its the 16th admement
its the 16th admement
its the 16th admement
b. the final session
c. the second session
d. the main session
The term used to describe an elected official serving a final term in office is
a. whip.
b. lame duck.
c. yellow dog.
d. political ghost.
Answer:
b. the final session
b. lame duck.
Explanation:
The political party convention is a 4 day event, in which in the third day the party members elect in the ballots their nominee, which would be officially nominated on the 4th day, in which in case he desires, would adress the audience with his/her acceptance speech.
A lame duck is a polititian that is serving his final term in office and is waiting for the next elected to his/her position to be sworn in, it is called lame duck because more often than not it is replaced because he wasn´t re-elected because of different political reasons.
agriculture
B.
education and the arts
C.
irrigation
D.
manufacturing
Job specialization is the focus and refinement of a certain area of expertise at work. On the one hand, job specialization can make workers less flexible to perform other types of jobs, but it reduces training time, as workers focus on a certain set of operations and actions during work. It also increases leisure time, because after mastered skills for a particular specialized type of work, they do not have the need to learn some other skills and work operations. They can spend that leisure time on personal education or enjoying art, etc.
The answer is: B.
B. engage in foreign conflicts.
C. cut funding for welfare programs.
D. increase the minimum retirement age.
to prevent the spread of communism
C to relieve prolonged economic sufferingd
to protect the Roman Catholic Church
Answer: B.to prevent the spread of communism
Explanation:
Reagan’s foremost international concern was in Central America, where he detected the most serious Communist threat. The tiny nation of El Salvador caught up since 1980 in a brutal struggle between Communist-supported revolutionaries and right-wing militants, received U.S. economic and military assistance. Critics argued that U.S. involvement guaranteed that the radical forces would gain public assistance by capitalizing on “anti-Yankee” sentiment. Supporters countered that allowing a Communist victory in El Salvador would lead all of Central America to enter the Communist camp (a new “domino” theory). By 1984, however, the U.S.-backed government of President José Napoleón Duarte had brought a modicum of stability to El Salvador.