I believe the answer is: <span>The full faith and credit clause of the U.S. Constitution requires state executives to honor and enforce the laws and decisions of other states
The main purpose of the executive branch is to ensure that the regulations that passed by the legislative branch is being enacted. Because of this, executive branches control almost all the government organization that get in touch with the citizens (such as administration, police department, etc)</span><span /><span>
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<span>They should listen to the child with full attention when the child talks about the death. <span>Sometimes
adults try to hide the topic or not explain to the children about what
happened, this is a mistake, they must explain to the children about the
death and hear and answer all the doubts they have.
I hope this infor
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Answer:
Baise Rajya (Nepali: बाइसे राज्यहरू) were sovereign and intermittently allied petty kingdoms on the Indian subcontinent, ruled by Khas from medieval India, located around the Karnali-Bheri river basin of modern-day Nepal. The Baise were annexed during the unification of Nepal from 1744 to 1810. The kingdom's founder Prithvi Narayan Shah (ruled 1743-1775) did not live to see this, but his son and grandson annexed the entire collection by the end of the 18th century.
Simraungadh, Simraongarh or Simroungarh ( Devanagari: सिम्रौनगढ) was a fortified city and the main capital of the Tirhut Kingdom founded by Karnat King Nanyadeva in 1097.Presently it is a municipality of Nepal, located in Bara District, Province No. 2. Archaeological investigations of the fort also show that part of the walls extended into Bihar, India as the city was situated on the modern-day border. The municipality was created in 2014 by agglomerating the Village Development Committees of Amritganj, Golaganj, Hariharpur & Uchidih; and later on expanded to include Bhagwanpur, Kachorwa, Dewapur-Teta, and Bishunpur kamalpur.
The correct answer is D.
Alisa Miller is the CEO of Public Radio International.
<em>According to Alisa Miller television networks have reduced the number of foreign bureaus by more than 50% over the past two decades.</em>
The number of foreign correspondents working for U.S. newspapers dropped by 25%.
The reasons for this reduction in international journalism are:
- The dangerous work in war zones across the world, for example, during the war in Iraq 156 journalists were killed.
- International journalism is expensive (bureaus, upkeep, travel, security).
- There is growing competition to old fashioned journalism (bloggers, citizen journalists).