Answer:
Young African-American male training to become a mechanic
Explanation:
Booker T. Washington defended that African Americans should follow vocational education that would give blacks more opportunities for economic security than higher education or political office for example. During the “Atlanta Compromise” speech, Washington defended that African Americans should work hard, earn respect and acquire vocational training.
Answer:
5.When the skater has high PE it the skater is slow, when the skater has low PE it's going fast. When the skater has high KE the skater is going fast, when it has low KE he's going slow
6. If you double the speed of an object, the kinetic energy increases by four times.If you double the mass of an object, you double the kinetic energy. potential energy increases as weight and height increases
7.The skater won't stop untill he runs out of kenetic energy.It depends on the potential energy to detemines how far it will go.What would slow you down is if the track was long,so eventually it would were out the energy
Hope it helps ;3
d stop the spread of comunism
For 13 it’s Jews! I need 20 letters so I’m righting these words
Answer:
In accordance with the information found on the Wisonsin Longitudinal Study, and published in the NCBI website, under the article name: "Long-Term effects of the Death of a Child on Parent´s Adjustment in Midlife", the answer to the question would be that parents during midlife who have experienced the loss of a child, either due to war, or traffic accidents, tend to experience all the effects, which are similar to those of PTSD, for around 18.5 years, especially when looking at parents who were 53, or older, and had lost a child at some point.
Explanation:
The loss of a child on parents is always hard, and the effects of it on almost all aspects of a couple´s life, are enormous. Most of these couples, whether young, or old, experience PTSD-like symptoms, but they may last for a long period of time, and sometimes, may become disastrous for a relationship. The Wisconsin Longitudinal Study, in fact, found evidence that shows that parents at midlife, who have experienced the loss of a child, especially to tragic, or violent, circumstances, will experience the effects for a much longer period of time, and cope much less well with the situation, than parents during their younger years.