<span>The suggests a power structure by the way it is drawn. One figure is larger because he is the leader of the Army and President, George Washington. Other figures displayed have power in proportion to their relative size on the map.</span>
The correct answer is A. The man who assassinated Kennedy.
Explanation
John F. Kennedy (1917-1963) was the president of the United States from 1961 to 1963 when he was killed in the city of Dallas in the state of Texas by Lee Harvey Oswald, who days later would also be killed by Jack Ruby in a confusing episode when he was being taken to an investigation before a judge. The reasons for Lee Harvey Oswald to assassinate the president are uncertain, but when he was killed a few days after the President's assassination there was no clarity about the fact beyond the insistent self-declaration as innocent of Harvey Oswald. So, the correct answer is A. The man who assassinated Kennedy.
Answer:
In his speech, Kennedy called Americans to recognize civil rights as a moral cause to which all people need to contribute and was "as clear as the American Constitution." He conveyed how the proposed legislation would lead the nation to end discrimination against African-Americans.
Explanation:
The correct answers are B) segregation laws of the South, C) high poverty rates among African Americans and D) discrimination.
<em>Dr. King is criticizing these issues in his speech: segregation laws of the South, high poverty rates among African Americans and discrimination.</em>
In his famous speech, Martin Luther King again defends African American civil rights and invites people to reflect on the issue of segregation and injustice. He refers to the segregation laws of the South that had affected and divided society in incidents such as the Montgomery Bus Boycott in the city of Montgomery, Alabama. He also referred to the increasing and high poverty rates that hurt black people and limited their possibilities to grow and prosper, and finally, the issue of discrimination and the effect on the United States society.