(1) support the construction of the Iron Curtain
(2) increase membership in the United Nations
(3) prevent the spread of communism
(4) attempt to solve world hunger
they had a huge influence on the people in Indus valley
Answer: To highlight the need for federal voting rights legislation to remove barriers that prevented African Americans from voting.
Context:
In September, 1963, a bombing at a church in Birmingham sparked the African American community into strong action in Alabama to push for the rights of black citizens. As noted in a Voting Rights Timeline provided by Alabama State University, "the murder of four black girls at the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in Birmingham" was the catalyst that launched a "new thrust on voting rights by the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)."
The voting rights campaign in Alabama culminated in the Selma to Montgomery March in March, 1965. Martin Luther King, Jr., as president of the SCLC, was a key participant in that campaign, as was John Lewis, chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). Marchers (including Lewis) were attacked and beaten by state troopers the first time they attempted the march. Many Americans were sickened by the scenes of this which they saw on television, and National Guard troops then were deployed to protect the marchers as they again made their effort. There were roughly 2,000 (not 20,000) who made the successful march from Selma to Montgomery, March 21-25, 1965. When they arrived in Montgomery, they were met by a crowd of nearly 50,000 supporters, both blacks and whites in that supportive group.
b) The election of multiple popes by different factions
c) The excommunications of powerful monarchs
d) The failure of the crusades to win back the holy land
China
Peru
United States
It is actually C. Japan
Answer:
Japan
Explanation: