B. Richard Nixon
He was president during that time so that’s the only logical answer
Answer:
C. concerned with uniqueness
Explanation:
Competing on differentiation refers to the strategic tactic employed by a company to make it's brand unique and as a result set it apart from those of its competitors. In this way a company aims to acquire market share by producing "different" products or services from the ones it's competitors are producing. This ensures that their customers are able to identify their products and appeal to it differently(positively) from other products in the market.
The correct answer is social loafing.
Social loafing refers to the phenomenon where a person puts in less effort to achieve a goal, when he/she is part of a group, compared to when he/she is working alone. Social loafing usually occurs due to diffusion of responsibility, where a person feels less responsible and motivated to help out, when he/she is in a group with other people. In this instance, Carlene demonstrates that she dislikes social loafing because she believes that when working in a group, there is always going to be someone who is content to sit back and let others do the work.
Proximity is the factor that determine where the illegal immigrants settle. The country like United States, has so many illegal immigrants that hope to have a better life in the country, they risk their life just to have money in the country because they know that country is rich so they migrate in the United states.
Answer:
The situation that have occurred with friendship between Jewell and Amie falls under the in-group–out-group bias, the concept actively researched under the theory of prejudice and group conflict.
Explanation:
In the beginning Jewell became friends with Amie, because she thought that they belong to the same group (<u>in-group</u>). Meanwhile, when she learned Amie was a teacher in her college she realized the belong to a different group (<u>out-group</u>).
This phenomenon is explained in particular due to <em>competition between groups</em>. Here, students and teachers compete, because each of them uses different methods of achieving goals.
For example, students cheat to get good grades, while teachers fight against cheating. By being friends with Amie (<u>the teacher</u>), Jewell (<u>the student</u>) might have become worried that she will disclose some information about how students cheat and thus <u>pose a threat against her own group</u>.