The correct answer is: "he law would apply to ethnic Chinese regardless of which Asian country they originated from".
The Chinese Exclusion Act was a US federal law enacted by the US goverment presided Chester A. Arthur in 1882. It prohibited Chinese women from migrating to the US, with the ultimate aim of preventing all members from a certain ethinical group or community from establishing themselves in the US.
The amendments introduced in 1884 tightened the previously accepted provisions that enabled former immigrants to leave and then return. After the amendments, they had to meet more strict requirements in order to do so. It also clarified that <u>these rulings were applicable to ethnic Chinese people regardless of which country they were coming from. </u>
The correct answer is the last one, signing the Camp David Accords. Those were the agreements between Israel and Egypt signed in 1978, that led to the first peace treaty between these two countries. The negotiations took place at the U.S. presidential retreat at Camp David, Maryland while Jimmy Carter was the president.
I am not completely sure but I think it's 'agrarian'.
When Prussia was hit by famine in 1744, King Frederick the Great, a potato enthusiast, had to order the peasantry to eat the tubers. In England, 18th-century farmers denounced S. tuberosum as an advance scout for hated Roman Catholicism. “No Potatoes, No Popery!” was an election slogan in 1765. France was especially slow to adopt the spud. Into the fray stepped Antoine-Augustin Parmentier, the potato’s Johnny Appleseed.