I hope I am understanding what you mean, if not, I apoligize.
So, first off, Whites could attend any school they please, all of their schools would be closer to their home and they would not have to travel far. For the Black community, they might have to travel a few hours to get to school each day, as the closest black school might be far away.
Second, white-only schools had better buildings. They were cleaner, they got the better funding from the state, they got higher quality education and the list goes on. Since each district determines the funding of the school, it would make sense that the white section would have more funding. Black people back then could not get super high-paying jobs, and the houses they could choose from within the black section were not very nice and neat. Making it in more of a poverty section, this meant less funding for the school.
I'd reccomend looking into Brown v. Board of Education too, since these topics can be closely related to each other. Notice the pictures below and the differences within the schools, the white school has proper desks, whereas the black one has only seats.
The primary reason for
t<span>he limited information available to archaeologist about early Native
American culture is their inability to record their history in tangible ways
like artifacts or remains of the houses etc; instead they passed on the
information orally. Their houses etc were made of mud or wood which by time
were affected by biodegrading and nothing was left behind. </span>
I believe the answer is: D. There are three economic classes: the rich, the poor, and the middle class.
The separation between these classes is based on their ownership of wealth&resources. The poor are those who barely have enough resources to keep living,
The middle class are those who can comfortably fulfil their basic needs while having a little bit of surplus that they can put into saving , while the Rich are those who had abundance of wealth & resources, to the point where they would not able to spend it in their lifetime.
He<span> coined the phrase "McCarthyism" in his </span>cartoon<span> for March 29, 1950, naming ... For four years</span>McCarthy<span> attacked communism, while in his </span>cartoons<span> Herb Block relentlessly attacked his heavy-handed tactics. ... up by Herb Block in a phrase: "If </span>you can<span>'t crush the commies, </span>you can<span> nail a neighbor." .... All </span>ways<span> to connect ...</span>