Comparison of school riot newspaper began at general school in Bideford, Devon. Both Daily Mirror and Daily Telegraph write articles about the story, but their comments are quite different. I analyze the languages of the two papers, the impact it has on the reader, and the emotions of tabloids and big newspapers. The two titles of each story immediately show the difference between the two papers. The title of "Daily Mirror" is very emotional.
I was recently shocked by the political manga of the Sacramento Bee newspaper. This shows a comparison of the image of the two school's water supply. It quickly reminded me of the racist Jim Crow's law in the 1880s and 1960s and apartheid in nearly all areas of the United States. But I noticed that this manga did not use Jim Crow's joke to portray Apartheid's concept, but that commented on social isolation of American public schools today.
Our generation is causing riots for reasons such as poor housing, low wages, poor schools, unemployment, apartheid, and failure to enroll in a particular school for birth. I saw my city, Detroit and burned it for 4 days. In this war, my generation closed the university and city hall. My first activity was RFK. I traveled with him and worked in the neighborhood of an African American with a "salt and pepper" team. I saw systematic racial discrimination that I had never imagined. My first elementary school is Indiana, and I will never forget those people. My second is Nebraska state. I saw racial discrimination against Native Americans and regular racial discrimination against African Americans. My candidate died on the dirty kitchen floor in Los Angeles, but this is a difficult way to promote the campaign.
The 1967 riot was a black and white story in our hearts. In the most common photographs of those days, flames, blood, and faces were grayscale. Until recently the newspaper began taking black and white photographs. For example, the New York Times did not publish color photos until 1993. So this is the way we remember the past and understand. Looking back on the 21st century, these pictures often have a special effect of dividing history into distant and stable ones.