Number 1 I know is correct
The answer to the question is ad-hoc committees.
This is because the committee is created only for the purpose of studying whether it is feasible to hold the Olympics in Atlanta and what preparations and the underlying budgets needed for the event to be realized.
Joint committees refer to committees where the members’ compositions originate from at least two different organizations.
In the U.S., standing committees refers to permanent members of a legislative panel created by the Senate and House of Representatives.
Conference committees, on the other hand, refers to a committee created in the U.S. congress to settle disagreements on a certain legislature.
Answer:
The sleeper effect.
Explanation:
As the exercise presents, Jamie heard about a divorce that was published in the RAG MAG, which she does not believe is very reliable. However, over time, she forgot where she heard about the divorce. The fact that she later came to believe the story was true is known as the sleeper effect. The sleeper effect is, as suggested, a psychological phenomenon that relates to persuasion. It is a delayed increase of the effect of a message that is accompanied by a discounting cue. So, in this case, Jamie heard statement X from place A. After some time, she forgot where she had heard it, but the information (statement X) remained in her mind.
Answer:
The region had important resources in oil (South Caucasus), natural gases (North Caucasus). ... This chain of mountains ensures the officially frontier between the Russian Federation and some republics from the southern Caucasus as Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia.
Answer:
Archimedes.
Explanation:
The scientific revolution was a series of events that allowed the emergence of modern science. Developments began to happen in fields like mathematics, physics, biology, anatomy, astronomy, chemistry, etc. This began to transform the views of nature and society. As the exercise says, some of this was done recovering the works of Greek philosophers such as Archimedes or Aristotle.
Archimedes of Syracuse was a Greek mathematician, physicist, engineer, inventor, and astronomer. He saw the world through mathematics, as the exercise details. Much of his work was recovered by the Renaissance humanists.