Answer:
Jordan retired from Congress in 1979 to become a professor at the Lyndon Baines Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas. She became an active public speaker and advocate, amassing 25 honorary doctorates. Her vehement opposition helped derail George Bush’s nomination of Robert Bork (who had opposed many civil rights cases) to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Jordan, who had suffered from multiple sclerosis since 1973, was wheelchair-bound by the time she was invited to give her second Democratic convention keynote address in 1992. Until her death she remained private about her illnesses, which finally included diabetes and cancer.
In 1994 Bill Clinton awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the country’s highest civilian honor. Jordan died of leukemia-related pneumonia on January 17, 1996. Breaking barriers even in death, she became the first African American to be buried among the governors, senators and congressmen in the Texas State Cemetery.
Answer:
Because it's human nature.
Explanation:
A grudge may arise from many human emotions. Jealously, sadness, anger...etc. When we get over one, it allows us to heal and when we don't, it can turn worse. For example, your really close friend forgot your birthday and now you have a grudge against them because you are hurt, angry and sad. They were your friend! but you feel betrayed and thus, you hold a grudge against them and once solved, you'll either get closer to your friend or have a damaged freindship.
Source: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/fulfillment-any-age/201710/why-people-hold-grudges-and-what-do-about-them
<span>In 'The Crucible', Arthur Miller uses situational, dramatic, and verbal irony, which, in the literary context, is the unexpected, to add comic relief, suspense, and intensity to some of the most dramatic scenes.</span>
Interesting. You did not describe the requirements, but the message seems good to me. Thanks for sharing.
<span>The narrator directly addresses the reader using the pronoun you.</span>