Answer: The Middle Colonies and New England were different in that New England was largely Puritan, and, save for Rhode Island (which practiced a form of religious tolerance), the government was a kind of theocracy run by the Puritans. There was little religious tolerance, and family life was built around the Puritan church.
Answer:
A.) With the meetings of the Florentine Camerata
In the gubernatorial election of 1920, he have campaigned prominently for John M. Parker, and today Long is often credited with helping Parker to win in the northern Louisiana parishes. However, after Parker was elected to the gubernatorial office, the two became bitter rivals. This break was largely the result of Long having demanded that Parker declare the state's oil pipelines to be public utilities and Parker having refused to do so. In particular, Long was horrified and became furious when Parker allowed the oil companies led by the legal team of Standard Oil to assist in the writing of the state's severance tax laws-laws that decreed how much money corporations such as Standard Oil had to pay the state for the extraction of natural resources. Because the governor was willing to go along with companies like Standard Oil, Huey began calling Parker the chattel of the corporations. After butting heads, Parker eventually tried to have Huey ousted from his position on the Louisiana Railroad Commission in 1921, although he was unable to do so.
The correct answer is - hospitals.
The infrastructure of a country is a set of built objects where services are offered, and people work, or are using them in their daily lives for their activities. In the infrastructure of a country also fall the schools, colleges, and universities, roads, airports, administration buildings, factories etc. They all have someone that works in them, something that offer, and are used, to and by the general public, and the more developed the infrastructure is, it usually means that the more developed the country itself is as well.