Hack the Second

The light bulb, such a simple object. How has it come to represent a great idea, a moment of brilliance? In lecture today we listened to Sean(?) give a history of symbols/shorthand to represent feelings. Even the people at Google seemed to be listening based on their use of the light bulb as an icon for an idea and an icon for science.

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(picture of the Google homepage Feb 23,15)

Hack #2

During section 1 on Wednesday talking about our primary sources how the 1920’s was a big change for women. Women started changing the way they looked, by cutting their hair, dressing less conservative, and most of all they were allowed to go to bars with guys. Women back then did not always want to stay home and take care of the kids, they wanted more. Who would want a life getting told what to do and not living the life you want. It was interesting to know that women could not go to a salon to get their hair cut, they had to go to a barber. Now actresses in our era have even shorter hair than the 1920’s. History from the 1920’s still has an impact on how people do their hair today.

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http://pophaircuts.com/wavy-hairstyles-for-short-hair-celebrity-haircuts

HACK #2 — Martin Luther King JR and John F Kennedy at SDSU?!

So this post is late because I did not have time to post it before, but on February 12, one of my friends from the Bay Area came down here for a tour of SDSU. After finishing class, I jumped into the tour. Prior to coming to SDSU, I did not go on a tour, so I was really interested at what the tour guide was saying. When we got to the Viejas Arena, he told us something that I thought was VERY interesting. He told us that in the Aztec Bowl (next to the Viejas), President John F. Kennedy gave a commencement speech! And he also mentioned that if we didn’t believe him, there was a plaque that said JFK actually did give a speech in the Aztec Bowl. Then when we passed the Cal Coast Amphitheater, our tour guide said that Martin Luther King Jr. gave a speech in there! I was really surprised and interested. I found out that MLKJR gave a speech the year after JFK did. Attached is a picture of my friend and I on the tour and the two links are information on the two speeches.

JFK: http://library.sdsu.edu/scua/exhibits-and-events/online-exhibits/kennedy

MLKJR: http://newscenter.sdsu.edu/sdsu_newscenter/news.aspx?s=74867

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-Bonny Truong ((Section 1))

Discussion Leader Chapters 6-10

Questions to think about: 
Why was there a cold war? Did Russian aggression make conflict inevitable, or did the United States overact to the battered Soviet Union’s quest for security? What was the effect of the cold war on the worldview and psychology of American citizens?


The Cold War began after WWII where the United States and the Soviet Union indirectly fought by using fear with the creation of nuclear weapons. Historians argue on whether this was necessary and if the US’s ego got in the way. Document 2 shows how Americans should try to understand their efforts. Secretary of Commerce Henry A. Wallace himself says how our efforts “make it appear either (1) that we are preparing ourselves to win the war which we regard as inevitable or (2)  that we are trying to build up a predominance of force to intimidate the rest of mankind.” He basically saw the flaws in our motives and ultimately it wasn’t worth the nuclear arm race they were initiating. He agreed that we overreacted and he saw the consequences that would happen.
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Document 8 deals with the new lifestyle of American citizens. Life Magazine titles “We Won’t All Be Dead” After Nuclear War in 1959. It was a policy that each family should be able to survive on their own for two weeks if they survived a nuclear attack. This article provided the harsh truth that the government can’t save everyone. It included where citizens can buy toolkits and how avoiding the topic of nuclear attacks isn’t helping anyone. This magazine emphasized the need for citizens to get active and start preparing for the worst.

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Hack #1

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The first open-topped garbage trucks were used during the 1920’s. In 1937 George Dempster invented a wheeled waste container which allowed garbage to be mechanically tipped into trucks. I take the trash to this dumpster at least once a week and was not previously aware of the improvements made throughout history.

Hack #1

Gwynn_plaque

Every day I am constantly “haunted by history” by the things and places around me. I took this photo on a trip to Cooperstown, New York almost 7 years ago and it is amazing to think I would be playing for him now. He is no longer with us but his accomplishments and ideals are still with us. The plaque reads all of Mr. Padre’s stats and accomplishments throughout his baseball career. It’s like Professor Blum said about a baseball card, however in this case only a very select few have a Hall of Fame plaque. It’s a timeline of history and of the 19 years of baseball Tony Gwynn played.

Hack #2: O, I’m a Good Old Rebel

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YAfHigPsC_s

This was shared with our section during Hist 109. Interestingly some of the stanzas are different, so maybe these new stanzas were added by fans of the song or these were simply omitted by the authors of Modern Problems. For your easy reference you can find this primary source on Page 4.

Hack #2

Today in between classes I decided to sit at a new spot on campus, facing Hepner Hall. I took a picture and sent it to one of my good friends who is going to transfer here next year. She expressed how she couldn’t wait to be an aztec and I figured I would continue to brag about how great SDSU truly is. I remembered how Professor Blum mentioned how we were the first to have a Women’s Studies Program so I took my free time to find a little more about it and ended up informing and hacking one of my good friends.
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MY SCHEDULE XD   The internet used to be a thing that students looked upon as a giant waste of time. And it was said that the internet would be a fad, like yo-yos. Now, about 90% of my daily schedule could not be accomplished without it. Technology has shaped me greatly.

Hack #3

Hack #2

This picture shows my friends and I channeling our inner 1920’s flapper. The 1920’s was an important time for the evolving of “acceptable” behavior for women. Flappers were the first group of women to push the social boundaries by wearing short skirts, cutting their hair, smoking cigarettes, and empowering women to express themselves. (Christine O’Donnell Section 1)292807_532474286766178_492164893_n