Before the lender found out she was black, she was
offered a loan almost immediately.
<span>However, when the lender learned that she was in fact
black, things took a bad turn. First, higher terms of the loan were imposed on
her. Second, she was told the loan was a risk due to declining prices in the
neighborhood. Third, she was suddenly asked to pay more and offered a less attractive
loan.</span>
Answer:
embedded effects of racism
Explanation:
The "Stand in the Schoolhouse Door" was a landmark event during the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s. After the Brown v. Board of Education case in 1954, the Supreme Court ruled that segregated schools were unconstitutional. In early 1963, African American students Vivian Malone and James Hood applied to join the University of Alabama, but when they arrived there on June 11 to enroll in the school, Governor George Wallace used his own body to block them from entering the auditorium. President John F. Kennedy summoned the National Guard to command Wallace to step aside, which he finally did after several hours. Malone and Hood then proceeded to finalize their enrollment process to join the university. The National Guard stayed on the university's grounds for the following days, fearing violence by white supremacists. Wallace's actions, which he considered part of his policy of "segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever" are considered a clear manifestation of the embedded effects of racism as, almost a century after the end of the Civil War, public facilities were still segregated in several southern states, and racism was very widespread among all levels of society.
<span>an example of one state's statute dealing with petty larceny: Petit larceny defined; penalty.</span>
The answer for this question is
<span>The essay explores how the different elements of the poem combine to create an atmosphere of doom with “the chain of events and the foreboding of the repeated word ‘Nevermore’" (Poe Studies/Dark Romanticism: History Theory, Interpretation, 163).</span>