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<title>Chris Crowe - Free Library Land Online - Music</title>
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<title>Mississippi Trial, 1955</title>
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<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/chris-crowe/mississippi_trial_1955.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/chris-crowe/mississippi_trial_1955_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="Mississippi Trial, 1955" alt ="Mississippi Trial, 1955"/></a><br//>]]></description>
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<pubDate>Tue, 12 Nov 2002 13:09:41 +0200</pubDate>
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<title>Death Coming Up the Hill</title>
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<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/chris-crowe/death_coming_up_the_hill.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/chris-crowe/death_coming_up_the_hill_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="Death Coming Up the Hill" alt ="Death Coming Up the Hill"/></a><br//>It's 1968, and war is not foreign to seventeen-year-old Ashe. His dogmatic, racist father married his passionate peace-activist mother when she became pregnant with him, and ever since, the couple, like the situation in Vietnam, has been engaged in a "senseless war that could have been prevented."<br> When his high school history teacher dares to teach the political realities of the war, Ashe grows to better understand the situation in Vietnam, his family, and the wider world around him. But when a new crisis hits his parents' marriage, Ashe finds himself trapped, with no options before him but to enter the fray.]]></description>
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<pubDate>Fri, 12 Nov 1999 09:22:32 +0200</pubDate>
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<title>Getting Away with Murder</title>
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<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/chris-crowe/getting_away_with_murder.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/chris-crowe/getting_away_with_murder_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="Getting Away with Murder" alt ="Getting Away with Murder"/></a><br//>The kidnapping and murder of Emmett Till is famous as a catalyst for the Civil Rights Movement. Emmett Till, a fourteen-year-old Black teenager from Chicago, was visiting family in a small town in Mississippi during the summer of 1955. Likely showing off to friends, Emmett allegedly whistled at a white woman. Three days later his brutally beaten body was found floating in the Tallahatchie River. The extreme violence of the crime put a national spotlight on the Jim Crow ways of the South, and many Americans-Black and white-were further outraged at the speedy trial of the white murderers. Although the two white men were tried and acquitted by an all-white jury, they later bragged publicly about the crime. It was a galvanizing moment for Black leaders and ordinary citizens, including such activists as Rosa Parks. In clear, vivid detail Chris Crowe investigates the before-and-aftermath of the crime, as well as the dramatic court trial, and places it into the context of the nascent...]]></description>
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<pubDate>Sat, 12 Nov 2016 10:18:28 +0200</pubDate>
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