1899 - Looking Ahead: What Kind of Nation Do We Want to Be? - Issue Guide (Downloadable PDF)

Kenny McGuane's picture
$0.00

Imagine you are living in the United States in 1899. William McKinley is in the White House. It’s a time of rapid expansion in population, geography, industry, and diversity, which present opportunities but aggravate tensions. Spurred by mechanization, the mass production of goods continues to change the lives of American workers—not always for the better. In cities around the nation, violence erupts in conflicts between police and federal troops and workers striking for improved conditions. Increasing numbers of immigrants arrive seeking refuge and opportunity.

Price: $0.00

1975 - What Is Our Responsibility to Vietnamese Refugees? - Issue Guide (Downloadable PDF)

Kenny McGuane's picture
$0.00

It is May 1975. Our country has been involved in a war for the past decade in Vietnam to stop the spread of communism. Strictly speaking, the Vietnam conflict was never a war since Congress didn’t pass a declaration of war, yet over 58,000 American soldiers have died. The war has divided our country, families, and communities. Some see it as an abuse of presidential power. Huge antiwar protests over the last decade have divided the country.

Price: $0.00

1908 - A Social Creed: How Should Religious Institutions Respond to Public Problems? - Issue Guide (Downloadable PDF)

Kenny McGuane's picture
$0.00

This issue guide is focused on a decision taking place in the spring of 1908. The General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church is convening its 25th session in Baltimore, Maryland, on May 6. Modeled after the United States Congress, the General Conference is responsible for ecclesiastical policymaking. Its decisions become part of the official church doctrines and discipline for the denomination’s thousands of connected congregations.

Price: $0.00

1976 - The Japanese American Incarceration: How Should A Wrong Be Righted? - Educator Guide (Downloadable PDF)

Kenny McGuane's picture
$0.00

On February 19, 1942, about two months after Japan bombed Pearl Harbor and brought the United States into World War II, President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066, which paved the way for the forced removal of over 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry living on the West Coast and in southern Arizona. They were made to leave their homes, job1s,9an6d3businesses and go to barbed-wire-encircled camps, where many would remain until the war’s end. Although Executive Order 9066 ceased to be enforced toward the end of World War II, it would not be terminated for decades to come.

Price: $0.00

1976 - The Japanese American Incarceration: How Should A Wrong Be Righted? - Issue Guide (Downloadable PDF)

Kenny McGuane's picture
$0.00

On February 19, 1942, about two months after Japan bombed Pearl Harbor and brought the United States into World War II, President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066, which paved the way for the forced removal of over 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry living on the West Coast and in southern Arizona. They were made to leave their homes, job1s,9an6d3businesses and go to barbed-wire-encircled camps, where many would remain until the war’s end. Although Executive Order 9066 ceased to be enforced toward the end of World War II, it would not be terminated for decades to come.

Price: $0.00

Pages

Subscribe to RSS - Educators