She never learnd how to talk but she did become a very good writer. SHe also tought many deaf pepole how to do sing laguage.
Brainliest plz? :3
The correct answer is D. along the Mississippi River. It is important to note that it lies on the west of the Mississippi River tallgrass prairie states and east of the Rocky Mountains in both the United States and Canada. This area is massive and most of it is covered is what is mentioned above, in prairie, steppe and grassland. It runs from Canada, all the way through a part of the United States and just stops on the border of Mexico. The Canadian provinces it goes through are: Alberta, Manitoba and Saskatchewan. In the United States, it runs through Colorado, Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas and Wyoming. The central plains do not encompass all these states, but rather has some parts in these states.
The answer is B. Federalist.
I hope this helps! :)
Answer:
Explanation:
Background
First of all, you have to know who accused Hughes and of what. Hughes was one of the literary figures of the Harlem Renaissance.
As a poet, he saw his job, I would guess, as a trumpeter pointing out what was wrong with America. In that regard he was a fore runner to Martin Luther King. He (Hughes) did not preach violence. He merely testified before the Senate un-american activities Committee. His poetry came out when he tried to describe himself to lead council. Hughes was asked if he was influenced by the Communist party.
Hughes said yes, but his mind was like a sponge -- it absorbed material from everything he encountered. This was not what lead council was looking for. Like most lawyers, he was looking for a black and white answer and he wasn't getting it.
One of the blackest marks against America was the House of Unamerican activities. It flew in the face of everything the 1st Amendment stood for. So yes, Hughes had a perfect right to speak. He was not like Malcolm X or any of the other violent leaders of Civil Rights. He was a poet seeking answers. When has that become unamerican?
The start of the American Industrial Revolution<span> is often attributed to Samuel Slater who opened the first </span>industrial<span> mill in the United States in 1790 with a design that borrowed heavily from a British model. Slater's pirated technology greatly increased the speed with which cotton thread could be spun into yarn.</span>