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e-lub [12.9K]
3 years ago
9

The police have arrested Harriet on the charge of burglary, but she claims she is innocent. After seeing Harriet act extremely s

cared after her arrest, her lawyer has assured her that no authority can take away her life, freedom, or property without letting her undergo fair criminal proceedings. To which amendment of the Bill of Rights is Harriet’s attorney referring?
First Amendment



Fourth Amendment



Fifth Amendment



Sixth Amendment
History
1 answer:
Alex_Xolod [135]3 years ago
8 0
Sixth amendment I think it is
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The United States home front during World War II supported the war effort in many ways, including a wide range of volunteer efforts and submitting to government-managed rationing and price controls. Gasoline, meat, and clothing were tightly rationed.

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What four things should you look for when analyzing sources in history?
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When you analyze a primary source, you are undertaking the most important job of the historian. There is no better way to understand events in the past than by examining the sources--whether journals, newspaper articles, letters, court case records, novels, artworks, music or autobiographies--that people from that period left behind.

Each historian, including you, will approach a source with a different set of experiences and skills, and will therefore interpret the document differently. Remember that there is no one right interpretation. However, if you do not do a careful and thorough job, you might arrive at a wrong interpretation.

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1. Look at the physical nature of your source. This is particularly important and powerful if you are dealing with an original source (i.e., an actual old letter, rather than a transcribed and published version of the same letter). What can you learn from the form of the source? (Was it written on fancy paper in elegant handwriting, or on scrap-paper, scribbled in pencil?) What does this tell you?

2. Think about the purpose of the source. What was the author's message or argument? What was he/she trying to get across? Is the message explicit, or are there implicit messages as well?

3. How does the author try to get the message across? What methods does he/she use?

4. What do you know about the author? Race, sex, class, occupation, religion, age, region, political beliefs? Does any of this matter? How?

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6. What can a careful reading of the text (even if it is an object) tell you? How does the language work? What are the important metaphors or symbols? What can the author's choice of words tell you? What about the silences--what does the author choose NOT to talk about?

Now you can evaluate the source as historical evidence.

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5. What questions can this source NOT help you answer? What are the limitations of this type of source?

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what it sways on the internet The year 1492 is an important date for Spain as a whole, but especially in the small, luscious city of Granada. ... As a result, these conquests brought both the Spanish language and culture to Latin America and the Caribbean as well as pumped economic wealth into Spain.

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