<p>On the NW Ordinance question, the answer was free land. In the NW Ordinance, they specifically set aside a square of land per township for the building of a school.</p>
<p>^agree with that as well. LOL</p>
<p>^an d yess</p>
<p>Haha...and sanger was birth control...i nicknamed her "sanger the banger" to remind me in APUSH. :)</p>
<p>What was Woodrow Wilson's declared reason for entering World War I?</p>
<p>Wasn't that an "except" question though? I dunno I remember that there was something about slavery....</p>
<p>LOL i always thought sanger=blood and then idk HAHA</p>
<p>Ah...I didn't find the test too difficult. The Campbell's soup one was ridiculous...I was gonna guess Warhol but didn't want to risk it...left two others blank as well.</p>
<p>My two cents:
Inappropriate job for women: I put down politician (can't think of a political woman during that time...or do the Seneca Falls women count? I thought that would be a temperence advocate)
Navy Recruiting: It wasn't asking women to join. Just to intimidate men.
Kennedy and Nam: He sent his advisors to Vietnam. Something was corrupt about all that, I think.
Silent Majority: the support for Vietnam, I believe. What else?
Truman and the Soviets: Advanced technology. The Cold War was instigated at that time already, and the Red Scare was erupting.
Lawyers and sound money: It was between the 1894 one and the 1896 one. I went with the opposition to Bryan's gold standard.
Not in 1950's: Victory gardens. That was in the wartime.
Lincoln's Map: I and IV. Cali and Oregon were pro-abolition.
Other map question: I believe it was areas where foreigners were. It was that or democrats, and there are certainly more than 1% of Democrats in the Southeast. lol
Chinese Exclusion: Supported by the middle class, who were furious that the Chinese were taking their jobs.
Lowell: It was the one about women. The lowell system put to work young girls into the factory.
China relations: Nixon. 100%.
Declaration of Sentiments: Birth control. Did that even exist back then?
Injunctions: Labor strikes or trusts? I guessed trusts...but I'm probably wrong.
Frontier theory: My semi-educated guess (as in I only eliminated one lol) was turner.
MLK: SLSC, or whatever.
Immigration: I don't know...I thought it barred all immigrants. But all I know for sure is Asians. Europeans, I don't know.</p>
<p>That's all I can remember for now.</p>
<p>i definitely knew andy warhol haha. i know my art history =)</p>
<p>Supported by the middle class</p>
<p>actually that's working class lol</p>
<p>and woot victory gardens==that was a total guess!! (:</p>
<p>Woot! Gradeinflation...we should go to an art mueseum...gotta love that art history...</p>
<p>great awakening- popular response?
cartoon- granger movement?
inunction- pretty sure its labor because in 1890's they were pro trusts.
which one wasn't true about 1920's- decreasing factory production?</p>
<p>I eliminated the two women that came out in the soup question because I recall seeing that painting in an episode of The Simpsons. It helped so.... yay :)</p>
<p>^YUP!!! :] lol</p>
<p>where did that colonial war start-? North america, europe?</p>
<p>north america. got that wrong =[</p>
<p>I thought that the Great Awakening answer was a religious mvmt. I know that it was a response to the Enlightenment, but the answer option said "popular response to republican ideals." The Great Awakening people were responding to the Enlightenment's questioning of religion, not republican ideals.</p>
<p>but was your answer choice one with, " in all the colonies" because the great awakening was not popular in all the colonies i believe.</p>
<p>it did say something like that but idk</p>