Answer:
The <u><em>Cotton </em></u>Club
Explanation:
The Cotton Club was a nightclub in New York (United States) that remained open during Prohibition in the 1920s.
It was founded in 1920 in Harlem, in the black neighborhood of Manhattan, although they generally denied admission to African-American consumers. The club was opened by heavyweight champion Jack Johnson, and smuggler and gangster Owney Madden acquired the club in 1923 while incarcerated at Sing Sing and changed the name of the club to Cotton Club.
It was a mythical club at the time since it was the showcase of the main musical novelties, such as Fletcher Henderson, Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Bessie Smith, Cab Calloway, The Nicholas Brothers, Ella Fitzgerald, Louis Armstrong, Nat King Cole, Billie Holiday or Ethel Waters. On Sundays were frequent "Celebrities Nights", attended by prominent people from politics and culture, such as Jimmy Durante, George Gershwin, Al Jolson, Mae West, Irving Berlin, Eddie Cantor, the mayor of New York Jimmy Walker or other celebrities.
In any country or state, all the nature- gifted things are considered as the parts of natural heritage. ... As a whole, natural heritage is the gift of nature whereas cultural heritage is associated with the man-made things and the things which were found during the different phases of human civilisation.
George Washington
served from 1789-1797
as the first President of the U.S.A.
Answer:
Israel
Explanation:
Palestine and Lebanon are not Jewish states, Jerusalem is not a state, it is a Capitol. The U.S. recognized Israel after The Holocaust.