led an expedition to explore the headwaters of the Arkansas and Red Rivers and to report on Spanish settlements in the New Mexico area.
I believe it would be the shared experiences dilute traditional cultures. It can’t be the 2nd or 3rd answer because those are positives and it is asking for a negative effect, but I don’t think it is the 4th answer either because I don’t believe that being able to experience the same things would eliminate a culture entirely. Yes it could dilute it because we’d be almost overcoming cultural barriers by connecting through shared experiences throughout the world, but the effects of shared experiences don’t translate to things like genocides or systemic discrimination in an attempt to eliminate a culture.
Answer:
Colleges were scared of what would happen if the group got stronger; liquor companies were scared women would pass prohibition, other were afraid that they would have power in general because they can affect governmental decisions. Many men simply feared the changing role of women in society and while the textile industry worried that women would vote for restrictions on child labor
Texas lost its boundary claims in New Mexico, but the Congress compensated Texas with $10 million.
<span>Assuming that this is referring to the same full question that was posted before with this segment, <span>the correct response would be no, since the person this statement is referring to would be Mark Twain. Crane was more known for impressionist works of literature. </span></span>