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Damm [24]
2 years ago
15

Against what opposing team did babe ruth hit his first career home run?.

Social Studies
1 answer:
enyata [817]2 years ago
7 0

Answer:

the New York Yankees

Explanation:

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Why the rule that everyone needs eight hours of<br>sleep is a myth?​
patriot [66]

Explanation:

The rule that everyone needs eight hours of sleep is a myth since sleep achieves many critical brain and body maintenance functions that cannot be performed while we are awake. While humans need, on average, eight hours of sleep each night, the exact length of time it takes to complete these sleep functions is highly dictated by an individual's genes.

<em>Hope</em><em> </em><em>this helps</em><em>.</em><em>.</em><em> </em>

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5 0
3 years ago
Why are samples obtained from participant pools maintained by psychology departments considered more representative of college s
Katyanochek1 [597]

Samples obtained from participant pools maintained by psychology departments are considered more representative of college students in general than volunteer samples from the college population because those who would not volunteer otherwise might do so for course credit.

<h3>The Opportunity Cost of Compulsory Research Participation</h3>
  • Undergraduates are frequently required by psychology departments to take part in faculty and graduate research as part of their coursework or else.
  • Objectively coercive are involuntary participant pools (also known as human subject pools) in which students are compelled to participate.
  • Due to the costly alternative work they would have to complete or the consequences of failing to complete a course requirement, students have less agency than other research participants.
  • This demonstrates how students are made to choose between lower-value activities that primarily benefit others and higher-value activities for which they have paid.
  • This contradiction can be resolved with voluntary participant pools, although doing so would result in fewer participants overall. To reclaim autonomy, departmental research practices must be altered.

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5 0
1 year ago
Why might two people have different responses to the same stressor? neither one is a perfectionist. they are both optimists. the
VMariaS [17]
D. they assess the situation differently. <span />
4 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
PLEASE HELP A major development in relations between the Soviet Union and the United States occurred in the late 1980’s when the
White raven [17]

Answer:

About the author

Rebecca Johnson

Rebecca Johnson is Executive Director of the Acronym Institute for Disarmament Diplomacy.

Established upon the ashes of the Second World War to represent “We the Peoples”, it is not surprising that both peace and security were fundamental objectives for the United Nations. While many also wanted disarmament, countervailing lessons were drawn by some political leaders, which made it difficult to get multilateral agreements on disarmament for several decades. Debates around nuclear weapons epitomized and sharpened the challenges. Academics in the United States of America led in developing theories of deterrence to provide legitimacy for these weapons of mass destruction, which soon became embedded in the military doctrines and political rhetoric of further Governments, from NATO allies to the Eastern bloc and beyond. Deterrence theory sought to invert the normative relationship between peace and disarmament by arguing that nuclear weapons were actually peacekeepers amassed to deter aggressors rather than to fight them. From there it became a short step for some countries—including permanent Members of the Security Council of the United Nations—to promote ideologies that equated security and peace with high “defence” budgets and military-industrial dependence on arms manufacture and trade. This is the backdrop for understanding how the United Nations System and disarmament approaches have intersected since 1945, and the way in which reframing disarmament as a universal humanitarian imperative has opened more productive opportunities for future multilateral disarmament treaties.

The very first resolution of the General Assembly of the United Nations, in January 1946, addressed the “problems raised by the discovery of atomic energy”. Despite civil society’s efforts, led by scientists and women’s peace organizations, leaders of the United States and the Soviet Union rejected measures to curb nuclear ambitions. As the cold war took hold, the leaders that had emerged “victorious” in 1945 raced each other to manufacture and deploy all kinds of new weapons and war technologies, especially nuclear, chemical and biological weapons (notwithstanding the 1925 Geneva Protocol prohibiting the use of chemical and biological weapons in war) and a variety of missiles to deliver them speedily anywhere in the world.

After early efforts to control nuclear developments floundered, it was the upsurge of health and environmental concerns provoked by nuclear testing that led the Prime Minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru, and the Japanese Parliament to call for such explosions to be halted altogether. After an egregiously irresponsible 15 megaton thermonuclear bomb was tested in the Marshall Islands on 1 March 1954, Nehru submitted his proposal for a Comprehensive Nuclear-Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) to the United Nations Disarmament Commission on 29 July 1954. Since then CTBT has been the centrepiece of disarmament demands from many States, especially the developing countries of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM). Intended as a first step towards disarmament, the driving force behind CTBT was concern about the humanitarian impacts. Early attempts at multilateral negotiations through a newly created Ten-Nation Committee on Disarmament made little progress. Although the leaders of the United States, the Soviet Union and the United Kingdom professed their desire for a CTBT, their talks kept stalling. Obstacles from the nuclear laboratories and security advisors were dressed up as verification problems, but they stemmed from these nuclear-armed Governments’ military ambitions and rivalries, and their shared determination to keep their own weapons options open, even as they sought to limit those of others.

From 1959 to 1961, various resolutions were adopted by the General Assembly aimed at preventing the testing, acquisition, use, deployment and proliferation of nuclear weapons. In 1961, for example, General Assembly resolution 1664 (XVI) recognized that “the countries not possessing nuclear weapons have a grave interest, and an important part to fulfil” in halting nuclear tests and achieving nuclear disarmament. General Assembly resolution 1653 (XVI) went further, noting that the targets of nuclear weapons would not just be “enemies” but “peoples of the world not involved in…war”, with devastation that would “exceed even the scope of war and cause indiscriminate suffering and destruction to mankind…contrary to the rules of international law and to the laws of humanity”. And finally, General Assembly resolution 1665 (XVI), unanimously adopted, called on nuclear and non-nuclear weapons possessors to “cooperate” to prevent further acquisition and spread of nuclear weapons. These early resolutions fed into “non-proliferation” talks between the United States, the Soviet Union and the United Kingdom, viewed as first steps towards disarmament.

4 0
3 years ago
HELP ASAP Will GIVE BRAINLEST AND 100 POINTS!!! Which of the following best decribes the Harlem Renaissance?
HACTEHA [7]

Answer:

D

Explanation:

During the 1920s, Harlem experienced a rebirth of cultural growth and acceptance. Racial segregation ended, and writers, poets, and artists flourished.

3 0
3 years ago
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