The correct answer here is the second option.
When the US helped the Panamanian people win their independence from Columbia they got the rights to build and operate the Panama Canal in perpetuity. But Panamanian people had no say in this and thus over time they wanted it back. After the riots, which were also presumably instigated by the soviet agitators, the conflict arose between Panama and the US. So, because of the riots a new deal was made.
Herbert Hoover believed that the government should not intervene in the affairs of American citizens because they got themselves into their own financial mess so they needed to get themselves out of it. This theory was called rugged individualism.
Answer:
Los hunos, un pueblo procedente de las estepas del Asia Central, posiblemente de origen prototúrquico, aunque existen versiones de que se trataba de un pueblo iranio, invaden territorios de la Europa Oriental y parte de la Europa Central, desplazando a pueblos germánicos tales como los godos o los francos hacia el decadente Imperio Romano de Occidente, al cual le haría frecuentes saqueos y campañas violentas durante la primera mitad del siglo V.
Explanation:
Los hunos, un pueblo procedente de las estepas del Asia Central, posiblemente de origen prototúrquico, aunque existen versiones de que se trataba de un pueblo iranio, invaden territorios de la Europa Oriental y parte de la Europa Central, desplazando a pueblos germánicos tales como los godos o los francos hacia el decadente Imperio Romano de Occidente, al cual le haría frecuentes saqueos y campañas violentas durante la primera mitad del siglo V.
Answer: Three cigars, with Lee's battle plans wrapped around them, had been inadvertently lost by a Confederate officer. With this information in Union hands, the South's anticipated victory was cut short. The Confederate Army had been unstoppable - within weeks of winning the Civil War. General Robert E. Lee had won the Second Battle of Bull Run and was marching 55,000 Confederate troops into Maryland on September 3, 1862.
The Confederate Army was welcomed, as anti-Union protests had filled Baltimore's streets.
On September 13, 1862, President Lincoln met with Rev. William Patterson, Rev. John Dempster, and Methodist, Baptist, and Congregational leaders who presented him with a petition to emancipate the slaves Lincoln told them: I am approached with the most opposite opinions and advice... I hope it will not be irreverent for me to say that if it is probable that God would reveal His will to others, on a point so connected with my duty, it might be supposed He will reveal it directly to me;
Explanation: