Some issues children faced in the 1900s for child labor were:
<span>✦ Constantly getting sick. Children worked in dirty, impure areas so sicknesses and viruses spread easily.
</span><span>✦ Working long hours. Children worked when the sun rose until the sun set. Many could not attend school and couldn't spend time playing.
</span><span>✦ Not getting paid enough. Children never got the fair amount for working long hours.
</span><span>✦ Worked in dangerous conditions. Machines were used during this time and they weren't as safe as ours today. Children would hurt themselves when working with these machines. Some of them even lost body parts such as their finger or hand.
</span><span>✦ Barely ate food. Children were too busy working to take a break and eat. It was just work, work, and more work.
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<span>Hope that helps! ★ <span>If you have further questions about this question or need more help, feel free to comment below or leave me a PM. -UnicornFudge aka Nadia </span></span>
Answer:
Eastern Europe (and Russia)
Explanation:
Eastern Europe at that time of Truman's presidency was the only place with communism at that point. Truman's beliefs would be shared with that of the UK, with Churchill declaring that an "Iron curtain" had been built, separating eastern europe from that of the west.
Truman's policy of Containment involved allowing Communism to remain where it was, but preventing it from spreading. As a result, the US would begin helping other countries, by aiding Greece in its civil war and Turkey from being threatened by the USSR. He also concocted the Marshall plan to help countries in western europe from falling to Communism.
A volcanic eruption or extreme flooding.
Which best describes one lasting effect of the Watergate scandal?
Many Americans lost faith in their government and became cynical about politics
These are mud bricks, thatched with straw, grass, or hay. The dirt bricks are packed tight, then set out in the sun to harden into a brick.