Determination of the south. They learned that the war wasn't going to be piece of cake and that it wasn't going to end within 3 months
I) The condemnation of D. C. Stephenson.
Stephenson was an important Klan leader in Indiana. In 1925 he was condemned for kidnapping, raping and murder of Madge Oberholtzer. This crime and other scandals of the time helped to destroy the Klan not only on Indiana but nationwide.
II) Groups fought against the KKK.
In 1924 students from a Catholic college blocked the way of a Klan demonstration and stole Klan's objects. Around the same period labor unions, newspapers, groups of Catholics and Jews united against it.
III) Republicans' detachment from the Klan.
Because of the scandals, previous Republican support of the Klan was stopped. Republican political leaders looked to differentiate themselves from the KKK.
I believe the correct answer would be <span>3.) They fought each other over philosophical differences but also teamed up to fight outside invaders, after which their differences caused friction that pushed them apart once again.
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While 2 would make sense because of the origins of the Communist party within the Nationalist party, but they never began as allies. 1 would be false because the Communist party formally began around 1929. 4 would be false because they did not coexist peacefully prior to 1960.
Hope I could help!
Most southern and eastern European immigrants arriving via New York'sEllis Island found factory jobs in Northeastern and Midwestern cities. Third-wave European immigration was slowed first by World War I and then by numerical quotas in the 1920s.
The south was formerly the confederate states in the civil war and therefore have more racial tensions than the north