public votes available. 

Betty Friedan: wrote The Feminine Mystique, feminist. 

Lee Harvey Oswald: had bizarre political ties, lived in Soviet Union, arrested for assassination of JFK, pleaded innocent, killed before trial. 

Jack Ruby: killed oswald when he was being transfered between courthouses, owned Dallas nightclub that catered to powerful crime figures. 
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