Answer:
Before slavery became an issue, it is socially acceptable for American people to see that people from a certain race or ethnicity are inferior over the other.
They use that as a justification for all horrible things that they did to these minorities. For example, They enslaved the Black people, heavily overwork Mexican and Asian people on their labor, massacre the native american people to steal their land, etc.
As industrial revolution came into united states, more American people realized that they would no longer need slavery as their labors. They can use machinery to increase their production instead.
This led to a new wave of progressive movement that advocated for the Abolishment of slavery. It opened up people's eyes that they've been using fellow human being as a tool for production and they aware they need to took drastic measure to give them freedom. This eventually led to the civil war which won by the union and force the southern states to gave up slavery.
But the movement didn't stop there. People believe that US faced other social issues that needed to be addressed. So the progressive movement continue to brought attention to problems such as giving women's right to vote, providing legal citizenship for the ex-slaves, Providing workers with minimum wage, etc.
When a Spanish expedition headed by the Genoese explorer Christopher Columbus <span>sailed west to find a new trade route to the Far East but inadvertently landed in what came to be known to Europeans as the "New World".</span>
Answer: how do you want us to help ???????
Explanation:
The grant available to third- or fourth-year college students majoring in physical, life, or computer sciences is the SMART Grant.
Two grant programs based on need were created by The Higher Education Reconciliation Act of 2005 for complementing the <em>Federal Pell Grant Program</em>:
- The first is called ACG (Academic Competitiveness Grants). Undergraduates from first and second year who fulfilled a rigurous high school curriculum can be awarded with it.
- The second is called SMART (National Science and Mathematics Access to Retain Talent Grants). Undergraduates from third, fourth and fifth year majoring in technical fields, critical foreign languages, or who are part of a qualifying liberal arts program can be awarded with it.