38: Shortage
39: Price equilibrium
40: unsure, possibly Utility
41: Diminishing Utility
42: Demand
43: Expenses
44: Opportunity cost
45: Possibly Trade off
46: don't know
47: don't know.
<span>Ziggurats and pyramids greatly differ in terms of purpose or function. Pyramids were originally thought to be the final resting places of the pharaohs but more recent archaeological finds have uncovered that they were built with very narrow shafts extending from the inside to the outer surface for the purpose of lifting the pharaoh’s soul unto the heavens. Ziggurats on the other hand were said to have been built to house the gods. Thus, they are the actual dwelling places of the gods themselves especially in the point of view of the Sumerians and Babylonians.</span>
He helped pass the Compromise of 1850 by establishing the theory of popular sovereignty.
Pros of Having Political Parties: Members of the governmental bodies can more easily predict the outcomes of debates based on the beliefs of the parties
Compromises can be made based on more distinct opinions of groups
Cons of Having Political Parties: Officials act in order to aid the party, rather than the people
It is more difficult for compromises to be made when a legislative body is so divided
Not all people agree with every aspect of their political party, and their opinions are not represented in full by the party
The Cuban Missile crisis comes to a close as Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev agrees to remove Russian missiles from Cuba in exchange for a promise from the U.S to respect Cuba’s territorial sovereignty. This ended nearly two weeks of anxiety and tensions between the U.S and the Soviet Union that came close to provoking a nuclear conflict. The consequences of the crisis were many and varied. Relations between Cuba and the Soviet Union were on shaky ground for some time after Khrushchev’s removal of the missiles, as Fidel Castro accused Russians of backing down from the Americans and deserting the Cuban revolution. European allies of the U.S were also angered, not because of the U.S. stance during the crisis, but because the Kennedy administration kept them virtually in the dark about negotiations that might have led to an atomic war.