<p>^that's what i thought =P</p>
<p>pi, that's what i put :D</p>
<p>and kfow, that's what it thought ^_^</p>
<p>I also ended up omitting that question.
That was the hardest question.</p>
<p>i'm pretty sure the soviet q is advanced technology</p>
<p>i said advanced technology, cuz i figured that the soon-to-be developed nuclear bomb and sputnik and all that had to have some seeds post-world war II</p>
<p>i definitely didn't think it was their army cuz i remember then losing like 20 million people or something</p>
<p>anyone else think this was pretty difficult? some of these questions were absurdly obscure</p>
<p>never heard of a lowell factory lol</p>
<p>that tomato soup one was NOT FAIR, i can't stop ranting about that question</p>
<p>the only person i could eliminate was georgia o'keefe, and that's cuz i've seen her drawings of flowers</p>
<p>needless to say, i omitted</p>
<p>well the warhol was a major cultural question... i have a lot more objection to the ambiguous, poorly-worded, obscure fashion that many other questions were characterized by</p>
<p>can i start a list?</p>
<p>(In no particular order)</p>
<p>first question - mercantilism
campbell's soup - andy warhol
hudson river school - idealized landscapes
started wwi - freedom of democracy
frontier theory - turner
who started china relations - nixon
lawyer sound money picture - protesting bryan and his free coinage of silver
soviet's greatest asset - army
women christian temperance movement - morality in it
silent majority - who didnt oppose vietnam war
nw ordinance - all EXCEPT no free land
1920s - all EXCEPT decr in manufac due to 8 hr workday
immigration in 1920s - favored northern/western europeans
prohibition - led to increased organized crime
declaration of sentiments - all EXCEPT birth control
injunctions - used against labor strikes/unions</p>
<p>can people add to this list??</p>
<p>The Campbell Soup question was simple to anyone who associated Warhol's name with the Pop Art movement.</p>
<p>Which was true of immigration policies in the 1920s? Chinese Exclusion Act repealed?</p>
<p>immigration in the 1920s - favored northern/western europeans. immigration quota was set at 1890 levels so asians and southern/eastern europeans would have a hard time coming over</p>
<p>In the 1920s Western and Northern Europeans were favored.</p>
<p>blueducky, you sure those are right? i thought:</p>
<p>soviets - advanced technology
nw ordinance - i thought it was free land in exchange for settling the land, i just dont remember what i put for an answer. i think i put education?</p>
<p>truman saw the greatest soviet asset as advanced tech. the army was destroyed by ww2, and it was relatively inefficient during the war, only managing to be successful in holding off the germans with its sheer manpower.</p>
<p>layered cake - i put education also, and it's difficult to find explicit proof that education was provided for (it was "encouraged", but this cannot be treated as more than a platitude). however, it seems to be free land. see land ordinance of 1785.</p>
<p>soviet definitely NOT technology, everybody thinks it is, but it says in textbook u can look it up</p>
<p>free land didnt come until homestead act, education was part of the ordinance for sure.</p>
<p>technology with sputnik came later
everyone thinks its technology
it says in my textbook its the army i swear it
after the war, soviet still had people in germany, and other parts of europe
since germany was defeated, only the soviet army remained</p>
<p>fair enough. guess those are my first two wrong</p>
<p>I think for the Ordinances, the newly established government did not want to prohibit/advocate slavery because it would cause tensions and as such possibly dissolve the newly formed republic...so i think its the choice about slavery</p>