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Mnenie [13.5K]
3 years ago
8

Which of the following correctly completes line I.__________ in the outline above?

History
2 answers:
Lady bird [3.3K]3 years ago
7 0
I think is c checks and balances I'm glad to help
LuckyWell [14K]3 years ago
7 0
I do believe it is D   <span />
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What evidence in the text helps you determine Lange's
Sholpan [36]

On a bitter, damp day in March 1936, Dorothea Lange was driving home to Berkeley after spending six weeks photographing migrant workers in California, New Mexico, and Arizona. Her position on the staff at the Resettlement Administration (RA), an agency set up to help peasants during the Great Depression, was tenuous. Lange was employed as a clerk and a stenographer, as she had no budget for a photographer. Travel expenses under “office supplies”.

That day, as Lange was driving down an empty California highway, she noticed a sign that read “Pee Pickers Camp.” Knowing the pea crop was frozen, she insisted on her twenty miles before finally turning back. After driving into the camp’s muddy lane, Lange approached the migrant worker and asked permission to photograph her, and she took only five photographs. In her Lange field part of her notebook, she said, “I didn’t ask her name or her story. He told me he was 32 years old. She said they live off frozen vegetables from the surrounding fields and birds that have killed children. She had just sold car tires to buy groceries.”

Hence, At her home, Lange developed her images and, with the prints still wet, told San Francisco News editors that migrant workers in Nipomo, Calif., were slowly starving – “Immigrant Madonna.” “,

Rebecca Maxell

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brainly.com/question/19665273

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8 0
1 year ago
How were the atomic bombs created in New Mexico used during WWII? a. They were tested at White Sands, but the technology was nev
HACTEHA [7]

Answer:

d

Explanation:

dropped in japan in hiroshima and nagasaki

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3 years ago
In which four religions did the worlds first farmers live?
EastWind [94]

Fertile Crescent, which arcs from the Persian Gulf to Turkey and south to Egypt

8 0
3 years ago
Looking at the map of the Battle of Long Island, where did the British troops come from before they landed in Brooklyn?
zepelin [54]

The correct answer to this open question is the following.

Although there are no options attached we can say the following.

Unfortunately, you forgot to include the map. So we are going to answer the question without the map, just on our knowledge of the subject.

The Battle of Long Island. The British troops came from the evacuation of the city of Boston Massachusetts before they landed in Brooklyn. Indeed, the British troops camped in Staten Island, very close to what today is Manhattan, before marching to what today is Brookly, the area where the Battle of Long Island was fought.

This Battle was considered to be the largest battle in the Revolutionary War of Indidepende and was fought on August 27, 1776. It also was the first major battle after the promulgation of the Declaration of Independence of July 4, 1776, drafted by Thomas Jefferson and other four prominent founding fathers.

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How did the growth of resistance movements in Eastern Europe lead to the collapse
bezimeni [28]

Answer:

Explanation:

Mikhail Gorbachev’s reformist policies in the Soviet Union merely served to encourage opposition movements to the Communist regimes in the Soviet bloc countries. Demonstrations became more frequent. Governments were forced to accept measures, recommended, moreover, by Gorbachev, towards liberalisation. However, these measures were not deemed to be sufficient.Hopes of freedom, long suppressed by the Communist regimes in the countries of the Soviet bloc and in the USSR itself, were inevitably fuelled by Mikhail Gorbachev’s attempted reforms in the Soviet Union and his conciliatory policy towards the West. It proved impossible to maintain reformed Communist regimes. They were entirely swept away by the desire for political democracy and economic liberty. Within three years, the Communist regimes collapsed and individual nations gained freedom, initially in the USSR’s satellite countries and then within the Soviet Union itself. The structures of the Eastern bloc disintegrated with the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact and Comecon. The Soviet Union broke up into independent republics.In Poland, economic reforms led to strikes in the spring and summer of 1988. The Solidarity movement called for trade union pluralism. During the Round Table negotiations, which enabled the gradual creation of the Third Polish Republic, the Polish Communist leaders recognised the social movement in April 1989. Solidarność was therefore able to take part in the first semi-legal elections since the Second World War. The elections, held on 4 and 18 June, saw the collapse of the Communist Party, and Tadeusz Mazowiecki became the first non-Communist head of government in Eastern Europe. He was appointed on 19 August 1989 and endorsed by an overwhelming majority by the Polish Sjem on 8 September 1989 as a result of a coalition between Solidarity, the agricultural party and the Democratic party. In December 1989, Lech Wałęsa, symbolic leader of Solidarność, replaced General Jaruzelski of the Polish United Workers’ Party as President. The victory of the trade union’s candidates in these elections triggered a wave of peaceful anti-Communist revolutions in Central and Eastern Europe.In Hungary, demonstrations against the regime increased during 1987 and 1988. The Opposition became more organised, and reformers entered the government in June 1988. On 18 October 1989, the Stalinist Constitution was abandoned, and Hungary adopted political pluralism. Earlier that year, in May, the ‘Iron Curtain’ separating Hungary from Austria had been dismantled, which enabled many East Germans to flee to the West.In Czechoslovakia, a programme of reforms inspired by those of the USSR was adopted in December 1987 but was not widely implemented. The regime became more oppressive and suppressed demonstrations in 1988.In the German Democratic Republic (GDR), opposition to the Stalinist regime grew. Huge demonstrations took place, and increasing numbers of East Germans fled the country. The government would not consider any kind of reform, counting on the intervention of Soviet troops stationed in the GDR. Gorbachev, however, refused to help, having renounced Brezhnev’s doctrine of legitimate intervention in fellow Communist countries. From that point on, the Communist regime crumbled. The Wall which had divided Berlin since 1961 came down on 9 November 1989, and East Germans were interested only in reunification with the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG).The fall of the Berlin Wall had a significant impact. The collapse of the Communist regime in East Germany, which had gone ahead with the Soviet Union being powerless to put up any effective opposition, led to German reunification, an event which had a direct influence on the European integration process. In order to integrate a reunified Germany successfully into Europe, it was vital to strengthen the European Community by establishing a European Union which would include an Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) and a political union. This was the objective of the Maastricht Treaty of 7 February 1992.The reunification of Germany further accelerated the demise of the Communist governments. In Czechoslovakia, the Opposition leader, Václav Havel, was unanimously elected interim President of the Republic by the parliament of the Socialist Republic on 29 December 1989. In the same vein, the anti-establishment Civic Forum movement won the first free parliamentary elections on 8 June 1990 and reappointed Václav Havel as President of the Republic in July of that year. In Hungary, the parliamentary elections held on 2 April 1990 resulted in the formation of the Democratic Forum government. On 9 December 1990, Lech Wałęsa became President of the Republic of Poland. In Bulgaria, a coalition government was formed on 7 December 1990, and a new Constitution was adopted on 9 July 1991. In Romania, following violent demonstrations, the Communist dictator Nicolae Ceauşescu was executed

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