Answer:
I would say C
Changes in women’s labor force participation in the 20th century
February 16, 2000
In 1950 about one in three women participated in the labor force. By 1998, nearly three of every five women of working age were in the labor force. Among women age 16 and over, the labor force participation rate was 33.9 percent in 1950, compared with 59.8 percent in 1998.
Labor force participation rates of women by age, 1950 and 1998
[Chart data—TXT]
Changes in labor force participation varied by age group. The biggest increase in labor force participation was among those age 25 to 34—their rate more than doubled, from a level of 34.0 percent in 1950 to 76.3 percent in 1998. Also, in 1950 women age 16 to 24 had the highest labor force participation rate (43.9 percent); in 1998 women age 35 to 44 had the highest rate (77.1 percent), followed closely by those age 25 to 34 (76.3 percent) and those age 45 to 54 (76.2 percent).
The
young people of Northampton experimented an explosion of religious enthusiasm.
Many men and young women in New England could not get married
because the population in rapids growth of the New England left little available earth, what hindered that the
young people could sustain for if same. Of an age to get married, but tightened
under their parents' authority, the men and the women in their last years of
adolescence and twenty years they often devote him to the idleness, gossips and
sexual sins. Edwards attached those sins in his preaching and, after years of
resistance, many gods young people suddenly united him to the affiliation of
the church, professing the conversion. Edwards wrote on this revival in his Faithful Narrative of the Surprising Work of God <span>(1737)</span>
The government purchases with income from the household sector, either that obtained directly through taxes or indirectly by selling legal claims through the financial markets.