A- Townshend act =)this is the correct answer
Answer:
Explanation:
Lee Harvey Oswald, a soon-to-be assassin, father of 2 children, and a very depressed human being, after hearing of John F. Kennedy's arrival in Dallas to try and win over the state's vote in the 1964 election, brought home a rifle one day and stashed it in his wife's best friend's garage. His wife took one look at the gun and ordered him to leave. Oswald did, but devised a plan to get back into the garage and take back his weapon. After doing so, he planned the rest of his assassination attempt. Then, on November 22, 1963, Oswald took his place in a 6th story window of the Texas School Book Depository. Around 12:30 pm, Oswald fired 4 shots over Dealey Plaza. The motorcade that Kennedy was fatally wounded in raced to Parkland Hospital where Kennedy was pronounced dead at 1:00 pm. Oswald fled the Book Depository and ran all around Dallas trying to avoid suspicion. He was apprehended by police at a movie theater at 1:40 pm. On November 24th, the assassin was assassinated by Jack Ruby as he was being transferred to a county jail. He was rushed to Parkland Hospital, but for the respect of Kennedy, was not given the same hospital room. Oswald could not survive due to massive amounts of blood loss and was pronounced dead at 1:07 pm. He is now buried at Shannon Rose Hill Memorial Park, in Fort Worth, Texas.
The answer to question 2 is B: Europeans started depending on slaves for free labor in new colonies. The new colonies that some European countries were starting to develop were, in fact, a main reason for the African slave trade. In America, for instance, laborers were very expensive to hire and the indigenous population had been decimated, so the British colonizers resorted to Africa - where slavery was a traditional practice, it must be said - in search of cheap labor that could work in the profitable plantations.
The answer to question 3 is A: American goods were sold in Europe. The Triangular Trade consisted of three stages. The first one involved taking manufactured goods from Europe to Africa. The second stage entailed sending slaves to the Americas. Finally, during the third or final stage, the goods that had been produced thanks to slave-labor in the plantations returned to and were sold in Europe.