<p>that was definitly barbed wire fencing......</p>
<p>i really feel good about that test- i finished a half an hour early and took it again</p>
<p>that was definitly barbed wire fencing......</p>
<p>i really feel good about that test- i finished a half an hour early and took it again</p>
<p>JG, for that 50s one, which I BELIEVE was an 'except' question, I put victory garden.</p>
<p>Victory gardens were around during world wartimes and thus not in the 50s. I'm just hoping they didn't linger for like two years or something.</p>
<p>And for the 19th century farming one, there's no question in my mind that it was chemical fertilizer. Although, who knows? I could be wrong! It's definitely not barbed wire. If you trust Wikipedia, it says, "Wire fences were cheaper to erect than their alternatives and when they became widely available in the late 19th century in the United States they made it affordable to fence much bigger areas than before. They made intensive animal husbandry practical on a much larger scale."</p>
<p>No, barbed wire led to the taming of the west. It was very important.</p>
<p>What were the books like "honeymooners" and "Power of self though" a reflection of?</p>
<p>i put physician & victory gardens...</p>
<p>isnt the susan one asking who would DISAGREE with feminist ideals or whatever? Ans: Brigham Young ?</p>
<p>Organization Man - 1956</p>
<p>hence the answer was 1950's</p>
<p>was sam adams the guy in the libel case??</p>
<p>and how genorous is the curve usaully?</p>
<p>Actually, it was Peter Zenger; you can get 7-8 wrong and get an 800</p>
<p>It was chemical fertilizer, which was definitely NOT available in the late 1890s.</p>
<p>didn't the barbed wire kill the cattle?</p>
<p>how about the passage toward the end that talked about women taking care of men and girls weaving?
there were two questions:
What does the passage mean & who would have most likely said this.
Thanks :)</p>
<p>shadesofpale, that's what I put, but the majority here at CC say that the answer was that many of them were wealthy or had close ties to nobility.</p>
<p>Did anyone get a lot of B's at one point like 4-5</p>
<p>The meaning of the passage..something about women's morals and political character..</p>
<p>drkornruns, I had around 4 Bs in a row on the first column on my answer sheet.</p>
<p>was the anser to that one question women cant be physicians right??/?</p>
<p>also there was a spanish question where it asked which was not a reason for exploration and settling of the America's:
choices were like
set up a place for trading manufactured spanish goods
increase spanish treasury
improve spanish name
game fame for spain
gold/silver and spread christianity</p>
<p>I put cigar makers cos they considered smoking to be "immoral" and women at that time felt that it was their duty to promote morality.</p>
<p>The passage was about women instilling virtues in society or some stuff iek taht it was most likely said by the cult of domesticity person (i thiink it was beecher stowe but i coudl be wrong i just picked it b/c of cult of dom.)</p>
<p>spanish colony answer: set up a market to sell goods manufactured in spain</p>
<p>for women, it was the physician profession that violated the cult (cigars did too, but cigar making did not). In fact, the time when women were established in the medical field was during wwI - then it became an extension of the cult of domesticity</p>
<p>I omitted 5 and, to be safe, I probably got 5 of the ones I answered wrong. So...what would that be? 750+?</p>