1. Most immigrants were from China or another Asian nation. This only applies to Angel Island in San Francisco Bay which makes sense due to the geographic convenience in an era of boat transportation. Hundreds of thousands of Chinese and other Asians (and some Mexicans) were processed here.
2. Immigrants had to pass health inspections before being admitted to the United States. This applies to both places. They both had hospital facilities for the medical examination and quarantine of sick or disabled immigrants.
3. Immigrants could be denied entry or sent back to their home countries. This applies to both of them but differently. Only 3% of immigrants arriving at Ellis Island were denied entry and deported while 18% of those who arrived at Angel Island were deported back to Asia (mainly China).
Many farmers, especially in Europe and China during the early 13th century, found it was more profitable to sell their lands that to continue farming them because of economic overhead.
Answer: It was a pure democracy. Everyone in the city could vote
Explanation:
Answer:
You included no options so I can only answer in my own words.
In Japan, <u>the military </u>rose to power because the government failed to solve the country's <u>economic</u> problems. In September 1931, Japan launched a surprise attack against <u>Manchuria in China</u>.
In 1940 Japan signed a pact of alliance with <u>Germany</u> and Italy.
<u>Josef Stalin</u> became the Communist leader of the Soviet Union.
To keep the United States out of the war, Congress passed a series of <u>Neutrality Acts.</u>
The acts took away self-government and historic rights of Massachusetts which triggered outrage and resistance in the thirteen colonies