ww1

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Across
  1. 2. beans, beets, cabbage, carrots, kale, lettuce, peas, tomatoes, turnips, squash, and Swiss chard.
  2. 3. guns or gun parts, explosives, magnets, knives, wire, torches, tools, chemicals, razor blades, alcohol, matches, and lighters.
  3. 4. Germany began competing with the British for having the largest navy in the world, as well as developing new weapons like poison gas and submarines, the latter being a great tool in surprise attacks.
  4. 8. someone who has no legal right to be there or who has broken the law
  5. 9. This five-day work stoppage in 1919 was called in Seattle to protest World War I wage controls.
  6. 11. Revolutions of 1848 on the European continent, the establishment of a unified Italian state in 1861, and the formation of new nation-states in central and eastern Europe after World War I.
  7. 12. included a dozen ocean liner ships and were typically fast and nimble.
  8. 13. the U.S. Uncle Sam recruitment poster shows a patriotic Uncle Sam stating, "I want you," uses symbolism to represent American strength and the importance to serve the country.
Down
  1. 1. The French Revolution was motivated similarly and legitimatized the ideas of self-determination on that Old World continent.
  2. 5. rights to the cannabis industry, financial payment, social service benefits,
  3. 6. the Peace of Westphalia of 1648 which ended the Eighty Years War between Spain and the Netherlands and the Thirty Years War in Germany.
  4. 7. healthcare and ultilities
  5. 10. when someone hacks into a computer network to steal information.