On January 29, 1850, the 70-year-old Clay presented a compromise. For eight months members of Congress, led by Clay, Daniel Webster, Senator from Massachusetts, and John C. Calhoun, senator from South Carolina, debated the compromise. With the help of Stephen Douglas, a young Democrat from Illinois, a series of bills that would make up the compromise were ushered through Congress.
<span>According to the compromise, Texas would relinquish the land in dispute but, in compensation, be given 10 million dollars -- money it would use to pay off its debt to Mexico. Also, the territories of New Mexico, Nevada, Arizona, and Utah would be organized without mention of slavery. (The decision would be made by the territories' inhabitants later, when they applied for statehood.) Regarding Washington, the slave trade would be abolished in the District of Columbia, although slavery would still be permitted. Finally, California would be admitted as a free state. To pacify slave-state politicians, who would have objected to the imbalance created by adding another free state, the Fugitive Slave Act was passed.</span>
Both can transfer energy through matter, but sound waves travel through air and infrared waves travel through space.
The answer is Spain,
not Egypt or mecca trust me your going to get it wrong if you choose either of those the answer is Spain
Answer:
that the program gave too much power to the government.
Explanation:
Franklin Delano Roosevelt was an American politician and statesman who was elected as the 32nd President of the United States of America in 1933. He was born on the 30th of January, 1882 in Hyde Park, New York, United States of America.
The Works Progress Administration (WPA) was an American agency that was established on the 6th of May, 1935 by President Franklin Roosevelt with Executive Order No. 7034, under the New Deal Programs (relief program).
The main purpose of the Works Progress Administration (WPA) was to provide employment opportunities for millions of job-seekers during the Great Depression. This program employed mostly unskilled workers to carry out or execute public works infrastructure projects such as construction of roads, public school buildings, hospitals, bridges, airfields, drainage and sanitary sewer lines, and the plantation of trees.
Furthermore, the Works Progress Administration (WPA) sponsored projects in the arts by employing thousands of writers, musicians, actors, and other skilled artists.
However, the Works Progress Administration’s was highly criticized for its creation of artistic and infrastructure jobs because people felt the program gave too much power to the government.