for fealty it's fealthiness.
and for gambit it's gambetto.
<u><em>Answer:</em></u>
<u><em>CONTENTS
</em></u>
<u><em>Susan B. Anthony, 1820-1906
</em></u>
<u><em>Alice Paul, 1885-1977
</em></u>
<u><em>Elizabeth Cady Stanton, 1815-1902
</em></u>
<u><em>Lucy Stone, 1818-1893
</em></u>
<u><em>Ida B. Wells, 1862-1931
</em></u>
<u><em>Frances E.W. Harper (1825–1911)
</em></u>
<u><em>Mary Church Terrell (1863-1954)
</em></u>
<u><em>Women gained the right to vote in 1920 with the passage of the 19 Amendment. On Election Day in 1920, millions of American women exercised this right for the first time. For almost 100 years, women (and men) had been fighting for women’s suffrage: They had made speeches, signed petitions, marched in parades and argued over and over again that women, like men, deserved all of the rights and responsibilities of citizenship. The leaders of this campaign—women like Susan B. Anthony, Alice Paul, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucy Stone and Ida B. Wells—did not always agree with one another, but each was committed to the enfranchisement of all American women.</em></u>
<u><em>Explanation:</em></u>
Answer:
Chinese immigrants suffered, from their first arrivals in the 1820s, discrimination and rejection by a large part of society. To a greater or lesser extent, this rejection stemmed from the enormous cultural, ethnic, and social differences between immigrants and American society: from basic issues such as language and cultural background, to purely racist issues such as the ethnic component.
Right from the start, they were exposed to the racism of the European population, which culminated in massacres and the forced resettlement of Chinese migrants in Chinatowns in the 1870s. In legal terms, too, the Chinese were far worse off in the United States than most other ethnic minorities. They had to pay special taxes, were not allowed to marry partners of European descent and could not acquire American citizenship. The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, which closed American borders to Chinese immigrants for more than 60 years, brought additional suffering.
<span> Jim Crow laws were challenged by African Americans in court. However, the Supreme Court ruled that the Civil Rights Act of 1875 was unconstitutional. </span>
The nature of New Mexico
Explanation:
- The late twenties and early thirties of the life of Georgia O'Keeffe were marked by two depressions - the global, Great Depression that President Roosevelt tried to end in 1933 with his New Deal.
- The painter's life on the shift of decades was filled with love disappointments, breakdowns of nerves and hospitalization at a mental hospital. She therefore sought a cure for intimate sadness at the Ghost Ranch, a rehab center in New Mexico, a state she visited as a bride and whose landscapes enchanted her even then.
- She will spend the entire summer of Georgia wandering the hills surrounding the city of Taos and the Chama River, painting with a palette of earthy tones, from yellow to dark purple, that will influence her future work.
- She researched the culture and traditions of the climate, bringing Mexican motifs to her canvases, but most of all she was interested in nature, the "harsh hills and cliffs she fell in love with" and who kept coming back until she eventually bought a house here. Meanwhile, returning to New York, Georgia brought with her the bones and skulls of animals she found and collected in the desert. She explained this unusual procedure by collecting flowers in some places, in some rocks or shells, so why not bring "beautiful white bones of animals" from the desert. For her, they signified "the wild freedom and wonders of the world we live in," which is why she often painted them, especially in combination with flowers, just like in the picture Aries head, white mallow and small hills.
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