Answer:
Hi there, so the answer to that question is A. The government has increasingly controlled how many stations are available, hope this helps <3.
Explanation:
The illegal voting would have been stopped or a least greatly reduced with the implementation of proper voter registration and state IDs. Of course, with the rudimentary technology of the era, falsification of ID documents would have been relatively easier than it is today. However IDs and voter registration would have presented an additional obstacle to border ruffians.
The violence would only have been stopped by the concourse of a national guard, a state police and civil deputies from the state protecting voter, voting locations and the transportation of ballots.
Answer:
Kindly check attached picture.
Explanation:
Crop rotation technique refers to the act and F alternating the growth of a series of crop on a land with the sole aim of controlling pest, weed and maintaining land fertility. In the question above, the piece of land is divided into three parts, two crops (summer and winter) are grown on two parts with the third lying fallow (a techniques used to restore soil fertility by leaving it idle during a certain planting season). The two crops and the fallow is alternated on the 3 portions of the land each year.
Kindly check attached picture for more details.
Answer: Cities
Explanation:
Political maps are designed to show governmental boundaries of countries, states, and counties, the location of major cities, and they usually include significant bodies of water.
Answer:
These evidences are gotten from his personal experiences, direct quotations, and examples.
Explanation:
King believed that the Vietnam War was diverting money and the attention from domestic programs which were created to help the black poor.
King's counter argument was:
"People will say that I am just a civil rights leader and have no business taking sides on the issue of war."
His argument was:
"The issue of America's soul is my concern whether it be about civil rights or war".
He said, ‘the war was doing far more than devastating the hopes of the poor at home…We were taking the black young men who had been crippled by our society and sending them eight thousand miles away to guarantee liberties in Southeast Asia which they had not found in southwest Georgia and East Harlem.'”