Answer:
B. La Salle?s ship
Explanation:
I watched the vid and if you look up the name it shows a ship hope you get a 100 :3 (you can do it)
1) 7 July 1937: Clash near the Marco Polo Bridge, close to Beijing
2) 10 May 1940: Germans launch offensive in the West
3) 12 August 1940: Battle of Britain begins
4) 22 June 1941: Launching of Operation Barbarossa
5) 7 December 1941: Attack on Pearl Harbor
6) 4 June 1942: Battle of Midway
7) 5 July 1943: Germans launch battle of Kursk
8) 6 June 1944: D-Day
9) 23–26 October 1944: Battle of Leyte Gulf
10) 9 August 1945: Dropping of second atom bomb, on Nagasaki
I hope this helps!
Answer:
After people were asked not to sit in the seat behind the drivers in honor of Rosa Parks' fight for the Civil Rights movement, some people did actually sit in that seat. Making the assumption that these people were prejudiced or racist is an example of the correspondence bias.
Explanation:
On December 1st, 1955, Rosa Parks was commuting back home by bus, when the driver asked her and three other African Americans to stand up from their seats so that white passengers could seat there. While the three other passengers complied with the driver's order, Rosa Parks denied to do so, which ended up with her arrest, and later on with a social movement that decided to boycott the buses in Montgomery during Rosa Parks' trial. Although most of the people decided to leave the first seat behind the driver empty in honor of Rosa Parks, some of them actually seat on it anyways. Assuming that these people were racists is an example of a correspondence bias. A correspondence bias is the tendency to draw inferences about a person's personality based on a unique and specific observed behavior. There are many circumstances and reasons as to why that people sat on the seat that was meant to be empty that would not make them instantly perceived as racist or prejudiced, but assuming that they are based on that one action would be an example of a correspondence bias.
Jumonville's murder in captivity incited a strong French response, and Washington was unable to defend his makeshift Fort Necessity from French forces led by Jumonville's half-brother. Washington surrendered on July 4 and signed a confession—in French, which he could not read—to Jumonville's assassination.
To protect the individual rights of the citizens and the individual states