<span> a law passed by </span>congress<span> in </span>1974<span> to allow the Environmental Protection Agency to regulate the quality of public </span>drinking water<span>.</span>
<span>Why study history? The answer is because we virtually must, to gain access to the laboratory of human experience. When we study it reasonably well, and so acquire some usable habits of mind, as well as some basic data about the forces that affect our own lives, we emerge with relevant skills and an enhanced capacity for informed citizenship, critical thinking, and simple awareness. The uses of history are varied. Studying history can help us develop some literally “salable” skills, but its study must not be pinned down to the narrowest utilitarianism. Some history—that confined to personal recollections about changes and continuities in the immediate environment—is essential to function beyond childhood. Some history depends on personal taste, where one finds beauty, the joy of discovery, or intellectual challenge. Between the inescapable minimum and the pleasure of deep commitment comes the history that, through cumulative skill in interpreting the unfolding human record, provides a real grasp of how the world works.—Peter Stearns</span>
The answer you are looking for is D.) articles that exaggerated or manipulated events to shock readers.
For example lets say there was a car crash and the people had minor injuries in your town. Later you see on the morning paper that the people suffered terribly from the crash that they had to be flown to a hospital. That is yellow journalism because the event is exaggerated.
I’ve read that
Leninism is political theory for the establishment of the dictatorship of the proletariat, led by a revolutionary vanguard party, as the political prelude to the establishment of socialism.
so I think that the answer would be aristocratic social structure.
Answer:
Option: D escalation of the Cold War
Explanation:
The Brinkmanship policy of the 1950s resulted in a conflict escalation of the Cold War. The Brinkmanship was a foreign policy between the United States and the Soviet Union. The best example of this policy referred to the Cuban missile crisis when the Soviet place nuclear missiles in Cuba in 1962. The policy forces communication between two parties confrontation to gain an advantageous agreement over the other for power.