Oi! Don't you love it how Americans can only give American answers? This sounds like it could be tons of fun! I would first divide it into people and places, get a map, and then go globetrotting.
Is this supposed to be current events? 20th century history? Or the most important in all of history? Anways, I'll do the most current. We don't do enough current events in school. Lets go globtrotting.
Lets visit europe first as really important people. We'll say Dubya sent us, just like he sends out half our army.
We'll do lunch with her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, a block or sorts from Westminister Abby . We'll have fish and chips. Maybe her grandkids can join us in full Nazi attire (current events joke).
After that we can go to gay Parie and talk politics with Jaques Chirac under the Arch De Triumph. We'll get on his good side and tell them Israel wants to buy more nukes (aren't we stinkers!)
After that stunt I kind of feel bad. I need to go to church. But lets go to the top. To St. Pete's Basilica to talk to Joe Ratzinger, alias His Holiness Benedict XVI. After confession the fish and chips got to me and I had to do a number II. I went to the local stall and consulted with his holiness Pope Poop III.
Okay. I do too many jokes.... after the bowel movement, I'm ready for business. Lets go to Israel and follow up on the nukes deal. Lets tell Ehud Olmert and Mahmood Abbas to meat us outside the Wailing Wall. We can propse they play rock paper siccors to dertermine peace in the Middle East. After that we call all celebrate and listen to the Clash or Matisyahu :)
Busy day! Anyways... In that utterly bizarre, and hopefull interesting snippet, I've given nine important people and four important places. Its a good start. Show this to your UN class and I think they'll get a kick ;)
2006-09-18 16:38:24
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answer #1
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answered by coffee_addict 3
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One building to use would be the United Nations building, the Washington Monument and the White House.
2006-09-18 15:50:03
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answer #2
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answered by darrenrom9071 2
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Charles LIndberg, Sutter's Mill, John Lennon, Allen Shepard, Thomas Edison, Boston tea party, Assassination of John F. Kennedy, Marten Luther King Jr., Mark Twain
2006-09-18 16:01:57
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answer #3
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answered by Nora Explora 6
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I would recommend reviewing the histories of some of your favorite countries (by this, I mean the noteworthy people of the countries you decide on)...for example, for the U.S., you might find a picture of Benjamin Franklin or George Washington...for France, you might find a daguerreotype or photograph of Charles de Gaulle...for the more advanced pictures, I would recommend looking at snapshots of famous people. You would want to find something that is at an unusual angle, to make it more difficult to identify the famous world leader.
Good luck!
2006-09-18 15:52:58
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answer #4
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answered by : ) 4
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You can use local people from your town / city. There are monuments all over the place in most cities. Go to a museum.
2006-09-18 15:48:40
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answer #5
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answered by Plasmapuppy 7
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easy ones Lincoln, Jefferson memorials in DC full of them. just search the Internet.
2006-09-18 15:49:02
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answer #6
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answered by wowwhatwasthat 4
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