Answer:
The U.S. Cold War economic policies were in contrast to those the United States pursued to win World War II.To win the Cold War, the United States became a low-savings, high-consumption economy. It basically supported its allies in a recovery, development and growth process that out-consumed the USSR and China.As the Cold War unfolded in the decade and a half after World War II, the United States experienced phenomenal economic growth. The war brought the return of prosperity, and in the postwar period the United States consolidated its position as the world's richest country.The growth had different sources
In its major provisions, the new law requires the states to:
-replace all their lever-operated and punch-card voting devices by 2006;
-upgrade their administration of elections, esp. through the better training of local election officials and of those who work in precinct polling places on election day;
-centralize and computerize their voter registration systems, to facilitate the id of qualified voters on election day and so minimize fraudulent voting;
<span>-provide for provisional voting, so a person whose eligibility to vote has been challenged can cast a ballot that will be counted if it is later found that he/ she is in fact, qualified to vote</span>
the answer to your question is a) they had advanced planning and developed effective military methods.
College athletic programs were most affected by the passage of Title IX in 1972.
I think it is B or C but I am not sure sorry dude