The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although the question doesn't include options we can say the following.
What describes costs associated with enforcing the Sherman antitrust act was "time and money spent to prosecute cases that were often decided in favor of big business."
The Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 was the first piece of legislation in the United States that tried to put a stop on monopolistic practices form big corporations in America. It prohibited the formation of monopolies. Instead, this legislation supported competition between companies to offer better prices to consumers. The fair competition had to be the name of the game.
Answer:
Option "C", The decision in Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
Explanation:
This Supreme Court case is famous for the doctrine known as "separate but equal", in which public facilities would remain segregated just as long as the segregated facilities were equal in quality.
Answer:
what is the question?
Explanation:
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I believe it's Ziggurats, because it was a Mesopotamian religious architecture; and built on raised grounds
Answer: The poem “The Buttonhook”, was created by Mary Jo Salter and it was published in 1982. Salter was born in 1954 and started writing poems around the 80’s, 90’s and early 2000’s. Salter wrote about the immigration process that took place in the 1920’s. She wrote this poem after she was inspired by a photo showing the eye inspection examiners gave to immigrants. One of the immigration stations was located on Ellis island. An infectious disease called Trachoma was an eye disease that often lead to blindness and it was quite common around this time period. To be cautious, the U.S government decided to examine immigrants for contagious diseases or stop them from entering America. To do the inspectors would pull back the eye lid using buttonhooks in order to check for the disease. This poem is presented though third person point of view. First the poem starts off by talking about how President Roosevelt viewed the inspection then the focus of the poem moves to the authors grandmother. The poet imagines the experience her grandmother would have had at the inspection. In the poem her grandmother is a young child observingher surroundings and waiting in the line to be cleared. Her grandmother is familiar with English and feels she can teach her parents, since they only speak Italian. The grandmother is also with her mom and she witnesses an inspector examine her mother's eye with a buttonhook. The inspector then went on to check her face and at this moment she felt that she has been blessed to come to America and that she can make it through the examination to see her father in New York.
Explanation: