1. <em>Anti-semitism: </em>views, actions, or policies that discriminate against Semitic people, which includes Jews as well as some Arab peoples.
2. <em>Encomienda: </em>colonial Spanish economic and social policy.
3.<em> Inquisition: </em>a time of Catholic persecution of those who did not hold to traditional Catholic beliefs.
4. <em>Nationalism: </em>a strong sense of love and devotion toward a country.
5. <em>Pogrom: </em>a planned strategy to kill off a minority or ethnic group within a country.
President Eisenhower provided support to see that the Supreme Court's ruling was enforced.
For instance, after the Brown vs. the Board of Education decision in 1954, many schools were reluctant to comply with the ruling. In Little Rock, Arkansas, Little Rock Central High School was still segregated in 1957 when a number of black students enrolled in the school - the "Little Rock Nine" as they became known. The governor of Arkansas called out the state guard to prevent the students from attending the high school, but President Eisenhower called deployed federal troops in opposition to the governor to protect those students as they attended the school.
WHITE PRIMARY. A legal device once employed by some Southern states to prevent African Americans from exercising their right to vote in a meaningful way. In the 1920s Southern states began using the white primary as a way of limiting the ability of African Americans to play a part in the political process,
It forced Georgia to allow African-Americans to vote in the Democratic primary. But, the Democrats had other ideas…they wanted to make their primary’s a private club. Governor Ellis Arnall prevented that from happening, and the white primary neared its end. But, it would still be a struggle.
Answer:
greater markets for goods and services ( first choice)