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Stock Market Crash of 1929
Workers flood the streets in a panic following the Black Tuesday stock market crash on Wall Street, New York City, 1929
Hulton Archive/Archive Photos/Getty Images
Remembered today as "Black Tuesday," the stock market crash of October 29, 1929, was neither the sole cause of the Great Depression nor the first crash that month. The market, which had reached record highs that very summer, had begun to decline in September.
On Thursday, October 24, the market plunged at the opening bell, causing a panic. Though investors managed to halt the slide, just five days later on "Black Tuesday" the market crashed, losing 12 percent of its value and wiping out $14 billion of investments. Two months later, stockholders had lost more than $40 billion dollars. Even though the stock market regained some of its losses by the end of 1930, the economy was devastated. America truly entered what is called the Great Depression.
East Berlin, the capital of the new communist regime of Eastern Germany was not happy with the fact that West Berlin was occupied by the US, Britain and France. This area was the only one behind the Iron Curtain that the Western powers could control Berlin.
Well, the amendment made alcohol worse than it already was. People had to go to illegal ways to gain alcohol, making mobs popular. Alcohol poisoning was also extreme, and there are many other factors I cannot think of right now :P
William Howard Taft was in charge of the Republican Party. Theodore Rosevelt in charge of progressive. And Woodrow Wilson I charge of the Democrat party.
Answer:
235 over 100 = 47 over 20 = 2 and 7 over 20
Explanation:
The 0.35 makes the decimal to be
35bhundredths. Writing the complete decimal value gives 235 over 100, which is of course an improper fraction. This fraction however can be reduced or simplified by dividing out common factors. Both 235 and 100 have a common factor of 5, so view the image for the example.