I don't know because I needed the answer
Yes, Arizona became a state in 1912.
The United States was given Arizona state from Mexico. Arizona is now in the U.S.
No, She is Now attending/playing at the rival school Arizona State.
The back of a United States quarter used to be an eagle. Now there are 50 additional backs, as each state has a specific quarter dedicated to it.
nope, a job is a job for now, especially with how low the economy is.
Because your teachers say so and for an example I choose Arizona for my state report and I'm doing it right now!
Well, if you mean what picture is inscribed on a quarter, then I will tell you. There used to be an eagle, but now the 50 US states have quarters with their state logo thing on it.
Geronimo was born in what is now known as Arizona when it was still part of Mexico.
2
33.333%.This can be calculated in two different ways:1) The likelihood of the first coin being a state quarter is 2 out of 3, or 66.666%. The likelihood of the second coin being a state quarter is 1 out of 2 (since there are now only two coins to pick from, one a state quarter and the other not), or 50.000%. The likelihood of them both being state quarters is then 66.666% x 50.000%, which equals 33.333%.2) This is the same question as "what is the likelihood that the coin not chosen is not a state quarter?", which is 1 out of 3, or 33.333%.
They sure can ... you owe the taxes ... to not pay is tax fraud and punishable by federal laws, too.
The first year for US coins was 1793. Now if the date 1792 is just below the word Kentucky, then it's a 2001 State quarter, worth 25 cents.