Answer:
Kennedy develops the central idea that the press must exercise greater caution in what it prints by emphasizing the peril facing the country.
Explanation:
This question refers to the speech "The President and the Press: Address Before the American Newspaper Publishers Association" given by President John F. Kennedy in 1961. The speech attempts to clarify what the role of the press is in present times, particularly during times of danger, as the Cold War was. In the text, Kennedy argues that the country is facing extreme danger, and that it is important to be prepared for it. The press should be careful about the things that they print in order to avoid creating panic or undermining the government's efforts to address the threat of communism.
<span>a group of lines forming the basic recurring metrical unit in a poem; a verse.</span>
Answer:
D. concerned
Explanation:
The speaker seems to care enough to reproduce the many things that the speaker has been told, describing them to us one by one, letting us know the agony that those women felt during that moment, even though it is briefly described.
In the majority opinion, Fortas suggest that the reason for the school authorities' actions is that they were uncomfortable with such a controversial topic. According to Justice Fortas school authorities wanted to avoid controversy on the topic of Vietnam war.