Go to Gmail and accept the invite I sent you from Quizlet.com. Spend about ten minutes practicing the words in the "2nd Vocabulary Test" set. Extra credit card for the top 10 scores on the game called Scatter and an extra credit card for the top 10 scores on the game called Race! You can only earn 1 card even if you place in the top 10 in both games. Sorry.
Speaking of extra credit, ask me about extra credit this quarter.
Read the screenplay from the TV series the Twilight Zone called, "The Monsters are Due on Maple Street." Answer the 30 questions in google docs. Don't forget to use complete sentences and AVOID using pronouns such as "she" or "it". Turn it in on Google Classroom.
Google Docs: Grammar Notes
Some sentences have a direct object.
The direct object is the noun or pronoun that receives that action of the verb. Direct objects can also be clauses and phrases, but we will deal with that later.
If you can identify the subject and the verb in a sentence, then finding the direct object--if one exists—is easy. Just remember this simple formula:
Subject + Verb + what? = Direct Object
Here are examples of the formula in action: Zippy and Maurice played soccer with a grapefruit pulled from a backyard tree. Zippy, Maurice = subjects; played = verb. Zippy and Maurice played what? Soccer = direct object.
The indirect object is a noun or pronoun that receives the action of the verb.
John passed Mark the ball. S V I.O. art. D.O.
To find the indirect object, use this formula:
Subject + Verb + Direct Object to what? = Indirect Object
Argumentative essay: At the end of Act II, in the last paragraph of the screenplay The Monsters are Due on Maple Street, the narrator lists several flaws in human nature. What is the author saying about human nature? Support your claims with valid reasoning and relevant and sufficient evidence from the text, including direct quotes. You may also include evidence from the novel Frankenstein and from the article below on what happened in Rosewood, Florida in 1923.
JANUARY 4, 1923, WHITE MOB DESTROYS SMALL BLACK COMMUNITY IN ROSEWOOD, FLORIDA
Posted by Michael Buchanan on Tue, 03 January 2012 in Today In Crime History
On this date, January 4, in the year 1923, a white vigilante mob began a two day rampage, resulting in the burning and dislocation of the small Afro-American community of Rosewood Florida.
Rosewood is located nine miles east of Cedar Key in western Levy County, Florida. In 1920 Rosewood had three churches, a train station, a large one-room black masonic hall, and a black school. There were several unpainted plank wood two-story homes and approximately a dozen two-room homes. Additionally, there were a number of small one-room shanties. In 1923 Afro-Americans made up the majority of the Rosewood Community.
The events that culminated in the burning of Rosewood actually began on January 1, 1923 in the neighboring community of Sumner, Florida, when a white woman claimed that a black man had assaulted her. Several groups of white men assembled to capture the accused black man, believing that he had fled and was hiding in Rosewood with the assistance of the black Community. At least one black man, who was believed to have information about the assault, was lynched in Rosewood on January 1, 1923, by members of one vigilante group of white men. The dead mans body was strung up and displayed as a warning to the black community.
As news of the alleged assault upon the white woman spread through neighboring communities over January 2 and 3, several white men from surrounding areas began to travel to Sumner and the Rosewood area to assist in the search for the accused black man. A rumor circulated that members of the Rosewood community were hiding and protecting the accused man. By January 4, 1923, approximately 30 armed white vigilantes had assembled, supposedly to search for the perpetrator of the assault and those that may have assisted him.
Upon arriving at Rosewood during the evening of January 4, 1923, the white posse found a group of African Americans barricaded in one home. Surrounding the house, the white mob riddled it with rifle and shotgun fire. The occupants of the home resisted and at least two white men were killed, while several others were wounded. At least one black occupant of the house was killed. The shooting continued for over an hour. The attack ended when the white vigilantes ran out of ammunition. As these men left Rosewood, they burned one church and several unoccupied houses.
In 1923, the idea that black people had taken up arms against white men was unthinkable in southern white communities. As this news spread, armed white men traveled to Levy County from Gainesville, Starke, and Perry, Florida . By January 5, a group of 200 - 300 angry armed white men had assembled.
Members of this white mob descended on Rosewood before dawn on January 5, 1923. Homes and other buildings were burned as the black community members fled into the neighboring swamp. At least two members of Rosewood community were murdered by white vigilantes on this day. Over the next two days, the homes of all black residents in Rosewood were destroyed, burned to the ground. The actual number of dead and wounded during the entire January 1923 Rosewood massacre is difficult to determine. Estimates of the number of black community members killed range from 6 to 27.
No arrests were ever made for the murders committed in Rosewood, Florida. An all white grand jury was convened in Levy County during February 1923, but it determined that there was insufficient evidence to make any indictments. To this date, not one person has ever been prosecuted for those crimes committed during January 1923, in Rosewood, Florida.
Sources and more information:
Rosewood, Florida: the Destruction of an African American Community, by R. Thomas Dye, The Historian, Spring 1996
The Rosewood Massacre Report, Part I, A Documented History of the Incident Which Occurred at Rosewood, Florida, in January 1923
The Rosewood Massacre Report, Part II, A Documented History of the Incident Which Occurred at Rosewood, Florida, in January 1923