Pacal the Great (Kinich Janaab Pacal) was the Maya King of the city of Palenque in Mexico. Pacal the Great's most important accomplishments was that he brought the city of Palenque from obscurity to a great power.
Answer:
Could stay in the country for a short time as "guest workers".
Explanation:
Guest workers were allowed to temporarily stay in the country to serve as low-skill workers that did jobs like forestry, tourism, farming, etc. The idea of guest workers aimed to reduce poverty levels and provide a way for illegal immigrants to gain citizenship without having to stay in their original country, which were often places where citizens had no rights and/or lived in extreme poverty. Guest workers often found themselves working for corrupt employers that made these illegal immigrants pay large fees to even get a chance to become a guest worker. So, while the idea was good in theory; corrupt, greedy employers made it practically impossible for illegal immigrants to be able to obtain their goal of citizenship.
Answer:
led to the Bataan Death March
Explanation:
The day after the surrender of the main Philippine island of Luzon to the Japanese, the 75,000 Filipino and American troops captured on the Bataan Peninsula begin a forced march to a prison camp near Cabanatuan. ... The next day, the Bataan Death March began.
Boosted economic prosperity through expansion of trade especially due to the rapid expansion and development of the 7000 mile silk road. The building of this road ensured that trade in farm produce developed a great deal.
1) some stories are interesting so decrease of boredom
2) increase in imagination and creativity
3) some of the stories could teach the reader a moral or two