During the time of the “student debt bubble,” state legislatures were ______.
a. mandating new performance requirements of state universities
b. cutting back on financial support for higher education
c. raising tuition to compensate for faculty salary increases
d. undertaking massive state university building and expansion programs
b. cutting back on financial support for higher education
You might also like to view...
Even if we could create a utopian society, why would it not survive?
a. It would be impossible to continue a perfect society. b. Outside influences would destroy it from within. c. Citizens could not resist the urge to make it more perfect. d. A perfect society would be static, but the world is always changing. e. Perfection cannot remain balanced indefinitely, and most likely could not correct itself.
According to political scientist Frank L. Klingberg,
naval expenditures, annexations, armed expeditions and diplomatic pressures reveal alternating phases of __________ in American foreign policy. A) aggression and passivity B) introversion and extroversion C) commerce and stagnation D) violence and tranquility
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 _________________________________
A) gave the FCC the power to regulate indecent material B) required broadcasters to provide public affairs programming under the "fairness doctrine" C) extended the power of the FCC to include regulation of print media D) promoted the equal time rule E) deregulated cable television providers and eliminated monopolies by local phone companies
Foreign policy analysis switches the understanding of how states behave in the international arena from a focus on states to a focus on the ______.
a. environmental impact on the foreign policy approach in each country b. military influence on the foreign policy approach of each country c. people and groups that make foreign policy decisions in each country d. economic forces that drive the foreign policy decisions of each country