<p>In what document was the ideal of nullification first mentioned?</p>
<p>KY and VA resolutions, both passed in response to the Alien and Sedition Acts passed under Adams (please PM or something if I'm wrong)</p>
<p>The Kentucky Virginia resolutions? not sure...</p>
<p>John C. Calhoun's "Exposition and Protest"? or was it the Virginia and Kentucky Resolves? I don't know if the later dealt with nullification specifically.</p>
<p>What was the name of the radio communication FDR used to reassure the American public during the Great Depression?</p>
<p>Nullification was brought up in the KY and VA Resolves in response to the Alien and Sedition Acts. They wrote that the state has the right to override a federal law if they(the state) deem in unconstitutional. John Calhoun brought this back in this Exposition and Protest. </p>
<p>FDR had a radio show(weekly?) that he dubbed, "Fireside Chats"</p>
<p>Q: What drew Confederate forces north of the Mason Dixon line and into Gettysburg, Pennsylvania?</p>
<p>An opportunity to invde the North and end the war?</p>
<p>What group of painters painted the American wilderness and West in the early to mid 1800s?</p>
<p>NOOOO! AHHHH! THEY NEEDED SHOES!! HAHA! It's okay, not even a real question, but i got you. As for the painters, I don't not know.</p>
<p>i'm guessing realists (like Thomas Cole)</p>
<p>Which three men represented America to negotiate the Peace of Paris 1783?</p>
<p>The Hudson River School btw</p>
<p>Well, Franklin was one of them, then I'll guess....Jay and Jefferson.</p>
<p>The painters were those from Hudson Rv. School</p>
<p>Um...Ben Franklin, John Adams, and somebody else</p>
<p>negative on Jefferson, the third person was Adams</p>
<p>What were the Blue Laws?</p>
<p>Q: List three advantages and three disadvantages of Navigation Acts to the colonies</p>
<p>I looked it up in my text because I was curious about this. It has five men being appointed by the Continental Congress to go. They were John Adams, Franklin, Jay, Jefferson and Henry Laurens. Although it does say that Franklin and Jay did most of the talking (recall Franklin's popularity with the French ladies)</p>
<p>What was the first university to accept females in the United States?</p>
<p>That was Oberlin?</p>
<p>correct, it was Oberlin...now bring your question from above down so we don't get this mad overflow. So two questions out now</p>
<p>What are the Blue Laws?</p>
<p>What are three advantages and disadvantages of the Navigation Acts?</p>
<p>Navigation Acts</p>
<p>Advantages:
1) Colonies had monopoly over England's tobacco trade
2) England protected colonies with its powerful navy
3) Shipbuilding industry flourished
Disadvantages:
1) Higher prices on imports
2) Farmers received little for their produce
3) Manufacturing and other industries crippled (such as textiles)</p>
<p>I don't remember learning about blue laws</p>
<p>Blue Laws were laws that addressed strict Puritan requirements.</p>
<p>Describe the Roanoke mystery.</p>
<p>Do you mean when a few of the men left for supplies back to England...and when they came back, all of the settlers were gone. Such a cool story, if I recall correctly, they found an ingraving on a tree of somebody's initials or something. And from that point on, the Indians in the area seemed whiter, as if the Roanoke settlers had been absorbed into the Indian line.</p>
<p>What did McClure's Magazine become known for in the early 1900s?</p>
<p>Sir Walter Raleigh, one of the first English explorers, led a group of men in 1587 to the Roanoke Island off the coast of North Carolina. The colonists all mysteriously disappeared days later, with an inscribed tree bark as the only evidence of their disappearance. Some speculate that they were captured and exterminated by local Indians.</p>
<p>A.McClure's known for muckraking?</p>
<p>Which popular novel led to the Pure Food and Drug Act?</p>