Want this question answered?
First, you do some research. There are many wonderful historical newspapers that will take you back to the era you are interested in. Find out who the important people were. Decide which subjects or topics your diary-writer might have cared about: for example, if you were adopting the persona of a young teenager from 1964, her diary entry might have been about how she saw the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show. Once you have your time period selected and you know what subjects a person of that time cared about, you can begin to write the diary entry.
could it be ENTRY ??
mr
the sinking of a ship
Economic gain.
Armenians and Arabs
it is bigg and strong and it had an influence to the countries
mine only had central had to install remote entry afterwards mine only had central had to install remote entry afterwards
It brought about the entry of the US into WW2, and the defeat and surrender of Japan.
With the news of the US's entry into WW 2, Winston Churchill was confident that the power of the Axis nations was doomed. He believed the application of overwhelming force that the US would bring to the war would defeat the Axis powers.
...to Defeat Germany first.
In World War II the chief Allied Powers were Great Britain, France (except during the German occupation, 1940-44), the Soviet Union (after its entry in June 1941), the United States (after its entry on Dec. 8-11, 1941), and China.
America's entry into the war on the Allied side spelled the end for the Central Powers. The industrial might of America resupplied the British, French, Belgians, and Italians even before the vast manpower became available to reinforce their battle weary forces.
Baptism
1. The first world war was first and foremost a battle of attrition - that is to say, a game of who could hold out the longest (who could sustain their army, but lose the most men, spend the most money, expend the most ammunition and fuel). After the entry of the U.S. into the war, and the Second Battle of the Marne (15 July to 6 August 1918) the Germans and the other Central Powers realized that they were doomed to lose the war of attrition, and simply couldnt' replace the casualties they were taking. 2. Britain's formidable navy choked Germany and its allies of munitions, fuel and food. They simply couldn't hold out. German civilians were on the verge of starvation. 3. The invention of a successful Tank broke the stalemate of Trench warfare, and had a hugely demoralizing effect on the Central powers. The Germans never built tanks in any serious numbers.
the Avengers
Invade Europe and defeat Germany.