Your question does not tell us anything only where can storages be for arms it can be anywhere i guess
Movies, sports, and car racing were important entertainment activities for American's in the 1920s.
- <em>True</em><em>!</em><em>!</em>
The movement of goods from the port of Marseilles to London is as follows:
For Hanseatic: One has to start at Marseilles then go through Lyons, Paris, Cologne, then finally to Bruges and then they will reach London.
For Venetian: The trade route starts at Marseilles to Valencia, Cadiz, and then sail through the Atlantic Ocean and reach London.
Wells blames a system in which racist ideology and violence against blacks has become a norm.
She describes in her text that there is an "unwritten law" that whites in particular white women, are in danger when living surrounding by blacks. The lynchings are public and made into a media spectacle. This behavior supports the mob, encourages the mob, and escalates the violence taking place because it literally supported or at the very least no one speaks out against it.
Lynching in America became common following the passage of the Civil War amendments and the end of Reconstruction. To maintain power structure in states where whites were completely outnumbered by blacks, fear and violence ruled. Ida B. Wells was considered a "muckraker", a journalist who exposed the muck or dirt of society. She investigated and exposed the lynching culture of the South. Despite, the support and disgust by many Americans who read her work, no anti-lynching law ever went to effect.
<span>Five events leading to the German signing of an armistice included:
1. The collapse of Bulgaria
2. Turkey's surrender
3. The split of Austria-Hungary
4. Allies forcing a German retreat
5. A threat to the German homeland</span>