Answer:
Theodore Judah
Explanation:
Judah was an American railroad and civil engineer who lobbied Congress to pass the Transcontinental Railroad Act with the purpose of building a railroad that would link the Mississippi River Valley to the Pacific coast
Franz Ferdinand decided to visit Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia and
Herzegovnia, to make an inspection of the Austro-Hungarian troops there.
The inspection was scheduled for 28th June 1914. It was planned that Franz
Ferdinand and his wife Sophie would be met at the station and taken by car
to the City Hall where they would have lunch before going to inspect the
troops.
It happened in the 1800’s it allowed a lot more people to get paid more from their jobs resulting in a higher standard of living. This is where unions came in the picture, they wanted 8 hour work days and no child labor. The gilded age is known as a prosperous time for the nation but the government was very corrupt. There were corrupt industrialists, bankers and politicians who stole and benefited from the working class.
*The trans continental railroad made more people move west and created “robber barons”
*Since the government was corrupt muckrakers became a thing, the muckrakers exposed government corruption and such
This question goes a lot deeper, so if you want to know more just ask in the comments
Answer:
In terms of experimental design I don't think you would be able to design an experiment to prove the information processing theory is correct, at most you would only be able to prove that the information processing theory is *not incorrect*.
Since the theory hinges on the operation of three different components, the sensory register, short-tem memory and long-term memory, you would have to 'test' whether actual mental behaviour is consistent with the predictions of the theory, i.e. information passes from the sensory register to short term memory and from short term memory to long term memory and from long term memory to short term memory.
Explanation:
<span>The judicial Power of the United States, shall be vested
in one Supreme Court, and in such inferior Courts as the Congress may
from time to time ordain and establish. -Article III, Section 1, The
Constitution of the United States</span>