Incomplete question. The options:
A. Black Southerners were not acting subordinate to whites.
B. Too many black Southerners were graduating from high school.
C. Black women were refusing the advances of white men.
D. Black men were running for local political office.
Answer:
<u>A. Black Southerners were not acting subordinate to whites.</u>
Explanation:
Sadly, because of the ingrained racial discrimination at the time, "Whites" felt that "Blacks" were subordinates. In other words, they ("the Whites") wanted to exercise headship over the "Blacks".
This wrong reasoning was highlighted in B. Wells's own words,
<em>"The Negroes are getting too independent," they say "we must teach them a lesson."</em>
<em>What lesson? The lesson of subordination. "Kill the leaders and it will cow the Negro who dares to shoot a white man, even in self-defense."</em>
Answer:
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Answer:
Slow down. ...Yield to pedestrians and bicyclists.Yield to traffic on your left already in the roundabout.Enter the roundabout when there is a safe gap in traffic.Keep your speed low within the roundabout.As you approach your exit, turn on your right turn signal.Yield to pedestrians and bicycles as you exit.
Answer:
The case represented a failure for the NAACP because it supported a law that limited the voting rights of formerly enslaved individuals.
Corrected with Google.