Answer:
After the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the ensuing Civil War produced acute food shortages in southwestern Russia. Wartime devastation was compounded by two successive seasons of drought, and by 1920 it was clear that a full-scale famine was under way in the Volga River Valley, Crimea, Ukraine, and Armenia. Conditions were so desperate that in early 1920 the Soviet government sent out a worldwide appeal for food aid to avert the starvation of millions of people.
Explanation:
The fact that the Marshall Plan financially aided European countries to build up their governments and economies after WWll worsened relations between the USA and the USSR
If the president <span>doesn't sign the bill but holds it for more than
10 days then it automatically becomes law without his signature, except
if Congress isn't in session to accept the returned bill.
</span>
Answer: Formed armed militias.
Explanation:
In response to growing hostilities between the British and the American colonists, the British army took over Boston and in 1775 attempted to take over military stores and arrest some people in Massachusetts.
New England (the region Massachusetts is part of) colonists then formed armed militias in response and chased the British all the way back to the Charlestown area of Boston and began the siege of Boston which was effectively the beginning of the American Revolution.
Answer:
In the excerpt Walt Whitman suggests that <u><em>human beings continue to exist after death through the people they know</em></u> because <em><u>the remains of the dead are absorbed into the soil and continue to nourish life</u></em>.
Explanation:
Walt Whitman's poem "Song of Myself" is a celebration of the self and how an individual becomes one with nature. The poet delves into the idea of discovering one's self, identification of one's self with that of others, and the relationship with the universe and nature.
In the given lines of poetry taken from the 6th part of the poem, the poet talks of what happens to life after one dies. He questions<em> "What has become of the young and old men? / And what has become of the women and children?"</em> And he responds, "<em>All goes onward and outward, nothing collapses, / And to die is different from what anyone supposed, and luckier."</em>
This shows that Whitman believes human beings do not die or vanish completely. Rather, they continue to exist after death through the people they know, and that the remains of the dead are absorbed into the soil and continue to nourish life.