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Question:

I have ONE day in Washington, D.CWhat MUST I see?

Because of flight arrangements, I arrive in D.Cat 06h00 one morning and depart at 06h00 the following morningApart from the White House, what should I make a point of seeing? I've never been to Washington before.

Answer:

Firstly convert cm into feet before any maths much easier that way 1 foot 12 inches1 inch 2.54 cm So one 1 foot 12 inch x 2.54 cm/inch 30.48 cm per foot Now width 4 cm/ 30.48 (cm/ft) A Ok you have to do some of the work else you will never learnNow length 5.7 cm/ 30.48 (cm/ft) B Area A x B Cost of area area/ 200 sq.ft x $4.10 Work out how many moles of Al are in your sample No of moles weight of Al / the molecular mass of Al (you are given these values) Number of atoms of Al in sample Noof moles of Al x 6.02 x (10 to the 23rd) Cost per atom cost of your area / number of atoms of Al in sample
Theoretically, that problem could only work if the sheet had a layer of only 1 atom because it has no volume.
2 to 4 6 parts Windors high +3 - coke Yep thats right.
That's a hard question to answer, simply because there's too much must-see stuff in Washington to see in a single dayFor cramming as much as possible into a day, I'd recommend hitting the MallThis has all the followingI've put my comments about them after each oneLincoln Memorial - After the Washington Monument, this is the most elegant of the various memorials, and despite the crowds tends to be a quiet area allowing for contemplationIf I was going to pick just one place in D.Cto visit, this would be itVietnam Veterans Memorial - A list of people killed in the war on black granite is, to put it mildly, somberTo be honest, it did very little for meKorean War Veterans Memorial - Easily the best of the three war memorials on the mallWhereas the Vietnam memorial seems fixated on the negative aspects of war and the WW2 memorial seems fixated on the positive, the Korean memorial, with its statues of soldiers on patrol, seems to do a good job of saying This is war, draw your own conclusionsWorld War Two Memorial - This memorial is so triumphant that it becomes almost disturbingOne critic once described the monument as something you might expect the Nazis to have come up withWhile I find that a bit strong, I see his pointWashington Memorial - Offers a great view of the capital in four directionsThe bit about the stones in the elevator staff is interesting, tooThis would be second after the Lincoln Memorial on my list of things to seeVarious Smithsonian Museums - American History, Natural History, Gallery of Art, Hishhorn (modern art), American Indian, Arts and Industries, Air and Space, Freer Gallery (East Asian art), Sackler Gallery (Asian art), African ArtGo to the ones whose subject matter interests you the most; my personal favorites were the Freer Gallery and the National Museum of Natural History (dinosaurs!)Capitol - For whatever reasons, I haven't been to the Capitol in so long I can't comment on it.

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