There’s no picture or diagram
In 1832, South Carolina declared that it had the power to nullify federal laws with which it disagreed -- namely, a set of tariffs designed to protect northern manufacturers. In response, President Andrew Jackson issued a proclamation asserting the Supreme Court's ultimate power to decide constitutional questions and emphasizing that its decisions had to be obeyed -- even though, earlier that same year, he had ignored the Court's decision in Worcester v. Georgia (prohibiting the forced removal of the Cherokee from Georgia)
William B. Hartsfield accepted the position of mayor of Atlanta during the Great Depression. He would serve at various times
until 1961. Which of these was he MOST remembered for during his time as mayor?
A. his support for the early Civil Rights movement
B. having an international airport named after him
C. being elected to the National Organization of Mayors
D. bring the Braves to Atlanta from Milwaukee
Answer:
D. His support for the early Civil Rights Movement
Explanation:
William B. Hartsfield was born on March 1, 1890, and later served as Atlanta's longest serving mayor from 1937-1961(served for six terms).
In his cause to make Atlanta a model city, he supported the early Civil Rights movement and was most famous for his work towards achieving racial equality. Thus, race relations in Atlanta were more progressive than in other southern cities. He was later credited with the slogan "Atlanta is the city too busy to hate".
Hartsfield also helped to desegregate Atlanta's schools. The city was viewed as a modern city and attracted other businesses to relocate to the state of Georgia.
Ruling out rival hypotheses, Findings consistent with several hypotheses
require additional research to eliminate these hypotheses. More five principles
of critical thinking are: (1.) Correlation vs. Causation, the fact that two
things are associated with each other doesn’t mean that one causes the other.
(2.) Replicability, a finding must be capable of being duplicated by
independent researchers following the same recipe. (3.) Occam’s Razor,
if two hypotheses explain a phenomenon equally well, we should generally select
the simpler one. (4.) Falsifiability, claims
must be capable of being disproved. (5.) Extraordinary Claims, the more a
claim contradicts what we already know, the more persuasive the evidence must
be before we should accept it.