Abraham Lincoln (February 12, 1809 – April 15, 1865) was an American politician. He was the 16th President of the United States. He was president from 1861 to 1865, during the American Civil War. Just five days after most of the Confederate forces had surrendered and the war was ending, John Wilkes Booth assassinated Lincoln. Lincoln was the first president of the United States to be assassinated. Lincoln has been remembered as the "Great Emancipator" because he worked to end slavery in the United States.[1]
Answer: The correct answer is: In ancient Babylon, fingerprints were pressed on clay tablets to mark contracts. The oldest documents known as such where fingerprints are shown date from China in the third century B.C. Sir William Herschel began collecting fingerprints in 1856 and noted that they were not altered with age. In 1888 Sir Francis Galton together with Sir Edmund Richard Henry developed the fingerprint classification system and this system is still used in the United States. Identification by fingerprints is very reliable.
Answer:
The answer is "women's rights"
Explanation:
A protest song is a tune that is related with a development for social change and thus part of the more extensive class of effective tunes (or tunes associated with recent developments). It could be society, traditional, or business in type.
Among social developments that have a related assemblage of tunes are the cancellation of movement, women's suffrage, human right movement, the common liberties development, social equality, the counter war development and 1960s nonconformity, the women's activist development, the sexual transformation, the gay rights development, basic entitlements development, vegetarianism and veganism, weapon control, and environmentalism.
protest songs are frequently situational, having been related with a social development through setting.
I want to say that the answer is C seeing as it's the most logical one.
Answer and Explanation:
Vatican II was a time of great change in the Catholic Church, as it allowed for a modernization of the entire liturgy of the church. Being Catholic, at that time, represented being modernized together with the church and this affected the entire religious life of these individuals, who from Vatican II would participate in the masses, would have a full view of the altar, heard the mass in the vernacular and would see a church more globalized and tolerant, even with women who would not need such a rigid dress during masses.