I believe number 3 is true
Answer:
<em>Lincoln's bodyguard left him at the theater and while he was away Lincoln got killed by a guy named John</em>
Explanation:
Yes, because the UN report partially corroborates the Sudan Tribune article. It confirms the types of attacks, torture, and human rights violations that have occurred in Darfur. It also states that civilians were deliberately targeted, but it does not call these acts genocide like the Tribune article does.
Then check the boxes that say:
The UN report corroborates the article in some ways.
The UN report confirms the attacks and killings that took place in Sudan.
<span>The UN report disagrees on if these events can be labeled as genocide.</span>
Answer:
A
Explanation:
The Sugar Act was an act that taxed the colonists on any imprted goods.
That's an interpretive question that would ask us to get inside the mind of Lincoln from a distance a century and a half away. We do know that Lincoln long had moral and political objections to slavery. He had outlined some of those thoughts in a speech given in Peoria, Illinois, in 1854. But Lincoln's views on what to do about slavery were something that took shape over time. In the Peoria speech, he suggested that perhaps slaves should be freed in order to be returned to Africa. But as the conflict over slavery grew and the Civil War became a reality, Lincoln became firmer in seeing this as a struggle not just over preserving the Union but also a battle for human dignity and the principle of equality. And so in the Gettysburg Address, in 1863, he affirmed the principle stated by the Declaration of Independence, that all men are created equal. The massive number of casualties at the Battle of Gettysburg certainly gave impetus to Lincoln's words about preserving the Union and government of the people, by the people and for the people. But those ideas had been central to Lincoln's worldview before Gettysburg as well as in that speech.