I have a few questions with a multiple choice answers that I do not understand. Can someone please explain it to me more clearly than my lesson is doing? Any answer that I think I know I will surely put asterisk by.

1. Article IV, Section 2 of the U.S. Constitution states: A person charged with any State with Treason, Felony, or other Crime, who shall flee from Justice, and be found in another State, shall on demand of the executive Authority of the State from which he fled, be delivered up, to be removed from the State having Jurisdiction from the Crime. How does this section of the Constitution help develop the rule of law?
A. It gives states the authority to get what they need from other states.****
B. It ensures that states respect the laws and the law systems of other states.
C. It makes it clear that certain crimes are more serious than others.
D. It allows criminals to escape but only when a state is unjust.
2. In Article I, the U.S. Constitution says "No state shall coin money...." Instead, the Constitution grants authority to coin money to the national government. This means that coining money is an example of what kind of power?
A. reserved
B. shared
C. delegated****
D. concurrent
3. Which of the following is most likely to be undertaken by the federal government?
A. organizing the construction of a new public university
B. writing additional requirements for teaching licences
C. revising a citizenship test for immigrants
D. passing new laws to encourage trade in state (This question's answer I have no idea what it is)
Please somebody help me I'm so lost :(

3 answers

Sorry I forgot to space out while I was typing my questions and everything else. I know it looks stuck together but please try to understand. Thanks.
1. A -- you're close, but there's a better answer.

2. C. No -- http://study.com/academy/lesson/reserved-powers-definition-examples.html

3. No. Business within a state is controlled by the state.
On question 3, think about what kind of things happen WITHIN a state and what things happen that affect ALL the states. The national government usually stays out of things that affect only things within any state, but has authority over NATIONAL affairs.