If your question is referring to a popular form of entertainment for the Americans at home during World War II, then the correct answer is music from Swing bands, Radio, movies, and musical plays.
The Government of the United States considered important to maintain the moral of the citizens during World War II. For instance, the U.S. Office of War Information controlled the features of the movies in order to maintain the hight spirit of the people. U.S. citizens also liked going to the Dance Halls or Ballrooms in order to listen to music and dance with the music of famous orchestras like the Glenn Miller’s orchestra.
<span> The </span>Albany Plan of Union<span> was a </span>plan<span> to place the British North American colonies under a more centralized government. ... Representatives of the colonial governments adopted the </span>Albany Plan<span> during a larger meeting known as the </span>Albany<span> Congress.</span>
The oldest of eight children, Ida B. Wells was born in Holly Springs, Mississippi. Her parents, who were very active in the Republican Party during Reconstruction, died in a yellow fever epidemic in the late 1870s. Wells attended Rust College and then became a teacher in Memphis, Tennessee. Shortly after she arrived, Wells was involved in an altercation with a white conductor while riding the railroad. She had purchased a first-class ticket, and was seated in the ladies car when the conductor ordered her to sit in the Jim Crow (i.e. black) section, which did not offer first-class accommodations. She refused and when the conductor tried to remove her, she "fastened her teeth on the back of his hand." Wells was ejected from the train, and she sued. She won her case in a lower court, but the decision was reversed in an appeals court.
Church officials working in the inquisition burned alive both Renaissance scholars and leaders such as Corpernicus, Martin Luther, and Galileo Galilei.