Answer:
C. Millie and Vanessa live two blocks from one another.
Explanation:
This is the only answer that doesn't use first person pronouns. The others all use I or we, indicating it is being said from someone involved, while this uses names and no first person pronouns.
Answer:
your answer is 3000 if it does not help ill look at it more
Explanation:
During the 1920s, American generally became more nativist. This is not to say that there had been no nativism in the US prior to that decade. However, In the 1920s nativism became more prevalent.
Since the 1880s,there had been a flood of "new immigrants" to the United States. These immigrants were " new" because they came from different regions than previous immigrants had. These new immigrants came from southern and Eastern Europe rather than from northern and Western Europe. Many of the new immigrants were Jewish. Many others were catholic and Catholics were still viewed with suspicion by many Americans. Finally, many of the new immigrants held to radical political beliefs such as socialism and anarchism.
After World War I,a backlash against these immigrants arose. This was due partly to the recent Bolshevik Revolution in Russia wish raised fear of a similar Revolution in the United States. It was also due in part to the changes that were occurring as American culture (particularly in cities) moved into "jazz age". Many traditional-minded Americans felt that the immigrants were dangerously political and identified the immigrant-laden cities with the bad new cultural developments.
It was for these reasons that anti-immigrant sentiment strengthened. This is seen most clearly in the immigration restriction acts of the 1920s. These laws were meant to reduce the flow of "new immigrants" and to encourage immigration by Northern and Western Europeans instead.
Hope this helped.
Tobacco was colonial Virginia's most successful cash crop. The tobacco that the first English settlers encountered in Virginia—the Virginia Indians' Nicotiana rustica—tasted dark and bitter to the English palate; it was John Rolfe who in 1612 obtained Spanish seeds, or Nicotiana tabacum, from the Orinoco River valley—seeds that, when planted in the relatively rich bottomland of the James River, produced a milder, yet still dark leaf that soon became the European standard. Over the next 160 years, tobacco production spread from the Tidewater area to the Blue Ridge Mountains, especially dominating the agriculture of the Chesapeake region. Beginning in 1619 the General Assembly put in place requirements for the inspection of tobacco and mandated the creation of port towns and warehouses. This system assisted in the development of major settlements at Norfolk, Alexandria, and Richmond. Tobacco formed the basis of the colony's economy: it was used to purchase the indentured servants and slaves to cultivate it, to pay local taxes and tithes, and to buy manufactured goods from England. Promissory notes payable in tobacco were even used as currency, with the cost of almost every commodity, from servants to wives, given in pounds of tobacco. Large planters usually shipped their tobacco directly to England, where consignment agents sold it in exchange for a cut of the profits, while smaller planters worked with local agents who bought their tobacco and supplied them with manufactured goods. In the mid-seventeenth century, overproduction and shipping disruptions related to a series of British wars caused the price of tobacco to fluctuate wildly. Prices stabilized again in the 1740s and 1750s, but the financial standings of small and large planters alike deteriorated throughout the 1760s and into the 1770s. By the advent of the American Revolution (1775–1783), some planters had switched to growing food crops, particularly wheat; many more began to farm these crops to support the war effort. In the first year of fighting, tobacco production in Virginia dropped to less than 25 percent of its annual prewar output.