Answer:
Andrew Jackson felt betrayed by his loss in 1824 and wanted to create a political party for the "common people" ... The spoils system was debated long after Jackson's presidency has ended.
A. Supply is reduced but there was no change in demand mentioned. Therefore, the price of the apples will increase affecting the price of the juice to be higher, since the quantity which can be produced is reduced.
B. Price can go up as Demand can go up as more customer will be considering to buy cheaper apple juice. This will affect the supply as the supply will go down to accomodate influx of buyers.
C. Quantity of apple juice will increase. Adding both made with natural ingredients and synthetic ingredients. Price will go down for both but will have bigger supply. Demand can go up as more customer will be considering to buy cheaper apple juice
D. Price reduction for the apple juice since the manufacturing cost is reduced. Demand can go up as more customer will be considering to buy cheaper apple juice
By deciding upon the policy of unconditional surrender, the Allies were changing the diplomatic process typically associated with previous wars, such as World War I. Instead of accepting an armistice and then negotiating a peace treaty the Allied forces, led by President Franklin Roosevelt, Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and Premier Joseph Stalin decided upon a more aggressive approach by demanding a unilateral unconditional surrender of the Axis powers. These terms would be determined by the Allied forces and placed upon of the Axis territories with no negotiation.
This policy placed all of the negotiating power with the Allied powers and gave them the upper hand in designing a post World War II landscape, something especially important to all the countries. Both the United States and Britain had hoped to use these peace terms to stem-off the complete control of Europe by the Soviet Union, while the Soviet Union hoped to use the peace terms to hold the United States and Britain to previously agreed to contributions towards the war.
The League was founded so that Sparta might protect itself against both a possible uprising of Sparta's helots and regional rival Argos. Thucydides in his History of the Peloponnesian War describes the workings of the League. Members sent delegates to meetings where each city held one vote