Answer:
I hope this helps
Explanation:
The situation when I had recieved poor service was when I went to a Hampton hotel. When I arrived the front desk clerk did not greet me, she acted as if I wasn't standing there until I got her attention then she rudely said "Can I help you?" Then I told her that I had a reservation and I wondered if my room was ready, she says " Let me check" so I waited and my room was not yet ready so I had to wait a while longer. The staff should have been trained with the fifteen five rule, meaning when you see a guest at least 15 feet away you make eye contact and smile and at 5 feet you greet with good morning or good afternoon
Wanted to avenge the defeat of his dad xerxes
Answer:
The answer is A, To guarantee the rights of the people.
Explanation:
The French Revolution was all about liberty, equality, and fraternity.
Answer:
In 1974 there was a power summit meeting near Vladivostok, U.S.S.R. between President Gerald Ford of the U.S. and Leonid Breznev of the Soviet Union. After the meeting Breznev went to his waiting train. The train however did not depart. The journalist and others who traveling on the train with Breznev were not told the reason for the delay even though the delay extended through the night. The next day they were told that Breznev had suffered a stroke. Breznev's personal physician, Mikhail Kosarev, said the problem was an overdose of his sleeping medication rather than a stroke. The symptoms were similar: slurred speech and muscle weakness. Kosareve said that if effect Breznev was a drug addict during this period and had merely miscalculated his dosage. It was not uncommon for the top leadership in totalitarian states to be addicted to sleeping potions. Mao and the top leadership of the Communist Party in China had been addicted to sleeping pills by the time of the Long March. Totalitarian leaders have a hard time relaxing and getting to sleep.
Explanation:
doubt this will help sorry :(
Answer:
The internment camps ended in 1945 following a Supreme Court decision. In Endo v. the United States, it was ruled that the War Relocation Authority “has no authority to subject citizens who are acknowledged as loyal to its leave procedure.”