Excessive interrogations and crosschecking from other family members was required of immigrants processed at angel island but not those processed at Ellis island.
<h3><u>Explanation: </u></h3>
The immigrants at Ellis Island were treated more fairly as compared to those that tried to immigrate through Angel Island. The interrogations at Ellis Island were small which were preceded by a minute’s worth of physical checking and evaluation, which needed to be passed to move onto the part where the inspector checked their documents and cross-questioned lightly.
The whole process took way less than it took on Angel Island. At Angel island, the physical evaluation process was the same, but they had to go through a gruelling amount and difficulty of questions, after which they were verified from any family members that already lived in America. Through Angel Island, the whole process of immigration took about months of preparation in advance, and any difference in the testimony of the family members and the applicant led to excessive difficulty in the procedure and risked deportation as well.
Both civil and criminal cases equally
I think it’s B because it makes more sense to me in a sentence
What is art?
Can we apply our concept of art to art of the past?
Can we apply our concept of art to art of different cultures? Is there one correct standard for judging art?
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
A relationship with another country based on less hostility is called "Détente."
This word has its origins in France and was applied to mean the diminish or release from tension. It was used during the Cold War years in which the Soviet Union and the United States competed in the arms race, the space race, and the spread/containment of Communism around the world.
Trying to ease tensions, on May 22, 1972, United States President Richard Nixon visited Moscow to have an official meeting with Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev. In that visit, both leaders signed the famous SALT agreement: the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks.