Answer:
Henry Ford was one of eight children born to William and Mary Ford. He was born on a farm near Dearborn, Michigan. For eight years he attended a one-room school when he wasn't helping on the farm with the harvest. At age 16 he left home on foot to find work in Detroit's machine shops.
Explanation:
The Tutsis were being targeted. Tutsi, being smaller in number, felt elite, and rose to power as tribal leaders and the rich upper class. The Hutu always were more like farmers and workers in Rwandan society.
In the 70s, fashion truly started becoming more individualistic than before which is a defining aspect of fashion that holds today, but many fads and trends pass in and out. The hippie style was very popular and available to poorer lovers of fashion. Power clothes like women's suits were also in vogue and a well known designer of them would be Karl Lagerfield who is still a popular designer today. Men's clothing stayed consistent throughout the decade with flared collars and pants. Fun dyed fake fur and odd colors were common even will the punk fashion movement started to kick off.
Unfortunately, many trends of the 70s were considered to be some of the ugliest in present opinions.
The fashion industry itself has no doubt changed drastically with the introduction of celebrity endorsement and social media, but the 70s was one of the first decades of fashion to becoming more like our present fashion industry.
Popular designers of the decade include: Vivienne Westwood, Diane von Furstenburg, Yves Saint Laurent, and Halston.
Answer:
He created the first usable versions of scissors, portable bridges, diving suits, a mirror-grinding machine similar to those used to make telescopes, and a machine to produce screws.
He also built some of the first odometers used to measure land speed and anemometers, for measuring wind speed.