Answer:
1. Discovering a cave is an ordinary event as such discoveries are so frequent that hardly nobody pays heed to them.
2. The paintings on the walls of Lascaux cave depict <em>"people hunting animals, such as bison or wild cats. Other images depict birds and, most noticeably, horses, which appear in more than 300 wall images, by far outnumbering all other animals."</em>
Explanation:
In the given passage, the speaker talks of how caves often discovered are not a strange or extraordinary event. The answers to the given questions are as follows-
1. Discovering a cave is an ordinary event as such discoveries are so frequent that hardly anybody pays heed to them.
2. The paintings on the walls of Lascaux cave depict <em>"people hunting animals, such as bison or wild cats. Other images depict birds and, most noticeably, horses, which appear in more than 300 wall images, by far outnumbering all other animals."</em>
Great poem. definitely needs some rhyming. i have an idea for just one of your lines
“Why is being me, a crime to you?
Does my skin color sicken them too?”
also maybe
“We all shed the same tears
We all have the same fears
But people treat me different
all across the hemisphere”
Explanation:
The racism of this film is as mysteriously invisible as it is systematic and vicious. It is a mixture of old-fashioned racism that has a long history in U.S. movies with racism of a new style, a particularly 1970s shade.
Rocky scolds the bartender not for his racism, but for questioning the champ, and walks off.
that scene, which took place in the original 1976 film, might have simply been a poignant acknowledgment of a persistent wound in the ego of certain white sports fans: the absence of a white American heavyweight boxing champion. Instead that wound became the fuel for the Rocky series, which sees a black boxer humbled by a white challenger in every single movie.