Yeah your answer is A as you can see by the picture ^^
lol
Alexander<span> III of </span>Macedon<span>, known as </span>Alexander the Great<span> was the son of King </span>Philip II of Macedon<span>. He became king upon his father’s death in 336 BCE and went on to </span>conquer <span>most of the known world of his day. He is known as 'the great' both for his military genius and his diplomatic skills in handling the various populaces of the regions he conquered. He is further recognized for spreading </span>Greek<span> culture, language, and thought from </span>Greece <span>throughout </span>Asia Minor<span>, </span>Egypt<span>, and </span>Mesopotamia<span> to </span>India<span> and thus initiating the era of the "</span>Hellenistic World<span>".
A great website to read in is: </span>http://www.ancient.eu/Alexander_the_Great/
Answer: Because they teamed up with Adolf Hitler but they still lost the war so Hitler was angry but years later in 1995 hitler shot himself in the head.
Congress passed the removal bill that May, and by September Jackson had begun negotiating with the Chickasaws, the Choctaws and the remaining Creeks to move west. Within four years they would be under land cession treaties or on the move. Some Seminoles also left in the early 1830s, and others fought the Army in Florida for several years. But Ross refused even to meet with Jackson. Instead, he turned to the U.S. Supreme Court, asking the justices to invalidate Georgia’s removal law.
As the court’s spring session opened in March 1831, Georgia officials roamed the Capitol to rally states’ rights advocates to the idea of stripping the justices of their power to review the acts of state governments. The justices—in an act that historians would say reflected their worry over the talk coming out of Congress—ruled that they lacked jurisdiction over the Cherokees’ claims against Georgia. Chief Justice John Marshall offered their only hope when he wrote that “the Indians are acknowledged to have an unquestionable...right to the lands they occupy.”
In the 1994 mid-term congressional election campaign, most Republican candidates for the House of Representatives signed a "Contract with America" in which they
<span>promised to encourage conservative values such as individualism and self-reliance.</span>