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Answer: A. to help people stay healthy
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Explanation:
Elizabeth Blackwell was born on February 3, 1821 in Bristol, England, but moved to the United States in 1831 along with her family. Elizabeth was the first woman who managed to practice a medical profession in the United States, which is why she is considered an example of the struggle for female emancipation.
It should be noted that the impulse that led her to want to be a doctor was the death of a friend, who before dying of a terminal illness told Blackwell that she wished she had been treated by a woman. This event marked her life and the idea of being a doctor emerged in her, so she sent letters of request to all the universities of New York and Pennsylvania, without receiving a response.
After ten universities rejected her application, she was admitted to Geneva Medical College (New York) and on January 11, 1849 she became the first woman to receive a medical degree in medicine in the United States.
<span>Assuming that this is referring to the same list of options that was posted before with this question, <span>the correct response would be that there was a sharp decline in manufacturing, since more jobs in these sector were being "exported" overseas.</span></span>
Like most modern believers in free markets, Smith believed that the government should enforce contracts and grant patents and copyrights to encourage inventions and new ideas. ... Smith's writings are both an inquiry into the science of economics and a policy guide for realizing the wealth of nations.
Answer:
His three basic teachings: the need for justice, morality, and service to others.
Explanation:
Jesus spread: love God, love your neighbor and yourself, forgeive those who have wronged you.
(I would assume that any of your choices not including any of these would be a teaching he didn't spread. Sorry I didn't have much to go off to give an exact answer.)
Answer:
The Deep South is a cultural and geographic subregion in the Southern United States. Historically, it was differentiated as those states most dependent on plantations and slave societies during the pre-Civil War period