Kepue keuh sikarim njan,puekaneuk boh keugeulantoe TH ?,kasep maté ureung Aceh
buet kléng Sigapura békle buet sikarim njan meuboh tandjikoh bahasa aceh tan
djeut agama pih Kristen waté tabi saleum thank you djidjaweub.
Njan cok si Karim di tiro Putra mahkota Almukarrah,almuzubbir,all malek All
ékbôh Jawa.
Bangsa Aceh sabé lam rugoe tjipiké békle lagénjan.
--- On Sun, 11/2/08, Acheh Watch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
From: Acheh Watch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: «PPDi» Re: [FreeAcheh] Nye nyoe PHOTO KARIM TIRO (aneuk wali)
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sunday, November 2, 2008, 4:29 PM
Nje. Njankeuh photo Karim, aneuk agam Njang Mulia Tgk Hasan M di Tiro, Wali
Nanggroë Atjèh Meurdéhka
--- On Sun, 11/2/08, I'm The Kruëng <[EMAIL PROTECTED] com> wrote:
From: I'm The Kruëng <[EMAIL PROTECTED] com>
Subject: [FreeAcheh] Nye nyoe PHOTO KARIM TIRO (aneuk wali)
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ps.com
Date: Sunday, November 2, 2008, 6:02 AM
http://www.happynew s.com/news/ 12112005/ Students- get-pig-eye-
view-of-history. htm
Associated Press
LISA CORNWELL
Updated: 12/11/2005
CINCINNATI
Students get pig's-eye view of history
Move over, Miss Piggy. Step aside, Porky. It's time to share the swine
spotlight with real pigs.
The contributions of an animal that has been reviled, mocked and dined upon for
centuries are being recognized in a Xavier University class highlighting
American pig history.
"As I was doing research, I found pigs popping up in rather significant
settings," said assistant history professor Karim Tiro, who teaches the class.
Few realize that swine sailed to the New World with Columbus, sparked wars
between colonists and American Indians and helped pioneer the assembly line, he
said.
He covers those and other topics in "A History of the Pig in America with
Especial Reference to the City of Cincinnati
Otherwise Known as Porkopolis."
The last part of the quirky title refers to a city that has had a love-hate
relationship with pigs since its heyday as the center of the U.S. pork-packing
industry.
Easy access to river transportation and farmland helped turn Cincinnati into
the pork processing capital of the world by the 1840s _ and the target of
international jokes about its "Porkopolis" image.
Appalled at the sight of pigs being herded or roaming wild through Cincinnati
streets in the late 1820s, British author Frances Trollope wrote that she would
have liked the city better if the people "had not dealt so very largely with
hogs."
"Cincinnati' s connection with pigs has always been seen both as a serious
economic issue and a point of humor or ridicule," said Dan Hurley, assistant
vice president for history for the Cincinnati Museum Center.
The Xavier students say they have learned how pigs and the development of the
pork industry reflect broader trends in history. They also have learned to
overlook the grins and giggles that often erupt at the mention of their class.
"But when I tell people what we have learned, they don't laugh as much, and
they usually think it sounds interesting, " said Tara Cleveland, 21.
Virginia DeJohn Anderson, a history professor at the University of Colorado at
Boulder, taught a class looking at the history of human and animal
relationships from antiquity to the present. But she's not aware of any history
classes highlighting one animal.
"I don't think many historians in the past have taken animals seriously as
historical subjects. That prejudice may be shifting as we are coming to
understand how animals have shaped not just the landscape, but also relations
among people," Anderson said.
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not
be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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