Some of the key provisions of the Ohio constitution of 1802 were that the Ohio general assembly would be bicameral, similar to the federal government. That they would have a governor but that the governor would not have a veto power; that they would have a supreme court that would have to convene on a yearly basis, and that the state would have the ability of accumulating unlimited debt.
Answer:
convergent boundary without subduction
Explanation:
As the state of the economy and the issues surrounding gaps in income inequality continue to absorb the national spotlight, some may wonder what exactly any of the numbers that are thrown around in the media actually say about, well, anything. What does it mean when the unemployment rate drops? Does that mean people are finding jobs and the economy is improving? What do any of the numbers surrounding unemployment really say about the state of the economy?
Recently you may have heard that the unemployment rate has dropped. While that is true, it does not necessarily indicate a positive occurrence. According the jobs report of December, 74,000 jobs have been added to the economy, and the jobless rate is down to 6.7%. Adding jobs and seeing a decrease in the jobless rate, both sound like really good things on the surface. Upon further examination of what exactly these numbers mean, the poor state of employment across the country begins to reveal itself.
This is specific to your religion of preference. I can not answer this for you, however, I can explain it a little bit. They are asking you to compare your religion's (faith's) holy book to that of another religion's book, for example if you are a Christian your holy book is considered the "Holy Bible" and you would compare the principals and similarities of that book to the book of Torah (Judaism), or Tripitaka (Buddhism), or Quran (Islam) Its really up to you, all you need to do is compare your holy book to others (if you don't have one just use one that you know best and compare it to others)
There are a lot of religions out there you would be surprised, look some up online it will help.
Although not many people know this, the civil rights act that they supported and fought for was actually an economic act primarily. It dealt with ending segregation in employment and disenfranchising workers and allowing African-Americans to live and work together with white people. This is why they fought for it since african-americans were forced to live in poverty and dread because of lack of economic support.