Slogans such as “Food will win the war” compelled people to avoid wasting precious groceries and encouraged them to eat a multitude of fresh fruits and vegetables, which were too difficult to transport overseas.
1.Mrs.Wheatley was the first African American to write a poem.
2.first African American to serve in the supreme court was Thurgood Marshall
3.John Mercly Langston was the first black lawyer in Ohio
4.Nat king Cole was the first black person to host a TV show
5.Bryant Gumbel became the first black person to host a network morning show
<span>The answer is D.
Though blacks were treated equally in the North, the South continued to
be segregated. Despite the abolition of
slavery, blacks were afforded the same opportunities as whites . Many of them were also harassed by mobs of
white raiders in order to keep them from voting as well assert their
superiority over blacks. Blacks couldn’t
sit at the same table as whites nor could they dine at the same restaurants as
whites. It took another hundred years
for blacks to finally be accepted in the South.</span>
Answer:
Because some didn't want to lose their profits.
Explanation:
Some knew the pain of the Africans while some with their selfish desire didn't want to let go
"Christian missionaries" group concerned the Tokugawa shoguns enough to limit the contacts between Japan and Europe.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Tokugawa Ieyasu, who led the nation after Hideyoshi's death, initially tolerated Christian faith, but eventually abolished Christianity throughout the country, to reinforce the base for the family-led Tokugawa regime.
Finally, in 1614, he decided to ban Catholicism and, in the mid-17th century, requested that all Foreign missionaries be expelled and that all converts be executed. That signaled the end of accessible, Japanese Christianity. Tokugawa ruled nation for half a century and pressurized Christian Japanese to direct towards Buddhism.