Historically just with two sticks but in lacrosse there’s only one stick
President Roosevelt invited Sinclair to the White House to talk about The Jungle after reading it. The president then set up a special commission to look into the slaughterhouses in Chicago.
In May 1906, the special commission released its report. Almost all of Sinclair's horrors were confirmed by the report.
When President Roosevelt read The Jungle, how did he feel?
The nation was horrified when The Jungle was published. President Theodore Roosevelt ordered an immediate investigation into the meat industry after reading the book, despite privately telling Sinclair that he disliked the Socialist polemic near the book's conclusion.
The novel gained notoriety primarily due to its depiction of meatpacking facilities. A copy of his book was sent to President Roosevelt by Sinclair. Roosevelt ordered an investigation into the abattoirs, partially but not entirely influenced by Sinclair's bestseller. As depicted in The Jungle, unsanitary conditions were discovered by federal inspectors.
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Many cases heard by the Supreme Court often concern criminal, civil, and bankruptcy cases. Many times once the case is decided it can be appealed. (Just add some for fluff to it and there you go)
The correct answer is Sir Ernest Rutherford.
One of the first findings on atomic energy theory was reached in 1911 by Rutherford, who became known as the father of nuclear physics.
He discovered that the mass of the atom was concentrated in its nucleus, and proposed that the nucleus has a positive charge and is surrounded by negatively charged electrons, which had been discovered in 1897 by J. J. Thomson.
His theory was complemented in 1913 by Niels Bohr, who placed the electrons in definite shells or quantum levels.