Im pretty sure the answer is B. because when you ask someone if you are going to a party, it is a matter most likely not decided yet, which is the meaning of and open question... hope that helps... :)
Answer:
Explanation:
Before the election the previous president was John Quincy Adams, but Andrew Jackson won.
Based on this information we can reject the following options:
John Quincy Adams was a popular president, and Andrew Jackson ran a poor campaign. (else he wouldn't win)
John Quincy Adams was such a popular president that Andrew Jackson lost despite running a strong campaign
Now, John Quincy Adams was not a very bad president, but Andrew Jackson won because of his campain:
the correct answer is:
John Quincy Adams was an unpopular president, and Andrew Jackson ran a strong campaign.
I've always heard it to be a. schools, but I'm not sure if that's the name for the specific situation you described.
<u>Answer</u>:
Cameron has been very stressed during harvest season while working on farm equipment in the evenings and harvesting the crops during the day. He comes down with the flu the day after his last field is harvested. The reason for his illness is likely that Cameron’s stress hormones suppressed the activity of Lymphocytes.
<u>Explanation</u>:
Immune system is the collection of billion number of cells that travel through our bloodstream. They defend our body against bacteria and viruses. White blood cells are the main immune cells in our body.
When a person gets stressed, the immune system's ability to fight gets reduced. The stress hormone “corticosteroid” suppresses the efficiency of the 'immune system' by reducing the number of "Lymphocytes". Lymphocytes are of two types:
a. "B cells" which produce antibodies and are released in the "fluid" surrounding the body cells.
b. "T cells" which gets locked to the 'infected' cell and destroy it.
Academicians were often cautious about airing the ethical dilemmas they faced in their research and academic work, but that environment is changing today. Psychologists in academe are more likely to seek out the advice of their colleagues on issues ranging from supervising graduate students to how to handle sensitive research data, says George Mason University psychologist June Tangney, PhD.