The run-up to the 1968 election was transformed in 1967 when Minnesota’s Democratic senator, Eugene J. McCarthy, challenged Democratic Pres. Lyndon B. Johnson on his Vietnam War policies. Johnson had succeeded to the presidency in 1963, following the assassination of John F. Kennedy, and had been overwhelmingly reelected in 1964. Early in his term he was immensely popular, but U.S. involvement in Vietnam, which had escalated invisibly during the presidential administrations of both Dwight D. Eisenhower and Kennedy, became highly visible with rapidly increasing U.S. death tolls, and, as the war’s unpopularity mounted, so did Johnson’s.
True, because presidents can veto.
Answer:
B. Privately funded redevelopment of existing commercial and residential buildings
Explanation:
The process of gentrification in U.S and Canada relate to how private own companies pull resources together for the redevelopment of an area into a taste that will conform to the middle class. It provides and avenue for those wealthy individuals to move to urban settlements which in return brings about transformation and redevelopment of the culture and property value of the area.
Investors in Tokyo the 1970's were purchasing available properties so as to bring about redevelopment in the areas. Areas like Ottawa, Montreal were also involve in this in the twenties.
The gentrification that took place in U.S started in Atalanta in the 1970's
<span>Greeks lived in independent sity-states
like Athens, Sparta, Thebes and others. For a long time, there was
rivalry among these states that led to Spartan hegemony and then a short
lived Thebes hegemony.</span>