By 1820, this compromise<span> had been realized as two bills were passed. The first made Maine the 23rd state. The second admitted </span>Missouri<span> as a slave state and set the parallel 36°30' as the dividing line between enslaved and free states as the country continued to expand. This </span>compromise<span> was </span>successful<span>.</span>
Answer:
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Explanation:
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Captain John Smith <span> became leader of the </span>Jamestown Colony<span>. He saved the colony by making a </span>rule<span> that anyone who did not work did not eat. This made the colonists plant food, and build shelters and fences to protect themselves from attack. Captain John Smith maintained a </span>peace<span> with the nearby </span>Algonquian Indians.<span> At the time, almost 30 tribes of the</span><span> Eastern Woodlands Indians </span><span> lived in </span>Virginia<span>. The Indian tribes formed a </span>confederation<span> led by </span>Chief Powhatan<span>. One day, Captain John Smith was captured by the Indians. A </span>legend<span> says that </span>Pocahontas,<span> the chief's daughter, saved his life.</span>
Operation Olympic was the first phase of Operation Dawnfall which was designed to occupy Japan, It was supposed to take place in November 1945 on the Kyushu island in southern Japan. The plan included 14 army divisions in the initial landings alone, an armada of 400 destroyers, 24 battleships and a staggering 42 aircraft carriers. It was all based on an aphibious landing in three diferent beaches: at Miyazaki, Ariake and Kushikino. The weakness of this operation was the location, Kyushu island was the only one that was in conditions for an invasion of these characteristics. So the japanese succesfully predicted it, they were ready to use all of their force to defend the island with the Ketsugo plan. As a result, both sides had estimated that the casualties would be huge. Finally the invasion never took place as the atomic bombs were dropped in Nagasaki and Hiroshima making Japan surrender.
<span>In the 1954 case of Brown v. Board of Education, written by Chief Just Earl Warren, the Supreme Court decided that having "separate but equal" schools for African American children and for white children was not in fact equal and violated the Equal Protection clause of the 14th Amendment.</span>