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Television, and Manhattan Project. By Mathew Gomes And Brad Morrison . Manhattan Project pictures!!. Television pictures. Television and atomic bomb picture. How television changed the world.
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Television, and Manhattan Project By Mathew Gomes And Brad Morrison
How television changed the world • Television changed the world because people don’t have to go places to see stuff watch commercials, news, sports, and entertainment. • It is also easier and don’t have to waste money and just watch stuff at there houses. • It also helps the economy because companies sell a lot of TVs. • Also cable companies make a lot of money because people need cable to watch TV.
How the Manhattan project changed the world • It changed the world because it caused japan what it is today. • They created nuclear weapons and now war is fought a totally different way. • The Manhattan project changed the world by ending world war two.
How Television has impact on my life • Television impacted my life because I can stay home and watch things on television instead of going out to the place and waste a lot of money when I can just watch it for free • Television is important to everyone because people watch the news, sports, and more and 99 percent of people in the U.S have at least one television.
How Manhattan project impacted my life. • Manhattan Project impacted my life by thinking what can happing in war. What about if that was us one day and we got a atomic bomb dropped on us. • And if we didn’t do it they would of dropped a bomb on us.
television External links • http://www.csun.edu/science/health/docs/tv&health.html • http://inventors.about.com/od/astartinventions/a/atomic_bomb.htm • http://www.high-techproductions.com/historyoftelevision.htm • http://www.thehistoryoftelevision.com/
Manhattan project external links • http://inventors.about.com/od/astartinventions/a/atomic_bomb.htm • http://americanhistory.about.com/library/timelines/bltimelinemanhat.htm • http://gk12.rice.edu/trs/science/Atom/man.htm
facts Manhattan project • The Manhattan Project was carried out in extreme secrecy. By 1945, the project had nearly 40 laboratories and factories which employed approximately 200,000 people. Among these employees were some of the greatest scientist that have ever lived. Included in this lot were Albert Einstein, Enrico Fermi, Richard Feynman, J. Robert Openheimer, and Harold Urey (and this is but a hand full of the many).