1. In his text "Revonverting Mexican Americans," the author Daniel Schorr talks about the ways in which Mexicans and Mexican-Americans were welcomed back to the country after WWII. He tells us that they are often the last people to be hired and the first ones to go. He also tells us that prejudice against Mexican-Americans is sustained by the views that Americans have of history, for example, in the battle of the Alamo. He thinks that such stories view Mexicans as inherently lazy and dishonest, which perpetuates discrimination.
2. He believes that resentment among Mexican Americans will not be contained because people will eventually begin to demand rights and equality. He argues that they "can be trodden on just so long." This is based on the fact that Mexican Americans are an essential part of the country, and they deserve the same rights as everyone else.
By the end of the 19th century, canned goods were becoming popularized largely through the use industrialization which accelerated mass acceleration and distribution of manufactured products. It wasn't however, until after prohibition ended was selling alcoholic products made doable again.
The first beer to be made available in cans was conducted by the Gottfried Krueger Brewing Company based out of Richmond Virginia in early in 1935. A sample size of 2000 cans were distributed with an approval rating over 90% by those who tried the canned beer. Earlier attempts were made before prohibition in 1909, but Gottfried Krueger succeeded because they found a way to prevent the beer from chemically mixing with the tin. They also succeeded in comparison to bottles because canned beverages did not require a deposit to be paid by the patron that a bottle required, and were easier for storage as well as easier to cool due to the tin material.
The canned beer introduction skyrocketed, with other brewing companies taking into account of the canned beer's success and creating their own canned beer products to meet the new craze. Today, canned beers may be found in practically every store that sells alcohol and continue to be popular drinks of choice for those today.
1. They built several cities with stone buildings and temples, as well as the colossal "heads" that are their notable legacy.
2. Zapotecs created one of the world's autochthonous civilizations.
3. The Chavin culture was very architectural and they built huge temples and buildings.
4. The Nazca culture had a highly advanced numeral system with place values.
They are all in the mountain time zone <span />