I believe the correct answer is B. Washington and
DuBois did not want African Americans to give up on achieving racial equality
in the United States.
Marcus Garvey advocated black separatism as the best
chance for African Americans to prosper (he supported Pan-Africanism and
founded the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities
League (UNIA-ACL)), but Washington and DuBois did not want African Americans to
give up on achieving racial equality in the United States.
In just twelve years, Alexander the Great conquered vast territories and dominated lands from west of the Nile to east of the Indus. He brought the Persian Empire, Egypt and much of the Middle East under his control.
Hope This Helps! Have A Nice Day!!
---------- He made an attempt to demonstrate to the men he led that he trusted them. He was constantly open to comments from his soldiers, demonstrating that he valued their opinions, and he always offered his men credit and appreciation for their achievements. ----------
<em>That should answer your question.</em>
Chinese immigration can be divided into three periods: 1849-1882, 1882-1965, and 1965 to the present.
The statement is TRUE.
President Lyndon Johnson’s top advisers–Maxwell Taylor, Dean Rusk, Robert McNamara, and other members of the National Security Council–agree to recommend that the president adopt a plan for a two-stage escalation of the bombing of North Vietnam.
The purpose of this bombing was three-fold: to boost South Vietnamese morale, to cut down infiltration of Communist troops from the north, and to force Hanoi to stop its support of the insurgency in South Vietnam. While his advisors agreed that bombing was necessary, there was a difference of opinion about the best way to go about it. Johnson’s senior military advisers pressed for a “fast and full squeeze,” massive attacks against major industries and military targets in the north. His civilian advisers advocated a “slow squeeze,” a graduated series of attacks beginning with the infiltration routes in Laos and slowly extending to the targets in North Vietnam. Ultimately, the civilian advisers convinced Johnson to use the graduated approach. The bombing campaign, code-named Rolling Thunder, began in March 1965 and lasted through October 1968.