Explanation:
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The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

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Why Does Gatsby Tell Nick About His Life
In The Great Gatsby, why does Gatsby tell Nick about his life?Does Nick believe him?
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Quick Answer
Nick is one of the few people who shows a genuine interest in becoming friends with Gatsby, and Gatsby wants Nick's approval. For this reason, he feels a desire for Nick to know him. But Gatsby also wants Nick to believe the wealthy persona and background that Gatsby has invented about himself as a way of making it real.
Answer:
The Navajo were ordered to keep their wartime jobs secret. It wasn’t until 1968 that the Navajo Code Talkers program was declassified by the military. The military did not order the Comanche Code Talkers to keep silent about their jobs in the war
Explanation:
During World War II, some 350,000 women served in the U.S. Armed Forces, both at home and abroad. They included the Women'sAirforce Service Pilots, who on March 10, 2010, were awarded theprestigious Congressional Gold Medal. Meanwhile, widespread male enlistment left gaping holes in the industrial labor force.Mar 5, 2010
The following items determine whether a good a service has elastive demand:
C. Availability of substitutes for a good or service
A. If the good is a necessity of luxury.
Subsequent to World War II, the development of nuclear weaponry, like those used at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, soared in anticipation of the Cold War. Furthermore, because resource and consumer production were converted to suit the needs of a wartime economy, citizens protected and increased savings for the time when the manufacture of cars boomed instead of military tanks. Following the war, the United States of America experienced a dramatic increase in the quality of the economy. It was continuously stimulated through the purchase of items that were available in the late '30s, for example.
The technology of society was also propelled further than ever before; the idea of colored television toyed with the minds of viewers and advertisements became incredibly popular and effective in marketing. New inventions crowded shelves as shoppers became increasingly aware of the benefits that 'Hoovers,' or vacuums, provided in the home, for instance.