Answer: E - year only if non-OPEC nations, including Norway, Mexico, and Russia, trim output
Explanation: From the above question, we are looking for the best constructed sentence among the options given.
Looking through all the options, A and B with the phrase ...'but only if' is wrong.
Options C and D has some grammatical issues at the end of each statement which made them both not correct.
The only option we are left with is the option E which states that 'year only if non-OPEC nations, including Norway, Mexico, and Russia, trim output' is correct.
Answer:When I was, oh, <em>around</em> eight years old, I thought it would be fun to learn to play the piano. My parents agreed to purchase a piano. They told me that I would be required to practice one hour a day, <em>due to the fact that </em>piano lessons were expensive. At first, I practiced piano for two hours each day, <em>with the result that</em> I progressed very rapidly. Every day for two years I raced home <em>when </em>school was done and practiced the piano with great enthusiasm. Then one day, something happened. I decided I liked baseball better than the piano. Though I can play the piano rather well <em>at the present time</em>, I do not practice as long nor as diligently as I once did.
Explanation:
Answer:
(a)The congress could pass a bill by stopping medications of life-or death from being increased to a particular value, thereby making Mylan to reduce their prices, to a more tangible value (b) If the president is not part of this decision, he can use his veto powers against the bill passed by the congress, thereby making Mylan to retain their rates as high as it is currently (c) Lobbyist and Interest groups will further express their ideas towards the president and congressmen to hold on, or make a change in the bill.
Explanation:
Solution:
(a) Congress could pass a bill by stopping important life-or-death medications from being added up above a certain value. in doing so,Mylan would be made to lower their prices to a more sensible value.
(b) If the President is not in approval of this sort of law making, he can use the power of veto towards the bill passed by Congress, in doing so Mylan can keep their rates as high as present as it is now. As a result, the power of Congress is weakened by the President's own power.
(c) For them to push their ideas forward, many lobbyists and interest groups would likely meet with the president and congressmen encouraging them to either or hold firm or make a change in their position on the bill such as lobbying several organizations that fight for the right of victims would urge congress to disallow a presidential veto of the bill this would mean that if they vote to override the veto, the bill becomes a law.
<h2>
To appeal to the dissatisfied, multi-ethnic population of the Soviet Union.</h2>
A comment from the <em>History Channel</em> explains the situation in the USSR when Gorbachev was in power. "In 1985, even many of the most conservative hardliners realized that much needed to change. The Soviet economy was faltering and dissidents and internal and external critics were calling for an end to political repression and government secrecy." As far as the aim of Gorbachev's reforms, "The plan was for the Soviet Union to become more transparent, and in turn for the leadership of the nation and the Communist Party to be improved," according to <em>YourDictionary</em>.
In March 1985, Mikhail Gorbachev proposed policies of <em>perestroika </em>(restructuring) and <em>glasnost</em> (openness) in the Soviet Union. These seemed like policies that leaned in the direction of Western ways of economics and politics. <em>Perestroika </em>meant allowing some measure of private enterprise in the Soviet Union. <em>Glasnost </em>meant allowing a bit of freedom in regard to speech and publication. Gorbachev was not trying to get rid of the Soviet communist system. He actually was trying to prop it up and preserve it, because it was starting to have many problems sustaining itself, and there was too much dissatisfaction and dissent occurring among the country's people. But in the end, opening things up a bit with <em>perestroika </em>and <em>glasnost</em> policies pushed the USSR further in the direction of shedding the communist model under which it had lived for so long, and would begin to spell the end of the USSR.