As a victim of the Indian attacks, Mary Rowlandson wrote a vivid description (her short book, "A Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson") of the eleven weeks and five days she spent living with the Native Americans.
Answer:
A. It would allow the delegates to speak openly and honestly with each other
D. It would prevent the delegates from being pressured by the public
Explanation:
A. It would allow the delegates to speak openly and honestly with each other
[] With the secrecy rule, the delegates could speak openly since this would not reach the public. It helped to let them make decisions since there was less pressure from the public (ties into option D).
D. It would prevent the delegates from being pressured by the public
[] If the public didn't know what was going on, they could not pressure
The second and third options do not make sense because the delegates wanted everyone to attend (they also wanted the votes to be as unanimous as possible) and they were not planning specific military strategies at this time.
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I hope this is what you are looking for, but if not - comment! I will edit and update my answer accordingly.
- Heather
The answer is gunpowder and square sails
Immigrants suffered many stereotypes, they worked for minimum wage plush they had to compete against other people for a job. If I recall amendments 13-15 basically gave them rights but government exploited the rights and found ways to give them unfair treatment, for example one of the amendments gave them equal rights to those of Americans, therefore that means they would have the same punishments etc.
Religion and agriculture
Many of the Egyptians' religious observances were centered on their observations of the environment, the Nile and agriculture. They used religion as a way to explain natural phenomena, such as the cyclical flooding of the Nile and agricultural yields.