Answer: A) students' rights to free speech
Explanation:
In 1965, Mary Beth Tinker, a 13-year-old high school student, <u>protested against the War in Vietnam by wearing a black armband. </u>
As a sanction, she was prohibited from wearing the armband by school officials and she also got a suspension, together with her brother and another student. When the students came back to school, they didn't wear armbands anymore, but they were dressed in black for the rest of the school year.
The case was brought before the court by the ACLU (American Civil Liberties Union). The Supreme Court ruled that students are allowed freedom of expression at school, provided that it doesn't damage the educational process.
Answer:
True
Explanation:
Passed in 1906, the PFDA was an early progressive piece of legislation that led to the creation of the FDA.
Answer:
A. They argued in support of ratification (acceptance) through political essays called The Federalist Papers.
Explanation:
Alexander Hamilton and James Madison, along with John Jay, were Federalists that strongly favored the ratification of the newly proposed U.S. Constitution. In order to gain support for its ratification, they wrote a series of 85 essays in 1787 that addressed constitutional principles and explained the deficiencies of the Articles of Confederation (the former U.S. Constitution) and the details of the new Constitution, arguing that its ratification would preserve the Union and empower the federal government to act firmly and coherently in the national interest. This collection of essays were known as <em>The Federalist Papers. </em>
Answer:
Frequently embracing "countercultural" life styles and radical politics, many of the offspring of the World War II generation emerged as advocates of a new America characterized by a cultural and ethnic pluralism that their parents often viewed with unease.
Explanation: