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lozanna [386]
3 years ago
10

Which statement does NOT describe a cultural change that occurred in the 1920s? CHOOSE ALL ANSWERS THAT ARE CORRECT.

History
1 answer:
antoniya [11.8K]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

The answer is D Laws supporting the theory of evolution were passed in many southern states.

Explanation:

Black musicians became popular with white audiences, specially with the rise of Jazz!

This might surprise you but Chicago had laws against women's bathing suits!! and some women got arrested over the issue!

And yes, law-abiding citizens did promote illegal liquor unintentionally.

But the Laws supporting the theory of evolution were passed in the 21 century, after the year 2000 most of the time!

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Although many Atlanta businesses had desegregated before the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Maddox's Pickrick remained stubbornly wedded to the segregationist Jim Crow policies. The passage of the act put Maddox on a collision course with the "forces of integration" he so ardently opposed. As a conspicuous symbol of segregationist defiance, the Pickrick became an immediate target of civil rights activists seeking to test the new law.

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stand at the Pickrick endeared him to many white Georgians who remained unwilling to relinquish segregation. Riding a wave of reaction to the Civil Rights Act, Maddox entered Georgia's 1966 gubernatorial contest and shocked many political observers by defeating the liberal former governor Ellis Arnall in the Democratic primary. This victory set the stage for a hard-fought campaign against textile heir Bo Callaway, the first credible Republican candidate for governor since Reconstruction. In a bizarre turn of events, Callaway won the popular vote, but because of a write-in campaign for Arnall, the Republican lacked a majority of votes. Following the Georgia constitution of the day, the legislature, controlled by Democrats, decided the election in favor of Maddox. Rumors that Maddox would return Georgia to a state of massive resistance against segregation proved unfounded. In fact, Maddox proved reasonably progressive on many racial matters. As governor he backed significant prison reform, an issue popular with many of the state's African Americans. He appointed more African Americans to government positions than all previous Georgia governors combined, including the first Black officer in the Georgia State Patrol and the first Black official to the state Board of Corrections. Though he never finished high school, Maddox greatly increased funding for the University System of Georgia.

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