The correct answer is A.
The Columbian Exchange is a series of biological and cultural exchanges between Europe and the Americas. The transfer of peoples, plants, and animals would be cultural exchanges, and the transfer of diseases would be biological exchanges.
Answer: c
Explanation: have a good day :)
<span>John Tyler was
the tenth president of the United States, and its significance in the
history of the United States, was because he became the first to reach
the presidency, without the need to have run in the elections, for the
death of President Harrison being Tyler the vice president, and having to assume the presidential office immediately. William Henry would have the fate of dying a little after becoming president, so Tyler was the successor. Unfortunately,
Tyler could also remember himself because he did not follow the ideals
of his party, because he was raised in Virginia, with aristocratic
ideas: so he did not support any of the proposed reforms in political
campaigns; <span>and regionalist sentiment and ideas of separation increased in southern slave states.</span></span>
The Great Depression affected women and men in quite different ways. The economy of the period relied heavily on so-called "sex-typed" work, or work that employers typically assigned to one sex or the other. And the work most directly associated with males, especially manufacturing in heavy industries like steel production, faced the deepest levels of lay-offs during the Great Depression. Women primarily worked in service industries, and these jobs tended to continue during the 1930s. Clerical workers, teachers, nurses, telephone operators, and domestics largely found work. In many instances, employers lowered pay scales for women workers, or even, in the case of teachers, failed to pay their workers on time. But women's wages remained a necessary component in family survival. In many Great Depression families, women were the only breadwinners.
An important corrective to a male-centered vision of the Great Depression is to note that while men's employment rates declined during the period, women's employment rates actually rose. In 1930, approximately 10.5 million women worked outside the home. By 1940, approximately 13 million women worked for wages outside the home. Even so, women's work continued to be less than well regarded by American society. Critics, over-looking the sex-typing of most work opportunities for women, lambasted laboring women for robbing men of much-needed jobs. Even women's colleges formally charged women not to pursue careers after graduation so that their places could be filled by men.
A: the Supreme Court exercises its right to decline to hear a requested appeal