Gerald Ford
Ronald Reagan
Richard Nixon
The correct answer is Richard Nixon.
President Nixon visited the People's Republic of China in 1972.
It was the end of the 25-year-long no communication period between these two countries and the first step in normalizing relations. It was also done to gain more leverage over relations with the Soviet Union.
Nixon said that this visit 'changed the world' because it drove a wedge between the Soviet Union and China and shifted the relationship between the three countries during the Cold War.
This visit made it possible for Americans to see the first imagines of China for over two decades.
Answer: free +5
Explanation: easy
sarcasm and anger
optimism and enthusiasm
fear and loathing
Answer:
Optimism and enthusiasm :)
Explanation:
the answer is lockouts
The main issue of the 1840s free soil party was the abolition of slavery.
Further Explanations:
The period of the 1800s in the United States saw a rise in conflict among Pro-Slavery and Anti-Slavery parts of the United States. These tensions were resultant of Missouri’s request made for the admittance of Missouri to the United States. The government took it as a threat to the balance between Free and slave states of the United States as during era there were 22 states in the United States as a slave state.This conflict was the initiation of other conflicts among which one is establishment Free soil party that persisted in the United States for a period of four years from 1848 to 1852.
The Party was established in Buffalo, New yorks with a single issue of expansion of slavery from the United States. The prominent members of the party were the former member of the Whig party and the Democratic Party. The members argued for the separation of slaves from free men as it was compromising their morality and will also boost the economy of the slaves.
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Answer Details
Grade: High school
Subject: US History
Chapter: Free soil party
Keywords: Free soil party,United States, Pro-Slavery, Anti-Slavery,Missouri’s, Free, slave, states, Buffalo, New yorks, Whig party, Democratic Party
school-sponsored religious prayers were unconstitutional
a student's right to privacy did not extend to his or her school locker
segregation of schoolchildren on the basis of race was unconstitutional