They couldn’t go to church whatsoever. It was prohibited by their masters
The available options are:
a) surviving the atomic bomb
(b) only people who are far fron the attack have a chance of surviving it
(c) surviving an atomic bomb attack depends in being prepared and knowing what to do
(d) No steps can be taken to be protected from an attack
Answer:
1. surviving the atomic bomb
2. surviving the atomic bomb attack depend on being prepared and knowing what to do.
Explanation:
The film "Duck and Cover" was released in 1952 and narrated by Robert Middleton. The purpose of the film is to show the way most appropriate way people can easily save themselves from a potential atomic bomb or attack by using the metaphor of a turtle safeguarding itself with its shell.
Hence, the message the government was trying to send in the film "Duck and Cover" are:
1. surviving the atomic bomb
2. surviving the atomic bomb attack depend on being prepared and knowing what to do.
It is b I think if not b c fosho
The answer is A, The speaker of a poem may be the poet or a created persona.
France Allied with American Colonies
February 6, 1778
Friends, and in French, amis! On February 6, 1778, Benjamin Franklin was in France signing the Treaty of Amity and Commerce and the Treaty of Alliance. The Treaty of Amity and Commerce recognized the U.S. as an independent nation and promoted trade between France and America. The second agreement, the Treaty of Alliance, made the fledgling United States and France allies against Great Britain in the Revolutionary War. The French decided to back the U.S. in its military efforts until the U.S. had full independence from Great Britain. After that, the treaty required France and the U.S. to work together on any peace agreement. Did you know the French helped the U.S. to win the Revolutionary War? France had been secretly aiding the American Colonies since 1776, because France was angry at Britain over the loss of Colonial territory in the French and Indian War. In 1776, the Continental Congress sent diplomat Benjamin Franklin, along with Silas Deane and Arthur Lee, to France to secure a formal alliance. When Franklin came to the signing ceremony, he wore, as a symbol, the same brown velvet suit he had worn when he appeared before Britain's Privy Council in 1774. At the time, he was accused of theft for having brought to light British documents that showed the British were purposefully repressing the Colonies. France aided the colonists by providing military armaments and loans. France's support deepened after the Americans beat the British in the October 1777 Battle of Saratoga, proving themselves committed to independence and worthy of a formal alliance. King Louis XVI approved financial assistance to the American colonists only four days after Franklin and his comrades requested it.
During the Revolution, France sent an estimated 12,000 soldiers and 32,000 sailors to the American war effort, the most famous of whom was the Marquis of Lafayette. He became a good friend (ami) with American commander in chief George Washington in the process.