The correct answer is B. Equal Rights Amendment
The National Organization for Women, founded in 1966, fully supported the Equal Rights amendment. They fought hard to have this law passed during the 1960s and 1970s without success.
Prohibition happened several decades before the NOW was founded and they never approved of Congressional pay raises.
The corrupt bargain created more public opposition to John Q. Adams and added fuel to the political fever for Andrew Jackson.
"<span>Slavery was abolished in the United States" has nothing to do with the Dredd Scott case, which instead said that blacks had no standing in court because they were not citizens. </span>
"tuxedo" This distinctive tailless dinner jacket was introduced in the
resort town of Tuxedo Park, New York, in 1886. The town's name, Tuxedo,
is an Anglicized form of the Delaware Indian word "p'tuksit," which
means "wolf," the totem of that particular Delaware group.
Answer:
Henry Sylvester Williams
Explanation:
Although the union between the different African countries is one of its priorities, the idea of a Pan-African union was not born on the black continent. In fact, it had its origin very far: in the American continent. One of its main leaders was Henry Sylvester Willians, a lawyer from Trinidad who managed to organize the First Pan-African Conference in 1900 in the city of London. This conference had as its main objective the creation of a movement that generated a feeling of solidarity with regard to the black populations of the colonies. Sylvester Willians was one of several black intellectuals in the Caribbean and southern United States who together sought a more dignified condition for the black populations of colonized areas