I believe the US supported Mao Zedong, and still does. However, when he assumed power in China, the United States responded to then with nothing specific. They didn't really do anything.
1. California State University <em>Grants master’s and baccalaureate degrees, and focuses on liberal arts and sciences</em>
2. University of California <em>Grants doctoral, master’s, and baccalaureate degrees, and is a primary research institution</em>
3. Contra Costa College <em>Grants associate degrees and professional certificates and provides vocational training</em>
<u>Sharecropping</u> is an arrangement with a land owner who rents out their land to a farmer for the payment of a percentage of the crop instead of cash.
<em><u>The land owner</u></em> get 50% of the profits without effort or risk.
If the crop failed, <u><em>the sharecroppers</em></u> could not pay off the loan for the seed. <u><em>The sharecroppers</em></u> then were in debt to the landowner at the start of the next growing season. The result was that <u><em>the sharecropper</em></u> though free were enslaved to the landowner by the debt
The correct answer is: "<em><u>The sharecroppers were benefited least from a sharecropping arrangement, they did all of the work, took all of the risks, and got very little in return</u></em>".
The Civil Rights Act that passed Congress in July 1964 did ban segregation in public accommodations. 6 1965, the Voting Rights Act banned literacy tests and other barriers to Black voting.