Answer:
Anger.
Explanation:
Langston Hughes's poem "Madam and the Rent Man" is an exchange between the rent collector and the tenant, Madam who refuses to pay for the services she hadn't received. This is a representation of how things remain unsolved, for the parties involved weren't able to see eye to eye.
With the use of the word "listen", the speaker is trying to get the attention of the other people. Then, she also mentions she'd rather "<em>go to Hades and rot away</em>", than pay, ending with an exclamation mark, obviously signifying the emphasis on the emotional stance of the speaker. This is also a representation of the normal situation of the blacks and the whites in their inability to solve their problems, especially with the whites refusing to listen to the blacks. Hughes uses this poem to show the real life situation, where the person complaining is talking sense, but it doesn't reach the right person for the problems to be solved.
Answer:
they moved westward
Explanation:
they were 'kicked out' from where they were by the colonists.
Answer:
C.
Explanation:
An emergency operations center (EOC) is an operative center which is responsible for carrying out emergency services in strategic manner. EOC is a part of the Civil Defense of the United States.
The staff of EOC are required to be <em>properly trained, divergent thinkers, work under pressure, good communications, etc.</em>
<u>So, from the given options that statement that suggests the staff requirement is in option C. Staff of EOC are required to work under pressure, have good communication skills, able to work for extended hours.</u>
Thus option C is correct.
Answer:
Fourth amendment
Explanation:
The Department of Justice wants access to the telephone records of a major newspaper. The requirement for a search warrant (an order from a judge authorizing the search of the records) would be required under the <u>fourth amendment</u>.
The fourth amendment rights guarantees Americans the right to be secure in their homes and properties and protects them against unreasonable searches and seizures of properties by the police or any other government agency without probable cause or valid reasons. For a judge to issue a search warrant, there must be sufficient reason or probable clause else the affected individual can sue for a breach of his or her fourth amendment rights.