A True American Tragedy The Indian Extermination |
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1 | A True American Tragedy “The Indian | 58 | Crazy Horse Monument Where: Black |
Extermination”. 1860 – 1890 Civil War and | Hills, SD. | ||
Post Civil War. | 59 | Panic of 1873. What: Economic | |
2 | Growth of America. | Depression Time Period: 1873 –1877 Result: | |
3 | “The Great American Desert”. AKA: The | 10,000 businesses fail Causes: Bankrupt | |
Great Plains. Oklahoma Wyoming Minnesota | Gov. and businesses from the Civil War To | ||
Iowa Washington Oregon. Colorado North | much money spent on railroad construction. | ||
Dakota South Dakota Montana Nebraska | Europe was also experiencing a Depression, | ||
Kansas. | and American businesses are heavily | ||
4 | The Western Regions. | dependent on the European market to buy | |
5 | Western Migration. Reasons: 1. Mining | and sell American made goods. 4. The Gold | |
(Gold & Silver) 2. Farming 3. New Life | Standard. | ||
(Foreigners & Domestic) 4. Railroad | 60 | Little Big Horn “Custer’s Last Stand”. | |
Construction 5. Military Outposts 6. | & V. Date: 1876 Where: Montana (Little | ||
Absence of Law (Outlaws) 7. Entrepreneurs | Big Horn River). Sitting Bull Sioux Chief. | ||
/ Businessmen 8. FREE LAND! Migration | Krazy Horse Sioux Chief. George Custer | ||
Trails: Oregon (West), Bozeman (North | U.S. General 7th Cavalry. | ||
West), and Santa Fe Trails (South West). | 61 | What Happened? Indian Surprise = | |
6 | Indians outnumbered 7th Cavalry 3 to 1. | ||
7 | The Donner Party. | Why Here: Custer was sent to investigate | |
8 | The Donner Party. | the presence of gold in the Black Hills | |
9 | What eventually made traveling and | (South Dakota) which is sacred land to the | |
migrating west easier? | Sioux Indians, and was given to them by | ||
10 | The "Good Guys" Lawmen. | the Treaty of Ft. Laramie (1868) Indian | |
11 | Tombstone, Arizona. Wyatt Earp. | Lure: General Custer spotted forty Indians | |
12 | “Doc” Holiday. Tombstone, Arizona. Dr. | outside of a Sioux Indian encampment | |
John Henry Holiday. | Pursued Indians to encampment over rough | ||
13 | “Wild” Bill. Deadwood, South Dakota. | terrain Plan: Divided 7th Cavalry into | |
Bill Hickok. Dead Man's Hand. Aces & | three Battalions and attacked the | ||
Eights. | encampment Custer’s Battalion, Reno’s | ||
14 | Calamity Jane. Mary Jane Cannary. | Battalion, and Benteen’s Battalion. | |
Deadwood, South Dakota. | 62 | June 25, 1876. | |
15 | Deadwood Dick. Deadwood, South Dakota. | 63 | 7th Cavalry Casualties 261. Battle |
Nat Love. | Results : Little Big Horn. Custer and his | ||
16 | The "Bad Guys" Outlaws. | battalion were all killed. Reno and | |
Western Situation = “Lawlessness”. | Benteen managed to escape while sustaining | ||
17 | Jesse James. | casualties to their own battalions. | |
18 | Billy “The Kid”. William Bonney. Only | Sitting Bull (1890) and Krazy Horse (1877) | |
known photo of him. Close-up photo. | were captured and killed in the future. | ||
19 | Butch Cassidy. George Leroy Parker. | 64 | |
Parker took the name Cassidy from the | 65 | The Apache Wars. Date: 1861 – 1886 | |
leader of the first gang he was part of | Where: Arizona, New Mexico, & Mexico. | ||
when the gang leader Mike Cassidy died. He | Cochise (1815 – 1874) 1st Apache War (1861 | ||
then took the name Butch after he | – 1874). Geronimo (1834 – 1909) 2nd Apache | ||
attempted to go straight with the law when | War (1874 – 1886). | ||
he became a butcher in Wyoming. | 66 | Brigadier Gen. George Crook. Apache | |
20 | The Sundance Kid. Harry Longabaugh. | Name: Nantan Lupan English Translation: | |
When jailed as a teen in Crook County, | Grey Wolf Chief. | ||
Wyoming, he liked the name of a member in | 67 | General Nelson Miles. | |
the local government named Sundance. He | 68 | Lt. Charles Gatewood. Lt. Gatewood | |
quickly adopted the name as his own. | with U.S. Army Apache scouts. Lt. Charles | ||
21 | The Cowboys. Leader: Ike Clanton. The | Gatewood. | |
Clantons & McLaurys. | 69 | Geronimo “The Apache Warrior”. | |
22 | The McCandles. | Geronimo’s Tribe: Chiricahua Apache. (1834 | |
23 | The Daltons. Photo of the dead Dalton | - 1909). He had deep hatred towards any | |
gang after a failed attempt to rob two | people who were not Apache, because his | ||
banks in their home town. | wife and children were killed by Mexicans. | ||
24 | Hmmmm…… Why were so many outlaws | Geronimo and an Apache war party raided | |
attracted to the western part of the U.S.? | and killed Mexicans and white settlers in | ||
25 | Mexican-American War (1846 – 1848). | Mexico, New Mexico, and Arizona. In the | |
Winner? | 1880’s the U.S. Army launched the | ||
26 | The U.S. Civil War (1861 – 1865) North | “Geronimo Campaign” in an effort to | |
v. South. V. Winner? The “Union” (North). | capture Geronimo and his band of outlaw | ||
The Confederacy (South). Where was this | Chiricahua Apaches. | ||
war fought? How did this war divide the | 70 | Ft. Marion St. Augustine, FL. | |
U.S. Army? End Date – April 9th, 1865. | 71 | Geronimo’s Imprisonment. When: 1886 – | |
27 | With malice toward none, with charity | 1909 Where: Ft. Marion, FL and Ft. Sill, | |
for all, ...let us strive on to finish the | OK. On way to Ft. Marion, FL. P.O.W. | ||
work we are in, ...to do all which may | Geronimo. | ||
achieve and cherish a just and lasting | 72 | The Ghost Dance. Year Created - 1890. | |
peace among ourselves and with all | Creator - Wovoka (Indian Shaman) Called | ||
nations. - Abraham Lincoln, March 4, 1865 | himself the “Messiah” Indians traveled to | ||
(2nd Presidential Inaugural Address). | hear his teachings. Rationale - Praying | ||
28 | Abe Lincoln Assassination April 14th, | for a return to the “Glory Days” | |
1865. | Prophesized that the dead would soon join | ||
29 | Lincoln Assassination Missed Targets. | the living in a world in which the Indians | |
Andrew Johnson Vice President. William | could live in the old way surrounded by a | ||
Seward Secretary of State. | plentiful game. A tidal wave of new soil | ||
30 | The Other Assassins. Lewis Powell. | would cover the earth, bury the whites, | |
George Atzerodt. David Herold. | and restore the prairie. | ||
31 | The Other Assassins Mary Surratt. | 73 | Sitting Bull’s Death Date: Dec. 15, |
32 | Assassin’s Execution July 7, 1865. | 1890. Little Big Horn victory. (1876) | |
33 | The Other Assassins John Surratt. | Escape to Canada. (1877) Surrender at Ft. | |
34 | The United States of America Post | Buford, ND and to the Native American | |
Civil War “A country in crisis”. Five | reservation. (1881) Arrest and shooting. | ||
American Questions: Q: How do we re-build | (1890). | ||
our country? A: Reconstruction and the | 74 | Wounded Knee Massacre. Date: Dec. 29, | |
civilization of the American West. Q: What | 1890 Where: South Dakota. Sitting Bull had | ||
is the direction or focus of our country? | recently been killed while being arrested. | ||
A: Wealth and prosperity for all. Q: What | Big Foot was next on the U.S. Army to be | ||
does our country rally behind? A: Be the | captured and placed on trial. The U.S. | ||
#1 world industrial power. Q: Who is the | Army 7th Cavalry was stationed above the | ||
new enemy? A: Native Americans Q: Why this | Sioux camp at Wounded Knee awaiting orders | ||
new enemy? A: The are sitting on a pile of | to go in and capture Big Foot. Big Foot | ||
wealth and don’t even know it. | Sioux Chief. While mourning of the death | ||
35 | U.S. soldiers return to the west | of Sitting Bull and the change in the | |
(1865). From where? | Sioux lifestyle, the Sioux began | ||
36 | Western U.S. Soldier’s Duties. Up to | performing the ceremonial Ghost Dance. The | |
1/3 third of western U.S. soldiers | observing U.S. Army officers of the 7th | ||
deserted. build forts drive settlers from | Cavalry felt that the dance was an | ||
Indian reservations escort mail prevent | uprising and moved in to search the | ||
smuggling protect miners, railroad crews, | encampment and disarm the inhabitants of | ||
and politicians fight Indians. Pay: $13 a | the camp. | ||
month. Why did U.S. soldiers not want to | 75 | Tragedy at Wounded Knee. Deaths 200 | |
be stationed in the west? Hard and | unarmed Sioux (Lakota) Indians were killed | ||
dangerous work for low pay. | 25 U.S. troops were killed by friendly | ||
37 | Buffalo Soldiers. | fire. The Search The 7th Cavalry searched | |
38 | The Obstacle “The Red Savage”. Western | the encampment and found many guns. A | |
Indian Population = 225,000. What was the | scuffle occurred when an Army Officer | ||
impact of horses on Native American | tried to take a gun from a deaf Indian. | ||
cultures? | From an elevated position a Hotchkiss | ||
39 | Famous Indian Killers / Haters. Andrew | machine gun opened fire on the Sioux | |
Jackson Florida Indian Slaughter. “Mad” | (Lakota) encampment. Importance This | ||
Anthony Wayne Battle of Fallen Timbers | conflict ended the Ghost Dance Movement | ||
Treaty of Greenville. | and the Indian Wars. | ||
40 | Teddy Roosevelt. U.S. President 1901 – | 76 | December 29, 1890. |
1909. | 77 | The Buffalo Slaughter. Great Plains | |
41 | Indian Removal Act (1830). | Buffalo Population: 1865 = 15,000,000 1890 | |
42 | Indian Removal Act (1830). Trail of | = 1,000. Reasons: 1. Food 2. Hunting Game | |
Tears (1838). What: The forcible removal | 3. Fur. | ||
of 100,000 members from five different | 78 | William Cody “Buffalo Bill”. | |
tribes in the southern part of the U.S. | Slaughtered buffaloes and sold the meat to | ||
When: 1832 – 1838. For their 100,000,000 | railroad construction workers and the U.S | ||
acres of rich farm land, these Native | Army. Responsible for killing over 4,200 | ||
Americans received 32,000,000 acres of dry | buffalo. Nickname: Engaged in a buffalo | ||
prairie land in what is now present day | killing contest with William Comstock. | ||
Oklahoma. Worchester v. Georgia (1832). | 79 | ||
U.S Supreme Court Ruling: Georgia has no | 80 | Sitting Bull and Buffalo Bill. | |
night to remove the Cherokee Indians. | 81 | Impact on Indians. “Kill a buffalo and | |
President Jackson’s Response: Dared the | you kill an Indian”. Native American uses | ||
U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John | of the buffalo: Bones = Arrow Heads Meat = | ||
Marshall to enforce his ruling. Why did | Food Fur = Clothing and Shelter Buffalo | ||
the U.S. government want this land so bad? | Chips = Fuel Tails = Fly Swatter Gal | ||
43 | Bad Treaties. Settlers and soldiers | Stones = Paint Buffalo Fetus = Delicacy | |
would trick Indians into signing treaties. | Smoked Fur = Moccasins. Buffalo = vital | ||
Most times the treaty was never signed by | component of Native American lifestyle. | ||
the chief. Negotiators would bother the | Buffalo were seen as biblical in the eyes | ||
Indians until someone signed. Most Indians | of Native Americans. Buffalo Population | ||
did not know what they were signing. | Decline = contributed to the “Indian | ||
Indians would unknowingly break the | Extinction”. | ||
treaty. Broken treaties must be enforced | 82 | Chief Seattle. Letter to President | |
by the U.S. Army = Indian Wars. | Franklin Pierce (14th Pres. of the United | ||
44 | Treaty of Ft. Laramie – 1851. Congress | States) – 1854: “Your destiny is a mystery | |
later cut the amount of yearly payments | to us. What will happen when the buffalo | ||
from 50 years to 10 years, and none of the | are all slaughtered? The wild horses all | ||
tribes received their payments on a | tamed? What will happen when the secret | ||
consistent regular basis. Groups involved | corners of the forest are heavy with the | ||
in this Treaty: U.S. Government 9 Native | scent of many men and the view of ripe | ||
American Tribes in the Wyoming Territory – | hills are blotted with talking wires? | ||
Sioux, Cheyenne, Arapaho, Crow, Shoshone, | Where will the thicket be? GONE! Where | ||
Assiniboine, Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara. | will the eagle be? GONE! Where will the | ||
Terms: 1. These tribes will not attack | buffalo be? GONE! And what is to say of | ||
settlers moving west on the Oregon Trail. | the swift pony and then the hunt? The end | ||
2. Railroads and roads may be built in and | of living and the beginning of survival.” | ||
through these tribe’s land. 3. Military | - Chief Seattle (1854). Tribe: Suquamish | ||
forts may be built in these tribe’s land. | and Duwamish Tribe Homeland: Washington. | ||
4. In exchange for these privileges, each | 83 | Buffalo Chips. | |
tribe will be paid $50,000 a year for the | 84 | The White Man’s Victory. Winchester | |
next 50 years. | Rifle. Colt Revolver. With these weapons, | ||
45 | The Indian Wars / Plains Wars “The 2nd | Indians and buffalo were easily killed. | |
Civil War” (1862 - 1890). Sioux War (1862) | 85 | Senator Henry Dawes. Dawes’ | |
Chivington Massacre (1864) Fetterman | Importance: He is responsible for the | ||
Massacre (1866) Little Big Horn (1876) | creation and passage of the General | ||
Apache Wars (1861 – 1886) Wounded Knee | Allotment Act of 1887, which is also known | ||
Massacre (1890). | as the Dawes Severalty Act, or the even | ||
46 | Resistant Tribes. Sioux. Apache. | shorter name the Dawes Act. State: | |
Cheyenne. Why did they resist? – This was | Massachusetts Time in Office: 1875-1893. | ||
an assault on the entire Native American | Facts about the Dawes Act: Put into affect | ||
way of life. They were defending their | – 1887 Amended (changed) –1891 and 1906 | ||
sacred homelands. They were defending | Ended – 1934. | ||
their food source. They have always been a | 86 | The Dawes Act (1887) “The | |
“hunter-gatherer” culture, now they are | Americanization of the Indians”. The Law | ||
being told to be “agrarian”. They have | In Theory 1. All Indian tribes are | ||
always been a “nomadic” culture, now they | abolished. 2. Established Indian | ||
are being told to be a “stationary” | Reservations - each male head of an Indian | ||
culture. Tribal clashes on the | family could claim 160 acres of | ||
reservations between different tribes | reservation land as a farm. 3. Indians | ||
being forced to live on the reservation | would be taught farming techniques. 4. | ||
together as they never had before. | Cooperating Indians could become American | ||
47 | Sioux War. V. Date: 1862 – 1864 Where: | citizens. | |
Minnesota. Little Crow Sioux Chief. Henry | 87 | The Dawes Act (1887) “The death of the | |
H. Sibley 1st Governor of Minnesota. | Indians”. The Law in Practice Indians were | ||
(Winner). December 26, 1862 = Largest mass | never given farm equipment or training. | ||
execution in U.S. History (38) War | Much of reservation land was bought by | ||
continued until 1864 and ended in North | land speculators. Reservation Conditions: | ||
Dakota. | disease, malnutrition, & poor | ||
48 | Sand Creek Massacre. V. Date: Nov. 29, | sanitation. School Teachers taught Indians | |
1864 Where: Colorado. Black Kettle | that there way of life was full of | ||
Cheyenne Chief. John Chivington U.S. | “Idleness, Superstition and Barbarism.”. | ||
Colonel. | Nothing was done to improve the Indian’s | ||
49 | Sand Creek Massacre “Chivington | situation until the Indian New Deal (1934) | |
Massacre”. Indian’s Position: Tension | during the Great Depression. | ||
between white settlers and Native | 88 | Why was the Dawes Act a failure? | |
Americans was high in the Wyoming | Corruption (the misuse of money) within | ||
Territory. Native Americans would be | the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) hurt | ||
protected from attack by the U.S. Army if | the success of the Dawes Act because it | ||
they reported to the closest U.S. fort as | was not properly funded by Washington D.C. | ||
“non-hostiles”. The Cheyenne were on their | Native Americans were never taught proper | ||
way to Ft. Lyon (Colorado) and set up camp | farming techniques. Reservation land was | ||
camp 40 miles away from Ft. Lyon. They | dry and arid, making it difficult to | ||
flew an American flag and a white flag of | successfully farm. | ||
peace over their camp in an effort to show | 89 | An Americanized Indian. | |
that they were coming in peace. U.S. | 90 | Carlisle Indian School. Where: | |
Army’s Position: The 3rd Colorado Infantry | Carlisle, Pennsylvania. | ||
Commander: Colonel John Chivington U.S. | 91 | Carlisle Indian School Band. | |
Soldiers: 700. | 92 | American Indian Movement. AIM. 1968 – | |
50 | Sand Creek Massacre “Chivington | Present. Slogan: “Remember Wounded Knee”. | |
Massacre”. Result: 450 Cheyenne were | 93 | AIM Flag. | |
mutilated and killed. 2/3 of Native | 94 | AIM Conflicts. 1970 – Seized the | |
Americans were women, children, and | Mayflower II ship on Thanksgiving Day | ||
elderly. The men (Braves) were away | which was the 350th anniversary of the | ||
hunting. | Pilgrims' landing at Plymouth Rock. 1970 – | ||
51 | Fetterman Massacre. V. Date: Dec. 21, | Seized abandoned property at the Naval Air | |
1866 Where: Wyoming. Red Cloud Sioux | Station near Minneapolis, Minnesota. 1971 | ||
Chief. William Fetterman U.S. Captain. | – Took over the Winter Dam in Lac Courte | ||
This was part of Red Cloud’s War which is | Oreilles, Wisconsin. 1971 – Took over | ||
also known as the Bozeman War. | Mount Rushmore. 1972 – Trail of Broken | ||
52 | Background of Conflict: Effect: Miners | Treaties which was a cross-country protest | |
and settlers created and used what became | by American Indian and First Nations | ||
known as the Bozeman Trail to get to | organizations intended to bring attention | ||
Montana, which passed through Sioux Land. | to American Indian issues such as treaty | ||
Cause: Gold was discovered in Montana in | rights, living standards, and inadequate | ||
1863. Disagreement: Red Cloud wanted the | housing. | ||
miners to use the Bridger Trail to get to | 95 | AIM Conflicts. These events were part | |
Montana, which did not pass through Sioux | of the Civil Rights Movement. 1972 – Took | ||
land. Problem: The Bridger Trail is longer | over the Bureau of Idian Affairs | ||
than the Bozeman Trail. The U.S. military, | Headquarters in Washington D.C. as part of | ||
ignored Red Cloud’s wishes and began | the Trail of Broken Treaties. 24 people | ||
building forts along the Bozeman Trail for | were arrested during this conflict. 1973 – | ||
miners and settlers to live in and on | Took over the Custer County Courthouse in | ||
their way to Montana. A Promise To Keep: | Montana. 1973 – Took over the Pine Ridge | ||
Red Cloud promised resistance to anyone on | Reservation in South Dakota which is the | ||
the Bozeman Trail who was not Sioux. Name | reservation where the Wounded Knee | ||
of Conflict: Red Cloud’s War or the | Massacre of 1890 took place. A stand-off | ||
Bozeman War. | between AIM members and the FBI lasted for | ||
53 | 71 days. 2 FBI agents and 1 Native | ||
54 | What Happened? Fort Kearny: Military | American died as a result of the | |
post in Rocky Mountains along the Oregon | “shootout” during this conflict. | ||
Trail, which connected to the Bozeman | 96 | Native American Occupation of | |
Trail. Colonel Henry Carrington – Ft. | Alcatraz. 1969 - 1971. Where: San | ||
Kearney Commander The Wood Train: Purpose | Francisco Bay What: Abandoned U.S. prison | ||
– To get wood out to other places along | Existence: Abandoned 1964. | ||
the Bozeman Trail in order to build more | 97 | ||
forts for miners and settlers passing | 98 | Black Hills. Where: South Dakota. | |
through. Problem – This was attacked by | Unclaimed Sioux Money For Land = | ||
the Sioux and Cheyenne Indians on a daily | $600,000,000. Because this land is sacred | ||
basis. Captain Henry Fetterman / 92 U.S. | to the Sioux Indians, they refused to sell | ||
Troops: He bragged he could destroy the | this land to the American government. The | ||
entire Sioux Empire with 80 men. He was | U.S. government has tried to negotiate the | ||
ordered to protect the wood train up to | sale of this land with the Sioux numerous | ||
Lodge Trail Ridge, because Carrington | times, but the Sioux refused to give up | ||
could not guarantee support from Ft. | their rights to their sacred homeland. | ||
Kearny beyond this point. The wood train | However, this land was taken with military | ||
was attacked by a small group of Indians. | force by the U.S. government and mined for | ||
Cpt. Fetterman pursued the Indians past | gold in violation of the Treaty of Ft. | ||
Lodge Trail Ridge. He was ambushed by | Laramie (1868) which ended Red Cloud’s | ||
2,000 Sioux Indians under the command of | War. To this day the Sioux still claim the | ||
Chief Red Cloud 92 U.S. soldiers were | rights to this land and refuse to accept | ||
killed in 20 minutes. Cpt. Fetterman took | any money for it. | ||
his own life to avoid being captured | 99 | Genocide. ? “The systematic | |
alive. | destruction of a specific group or race.”. | ||
55 | “Native American Heroes”. Chief Red | 100 | Making a Comparison. The Holocaust |
Cloud. Sioux Warriors. | Jewish Concentration Camps The German | ||
56 | Treaty of Ft. Laramie – 1868. Groups | Aryan Race Genocide and Pogroms of Jews | |
involved in this Treaty: U.S. Government | Gassing and Burning of Jews Using Jews to | ||
Sioux. Terms: 1. Red Cloud’s War or | police themselves in the Jewish ghettos. | ||
Bozeman War is over. 2. The Black Hills of | 101 | Making a Comparison. Indian | |
South Dakota is given to the Sioux. 3. | Reservations Americanized Indians Massacre | ||
Parts of Wyoming, Montana, South Dakota | of Indians Mass Hangings of Indians Having | ||
are guaranteed as hunting grounds for the | Indians police themselves on the | ||
Sioux. This treaty was broken by the U.S. | reservations Using Indians to catch | ||
Government in 1877 after gold was | Indians. | ||
discovered in the Black Hills. | 102 | The End. | |
57 | Black Hills. Where: South Dakota. | ||
A True American Tragedy The Indian Extermination.ppt |
«The english-speaking countries» - The English-speaking countries. Scotland. Australia. Disneyland. Great Britain. USA.
«Æåíùèíà the woman» - A woman’s tongue wags like a lamb’s tail. Íàèìåíîâàíèå ìîëîäîé äåâóøêè â ñîâðåìåííîì àíãëèéñêîì ÿçûêå. Ïóòè ïîïîëíåíèÿ ëåêñè÷åñêîé ãðóïïû «æåíùèíà» â àíãëèéñêîì ÿçûêå. Æåíñêèé èíòåëëåêò. Õîëîñòîìó ïîìîãàé áîæå, à æåíàòîìó õîçÿéêà ïîìîæåò. « Der mann»- íåì. «Un homme»- ôðàíö. « A man »- àíãë. Îò íàøåãî ðåáðà íàì íå æäàòü äîáðà;
«The animals» - LION. The animals which live in the rainforest and tropics. HIPPO. WHALE. The animals which live in the forest. KOALA. The animals which live in a SAVANNA. POLAR BEAR. CAMEL. ELEPHANT. STARFISH. FISH. SNAKE. KANGAROO. SQUIRREL. PENGUIN. PARROT. SEAL. FOX. GRIFFIN. REINDEER. The animals which live in the OCEAN.
«The green movement» - The countries in which there are offices Greenpeace. One of the largest victories ãðèíïèñîâöåâ in the given campaign can name refusal of flooding of an oil platform brent spar as it contained many toxic substances. "Green" movement in the world. It became the first African who has headed this organization.
«My school» - Level 2. Øêîëà â íàøåé æèçíè. Let’s play. Everybody goes to school. Let’s discuss. Èíòåðíåò-ñàéòû. Level 4. Ó÷åáíî-ìåòîäè÷åñêîå îáåñïå÷åíèå. English in Use. Questionnaire. Level 3. My school. Learner’s Creed. What does Angela Bryan think about her job? Check your answers. I believe in myself and my ability to do my best at all times.
«Pointillism» - History. Pointillism is based on. «Self-portrait» «Breakfast» «La Tour Eifel» «The Beach Heist». that blend, generating others. George Seurat. The scheme of Pointillism. Complete the sentences. «Breakfast». CMYK colors. «A Sunday afternoon on La Grande Jatte». Pictures, belonging to this style are painted in.