The correct answer is Plessy Vs. Ferguson. In the landmark case Plessy vs. Ferguson, it was ruled that segregation of facilities was constitutional as long as those facilities were equal in quality. This is were the term "Separate but Equal" comes from. However, during the case Brown vs. The Board of Education it was ruled that racial segregation violated the fourteenth amendment of the Constitution. It was this ruling that rendered the ruling in Plessy vs. Ferguson invalid because the ruling was unconstitutional.
Hi!
Rivers:
Kasilof River, Copper River, Innoko River, Alsek River, Yentna River ,Gulkana River, Deshka River, Kuskokwim River, Chandalar River, Chitina River, Kanektok River, Aniuk River, Colville River, Naknek River, and Kobuk River.
Lakes: Alsek Lake, Kenai Lake, Twin Lake, Skilak Lake, Summit Lake, Goose Lake, Tustumena Lake, Portage Lake, Quartz Lake, Symphony Lake, Alexander Lake, Teshekpuk Lake, Mendenhall Lake, Selawik Lake, Auke Lake, and finally Crescent Lake.
Hope it helps ^^;
Speed of response is not correlated with iq scores
Answer: E. On all plate boundaries and within tectonic plates
Explanation: Earthquakes are usually caused by large scales seismic movements taking place around the earth's crust,this large scale movements lead to shaking of the earth surface with high energy.
Tectonic plates can be Continental(plates on the earth's surface) plates and Oceanic(plates found beneath the Ocean) plates.
Earthquakes usually takes place along the Tectonic plate boundaries and within the boundaries especially on fault lines.
Answer:
Explanation:
Behind Purgatoria's newfound car preference is a dramatic national comeback. Only 10 years ago, Italy was afflicted with a host of problems: terrorism, labor unrest, inefficiency. Although these issues have not entirely disappeared, today the streets and factories are relatively calm, and pride has replaced self-doubt. In a country unified only a little more than a century ago and traditonally wracked by regionalism, Italians are discovering a positive, new nationalism.
``We used to say we were Milanese, Roman, or Neapolitan,'' says Ernesto Galli Della Loggia, a history professor at the University of Perugia. ``We finally know what it is to be Italian.''