Answer: Caution toward civil rights legislation
Explanation:
John F. Kennedy had during his Presidential run, remained a steadfast supporter of Civil rights for the African Americans and showed this with his efforts to get Martin Luther King released from custody after he had been arrested following a protest. This act perhaps was the cherry on top that won him the African American vote.
This was not however welcome by all in his party. As a result of his stance on Civil Rights, members of the Democratic party in the South did not support him as much as they should have, if they did at all and this led to one of the closest popular votes in history.
Kennedy's administration knew then that it needed the support of Southern Democrats to be reelected as well as in congress to pass certain bills. He therefore tried not to antagonize them by limiting civil rights legislation.
This is not to say that he did nothing in the fight for civil rights though. He dispatched the US army to help enrol an African American named James Meredith in the University of Mississippi as well as introducing what would later become the 1964 Civil Rights bill that was passed after his unfortunate demise.
It would be the "B. The Secret Service" that does not operate under the Department of the Treasury, sine the primary goal of the Secret Service is to protect the President.
Germany violated the terms of the treaty of Versailles by rebuilding the military and air force and reinstating the draft. Germany took Rhineland and sent German military forces into Rhineland, a demilitarized region. Britain and France were desperate to avoid war. World leaders decided to appease the aggressor rather than risk a war. Germany was appeased after taking Sudetenland and promised to stop there. Germany violated the Munich agreement and then took all of Czechoslovakia.
Answer:
The right answer is A.
Explanation:
In its beginning, the secret Noble Order of the Knights of Labor (founded in 1869) proposed to replace capitalism with a system of worker cooperatives. Ten years later it became public and shredded the "noble" from its name. For a long time, it focused on economic benefits for its members.