Answer:
The correct answer is C. President Johnson's Great Society was intended to create a society free of poverty.
Explanation:
The Great Society was a comprehensive welfare policy reform program initiated by President Lyndon B. Johnson.
The Great Society consisted of a number of measures and legislative changes. The two main objectives of the program were to reduce poverty and racial discrimination. Special measures were put into education, health care, urban problems and public transport. The Great Society program followed up the New Deal and John F. Kennedy's New Frontier. Johnson's persuasive skills and ability to negotiate with Congress, combined with the Democrats' election in 1964, prompted the program's adoption.
The Vietnam War escalated at the same time, which led to the draw of attention from the Great Society, but Richard Nixon continued many of the costly elements, while Ronald Reagan ended many of them later.
Answer: He is broke, sad, and feels guilty about all that has happened, compared to how he was only worried about his reputation at the beginning of the play.
Explanation: In the story, Parris is a minister that is afraid that his daughter has been bewitched, and calls a witchcraft expert. He then knows that said witchcraft was made by his niece and daughter but is afraid that people knowing it may affect his reputation.
Later, in Act IV, after all of the unfair hangings that had been made to innocent people trying to find the culprit, he feels depressed, guilty and hopeless, since also, his niece, who started everything, stole his money and ran away. We can see this in the line: "My daughter tells me how she heard them speaking of ships last week, and tonight I discover my strongbox is broke into".
Thinking the world is innocent is better then knowing what actually goes on
Answer:
he save his son for his live
Explanation: