The second alternative is correct (B).
During the Great Depression the film industry became the great highlight of the arts.
The 1930s and 1940s were considered the Golden Age of Cinema. The technologies developed at the time made the films more realistic and cinema was replacing the Theater in the position of main source of entertainment.
G<u>oing to the movies became a social event, so people, tired of the effects of the Great Depression, used the film sections as a source of leisure and socialization, which was good for the minds of people in financial depression.</u>
Answer:
The two ways that Michael can get a better price is...
Explanation:
1. He can get a new used one, which means that the person selling it only used it barely and it's good as new.
2. He can find discount codes or find the best deal, which means he can do his research and find the best deal so he can purchase his gaming system.
Answer:
Explanation:
The cartoon refers to Roosevelt's international policy in Latin America as well as the handling of the Venezuela Crisis of 1902–1903.
He has claimed it is necessary to involve police duty and power in order to reach welfare. His famous quote about foreign policy states <em>"Speak softly and carry a big stick; you will go far"</em> - <u>which means be intelligent and soft-spoken but do not fret to take violent actions if necessary.</u>
From this quote came the name of Roosevelt's foreign politics called <em>Big Stick Ideology </em>or <em>Big Stick Diplomacy</em>. <u>This cartoon refers to it, naming the stick 'diplomacy', which is a metaphor for Roosevelt's aggressive policy in international relations in Latin America. </u>
The most important qualities that we can find in Moses are perseverance and wisdom. Over the facts we know of his life through the Bible, we can see that even being a baby, when he was left to his fate in the River Nile, his little body had to persevere beyond the inclemency of weather and hunger. Beeing a young man, he was a good son and a beloved brother within his egyptian family. Later, when he discover his Jewish origins he takes responsibility over the suffering of his own family and his people, and <em>beyond his own privileges and comforts</em> as an egiptian prince, he accepts to carry on with the demands that lay over him. Along times and events, he always persuits <em>wisdom and justice</em> and finds the way to live according to his principles and believings.