I cannot do this entire thing for you, but I can help.
A cause is the thing that forces something else to happen. So, that could be anything. The effect is what comes after the event.
For example, the driver was texting while driving. That is the cause. He hit a girl. That is the event. He girl was injured. That is the effect.
Hope that helps!
Answer:
As an admiral and later the 19th Chief of Naval Operations, Zumwalt played a major role in United States military history, especially during the Vietnam War. A decorated war veteran, Zumwalt reformed United States Navy personnel policies in an effort to improve enlisted life and ease racial tensions.
Also nice tartaglia pic
I = Prt
I: interest earned
P: principle (initial invested amount)
r: rate (percentage)
t: time in years (duration)
Most often, when letters are side-by-side this means they are all factors of each other. If something is a factor of another, then multiply them. So, 275 times 8% or 8/100 or 0.08 times 16 years is equal to $352. With this total subtract $275 from $352. The interest earned is equal to $77.
$275 * 0.08 * 16 yrs = $352
$352 - $275 = $77
I = $77
This may seem confusing when saying aloud in order of the equation, "Interest equals $352". The total is $352, the interest earned is equal to $77. Conventions and platitudes are often erroneous.
Arizona,California,Delaware,Florida,Ilinois, Indiana,Kansas,Maine,Minnesota,New Mexico,North Carolina,Oregon,Virginia,West Virginia,Wisconsin
President Lincoln learned that to recreate the Union, servility must end. Politically, Lincoln faced constrain on all sides: from African Americans fleeing servility, from Union generals acting self-reliant, from extreme Republicans calling for instant abolition, and from pro-slavery Unionists who opposed emancipation. commanding a balance, he trust the president only had the authority and political support to free enslaved the people residing within the eleven rebel states. In the summer of 1862, he began to draft the Emancipation Proclamation. Lincoln constantly implicit his critics that he had no ambition for rescinding the proclamation. He frequent his fidelity to emancipation in this note to Henry C. Wright of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society. In 1864, he would risk his political fortunes and his reelection by throwing his full advocate behind the 13th Amendment to the Constitution, which abrogate slavery.