By the 1940s, the general interest, mass circulation magazines (with and without an emphasis on pictures) were well established. These include Life, Look, Collier’s<span>, and the </span>Saturday Evening Post<span> and others. National magazines, with circulations in the millions, were an important part of national advertising strategies of virtually all major brand name products. In 1946 magazines held 12.6 percent of the total advertising market share (van Zuilen, 1977).</span>
Since you have not provided the choices, I will just provide you with some of <span>Charlemagne accomplishments and hopefully they will help you choose the correct choice from the ones you have.
</span><span>Charlemagne:
1- </span><span>He encouraged a revival of learning within his empire
2- </span><span>preserved law and order
3- preserved a strong government
4- </span><span>reunited large areas of the Western Roman Empire
It is good to notice that </span>Charlemagne did not succeed <span>in driving the Muslims out of North Africa.</span>
Answer:
<h3>The Boston Tea Party was a political protest that occurred on December 16, 1773, at Griffin's Wharf in Boston, Massachusetts. American colonists, frustrated and angry at Britain for imposing “taxation without representation,” dumped 342 chests of tea, imported by the British East India Company into the harbor.</h3>
Hope it helps you
The correct answer is - women being prevented from voting.
Even though India has had a very long history of class segregation, as well as gender segregation, that has dramatically changed in the past few decades. The country is now a democracy, much more than the Western democracies even if we consider the daily lives and behavior of the people which is much less regulated and much more free.
The women are allowed to vote by law, and no one is allowed to strip them of that right. If someone tries to do such a thing than the law predicts big fines and charges. It is happening though occasionally on places that are still practicing the traditional life, mostly in the rural areas far away from the cities and towns, but it is becoming less and less practiced with each new generation.
One thing that Europeans in the fourteenth century did during times of famine to survive was that they "<span>killed and ate their draft animals," since this was a last resort and did not bring them a long-term advantage. </span>