Read the timeline and answer the question that follows: Timeline: Women’s Rights 1848: The world's first women's rights convention is held in Seneca Falls, N. Y., July 19–20. 1909: Women garment workers strike in New York for better wages and working conditions. 1968: Shirley Chisholm (D-NY) is first black woman elected to the U. S. Congress. 1974: MANA, the Mexican-American Women's National Association, organizes as feminist activist organization. By 1990, MANA chapters operate in 16 states; members in 36. 1995: United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women—Beijing, China. 2000: U. N. General Assembly Special Session, "Women 2000: Gender, Equality, Development and Peace for the 21st Century." 2003: Amnesty International issued a report called Intolerable Killings: 10 Years of Abductions and Murders of Women in Ciudad Juárez and Chihuahua, highlighting the pattern of killings and abductions of women in the two Mexican border cities. According to the timeline, would it be reasonable to assume that all women will have rights equal to men in the next decade? A. No, rights for women have progressed, but women still face hardships in many parts of the world. B. Yes, the timeline indicates consistent rapid, forward movement toward equality for women. C. No, women’s rights have not progressed significantly since the mid-1800s.
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In 1870 which path would be the easiest to travel when going from omaha to sacramento a-mormon trail b-transcontinental railroad c-santa fe trail d-california trail
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Read the timeline and answer the question that follows: Timeline: Women’s Rights 1848: The world's f...
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