The company management strategy that was used to suppress the Homestead Strike was cutting the wage earnings of roughly 300 some employees. Carnegie Steel was the company that came up with this plan.
False they mainly had 5 - 10
Hi!
The <u>answer would have to be B, small, colored tiles</u>.
To find out the correct answer you first need to know the definition of mosaic. A mosaic is defined as <em>a picture or pattern produced by arranging together small colored pieces of hard material, such as stone, tile, or glass</em>. From it's defintion we can see that mosaics are only made of tile, stone or glass, ruling out all the posibilities given except B. <u>Therefore, color tiles is the answer (b)</u>.
They were trying to achieve self-determination
Answer:
Obierika represents a foil to the character of Okonkwo, his own best friend. And through the two men, we see both sides of the story and also presents a critical voice for the character of Okonkwo and his strict belief in his tradition and customs.
Explanation:
The character of <u>Obierika </u>in Chinua Achebe's <em>Things Fall Apart</em> is presented as a contrast to the character of Okonkwo. The main theme of community, belonging, and tradition revolves around the whole story while also dealing with the emergence of the British in the African nation in an attempt to "civilize" them.
Though the two characters are close friends, they seem to at times be at loggerheads. At the time of the 'sacrifice' of the adopted son Ikemefuna in <u>chapter 8</u>, Obierika did not go along with the others for which Okonkwo is angry with him. But his best friend told him <em>"If I were you, I would have stayed at home. What you have done will not please the earth. It is the kind of action for which the goddess wipes out whole families"</em>.
Again, in <u>Chapter 20</u> when the missionaries came to their village during Okonkwo's exile, Obierika also seemed to disagree with this intrusion. But unlike Okonkwo who acts impulsively, Obierika thinks before he actually does things. And it is such that when Okonkwo vehemently opposes the missionaries and their 'supposed claims of bringing change' to the people, Obierika did not disagree like his friend. he did not accept the foreigners' move but he also did not act rashly either. And when he questioned the rise of the White man's power in his village, Obierika calmly explained to him the events of the period he was exiled. The accepting manner in which Obierika tells him about how the White man said <em>"our customs are bad; and our own brothers who have taken up his religion also says that our customs are bad"</em> shows his resignation in trying to oppose the influx of the new people and change.