<span>With the enactment in 1903 of the Terrell Election Law, which was amended in 1905-1906, a statewide direct-primary system for all state, district, and county elective offices was established and made mandatory for all parties that had received as many as 100,000 votes in the previous election; the requirement was later ...</span><span>Jun 12, 2010</span>
Answer:
Explanation:
Joseph's dreams first get him into trouble, but his ability to understand them leads him to be chosen by the Pharaoh and to save the world. We could learn a lesson about the mysteries of how the world works. Believers and non-believers can see it as an illustration of the need to keep trying and persevere.
Answer:
c) Multicultural theory
Explanation:
Multicultural theory in essence is simply explaining that, the more individual or person of more than one culture or ethnic group, for example: African american or Irish American who embraced their multi-identity, the more positive views or perceptions they held towards people of different cultures or ethnic groups from which they came from.
In other words, multicultural theory, propose the positive relationship between person of multiethnic groups to have a positive views of people from different ethnic group(s) from his or her.
<span>Most psychologists agree that intelligence is THE ABILITY TO USE KNOWLEDGE, LEARN FROM EXPERIENCE, AND SOLVE PROBLEMS TO ADAPT TO ADAPT TO NEW SITUATIONS.
Intelligence is not limited to theoretical development. It also involves the application of the theories you have learned.</span>
Answer:
It was Georg Simmel (1858-1918) who developed the theory of focused urbanism.
Explanation:
Simmel drew attention to the urban experience in his sociological theories, concentrating on urbanism or life within the city rather than the structural development or evolution of the urban area itself over time. He focused more on the social psychology of city dwellers and how they are different than rural dwellers in the essay called "The Metropolis and Mental Life." Simmel believed that the sensory experience in a city makes a city dweller unique because of the stimuli -- there are more people and sites and sounds that sharpen our senses and make us more rational or calculating than those who live in the country. We think with our heads and we are more detached or reserved as a function of living in the greater population density of cities where there is more economic differentiation and people dedicated to different kinds of careers and trades.