Why did Richard Nixon and Nikita Khrushchev argue in 1959?

A) nuclear capabilities
B) over political elections
C) concerning the history of aviation
D) about their system's respective kitchen appliances


D

History

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In the election of 1944, FDR's running mate, who eventually became president with FDR's death in 1945, was __________.

A. Dwight Eisenhower B. Harry Truman C. Henry Wallace D. Thomas Dewey

History

In the case Shaw v. Reno (1993), the Supreme Court __________

A) ruled that states had the right to draw their congressional districts any way they saw fit B) invalidated an effort by North Carolina’s legislature to guarantee that one congressional district would contain a majority of black voters C) rejected federal affirmative action statutes D) ruled that affirmative action was a constitutional remedy for past racial discrimination

History

The Fourteenth Amendment

a. guarantees that the Confederate war debt will be paid in full. b. grants to states the right to determine who is and is not a citizen. c. gives black males the right to vote. d. requires that states uphold the principle of equality before the law.

History

Why did Russia and Austria look on a unified Germany with suspicion?

a) They feared their multiethnic, multireligious empires would be threatened by the new German model of single-ethnic nationalism. b) Neither state had many Protestants and both feared a new wave of religious wars from the newly unified Germany. Consider This: Germany’s immediate neighbors and potential rivals were challenged by the efficient, highly centralized nation-state. See 8.4: Nationalism’s Consequences. c) They feared the anti-Islamic posture of the German government as a feature of its new nationalism. Consider This: Germany’s immediate neighbors and potential rivals were challenged by the efficient, highly centralized nation-state. See 8.4: Nationalism’s Consequences. d) They feared that Serbia, Croatia, and Greece would join the German confederation. Consider This: Germany’s immediate neighbors and potential rivals were challenged by the efficient, highly centralized nation-state. See 8.4: Nationalism’s Consequences.

History