The thing that the Social Security Act and the Work Progress Administration had in common regarding employment for young people was that "<span>They increased the job opportunities for younger workers" since FDR wanted more people working. </span>
They sold for like three years in the time for the supreme court cases
Answer:
Jerusalem.
Explanation:
Paul was born in Tarsus, a city in the southeastern corner of Asia Minor. Around AD 33, he converted to Christianism after an appearance of Jesus on his way from Jerusalem to Damascus. Paul undertook three major missionary journeys, in which he spread the teachings of Jesus Christ throughout the Middle East and Greece. On his return to Jerusalem, he was accused of bringing a "Gentile" into the temple. A commotion ensued and he was arrested by the Romans and imprisoned in Caesarea, the coastal city where the Roman procurator resided. Finally, as a Roman citizen, he appealed to the emperor. Paul and some other prisoners were taken to Rome by ship in AD 60 by Roman soldiers.
During the nineteenth century, it was "India" that experienced a decrease in industrial production, since there industrial production had never been that high to begin with relative to many other nations.
The 13th amendment was passed by the Senate on April 8, 1864 and by the House on January 31, 1865. It marked the official end of slavery in the United States. The Civil War, however, had mortally wounded slavery as an institution, since the Southern economy was devastated and enslaved African Americans had rebeled and run away from plantations in record numbers, greatly diminishing the amount of slaves under Southern control. The greatest strike against slavery, however had been Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation, which freed all slaves in rebel states. Thus, as soon as a slave left Confederate control, or as soon as the Union army liberated a certain area, that person was no longer a slave. Though it was a unilateral war measure of the Executive branch, and thus did not have the legal standing of a constitutional amendment, the Emancipation changed the legal status of more than 3.5 million slaves, dealing a crippling blow to Southern slavery.