B figures are carved in high relief with deep undercutting
Answer: Local and unique ways of being are increasingly replaced by more homogenized and standard ways of being that are shared across cultures. The world seems smaller because with all of this global integration there is a sameness or familiarity no matter where you are
Explanation:
<u>The March on Washington:</u>
Jones writes in another book, "The March on Washington," is "that it was a walk 'For Jobs and Freedom,' and that it pointed not simply to end racial isolation and separation in the South yet, in addition, to guaranteeing that Americans of all races approached quality training, moderate lodging, and employments that paid a living pay. The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom was one of the biggest political meetings in history and where Martin Luther King Jr. gave him "I Have a Dream" discourse.
The walk was about social equality, casting ballot rights, and racial correspondence, yet it was additionally about the requirement for employments and for occupations that paid a better than average pay. The marchers needed the government the lowest pay permitted by law raised almost 75 percent, from $1.15 an hour to $2.00 60 minutes.
The first mentions of Danes are from the 6th century in Jordanes' Getica, by Procopius, and by Gregory of Tours. The first mention of Danes within the Danish territory is on the Jelling Rune Stone which states how Harald Bluetooth converted the Danes to Christianity in the 10th century.[22]
Denmark has been continuously inhabited since this period; and,
although much cultural and ethnic influence and immigration from all
over the world has entered Denmark since then, present day Danes tend to
see themselves as ethnic descendants of the early tribal Danes
mentioned in the historic sources. Whether this is true or not, the Danish Royal Family can certainly trace their family line back to Gorm the Old (d. 958 AD) in the Viking Age, and perhaps even before that to some of the preceding semi-mythical rulers.