<p>1.What did John Dewey advocate?</p>
<p>Yeah, he had a lot of education reforms, and he had the Dewey Decimal system. He wanted education to be more informal.</p>
<p>1.What did John Dewey advocate?</p>
<p>Yeah, he had a lot of education reforms, and he had the Dewey Decimal system. He wanted education to be more informal.</p>
<p>Imiriacle, good catch. You’re right, it’s definitely T. Roosevelt’s Square Deal, FDR’s New Deal, Truman’s Fair Deal. Always get those mixed up somehow’s. Also, imiracle, if no one answers your question, please post the answer because I would like to know.</p>
<p>Did you mean Doctor Spock? Because that’s the child-care doctor, he had a really popular guide that all these parents used to buy, I think in the 80s.</p>
<p>Supreme Court cases! Dates and explanations for the following:</p>
<p>Cherokee v. Georgia:</p>
<p>Marbury v. Madison:</p>
<p>Schenk v. U.S.:</p>
<p>Korematsu v. U.S.:</p>
<p>Fletcher v. Peck:</p>
<p>McCulloch v. Maryland:</p>
<p>Gibbons v. Ogden:</p>
<p>Worcestor v. Georgia:</p>
<p>And try to actually see which ones you can remember, don’t look them up.</p>
<p>Ok the answer’s quite easy and thank you spets
Cleveland suppress labor unions. During the Pullman strike(second term) he called the national guard to shoot at them. But TR during the mine strike called both sides and threatened the employers to negotiate or else he would take control of the mines and make them national.
So the change is anti-labor union to pro-labor union.
There wasn’t really anything during McKinley because of the Spanish American war.</p>
<p>gibbons vs. ogden- dont know date, but dealt with interstate trade. and that a state could not regulate interstate trade. that job was for the federal govt.</p>
<p>Korematsu v. U.S- 1944? detainment of jap american citizens.</p>
<p>I think SPock became famous in the 50s
He was born in like the early 1900s so I really don’t think he became famous when he was in his 80s…but I could be wrong</p>
<p>My question is still in the air -<br>
Who were Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein and what are they famous for?
Also…which book did they write (that was later turned into a movie)?</p>
<p>by the way…spets…I guess I found a way to review with you, albeit not one on one! =)</p>
<p>What was Reaganomics?</p>
<p>Why was the movie Birth of a Nation so important?</p>
<p>What was the first movie with sound?</p>
<p>Describe American involvement before the U.S. joined World War II, and how it gradually headed away from neutrality.</p>
<p>Marbury v. Madison: Established judicial review; Supreme Court had the sole power to judge the constitutionality of laws.</p>
<p>Korematsu v. U.S.: Upheld (FDR’s?) use of Japanese concentration camps.</p>
<p>Acacia- yeah, I think you’re right, actually. The only reason I know of him is that when I was around 7, we got his book at some library book sale, where you get as many books as you can fit into a paper bag for a dollar. I remember reading that book when I was younger. God, I was such a nerd when I was little.</p>
<p>What was the first movie with sound?
The Jazz Singer </p>
<p>Describe American involvement before the U.S. joined World War II, and how it gradually headed away from neutrality.
At first we were completely neutral but it gradually became clear, through things like the Lend Lease Act where we “lent” weapons and war equipment to GB, that we favored Britain.</p>
<p>Ambrosia…you were reading about raising children when you were 7? Wow looks like we have a blooming parent on our hands.</p>
<hr>
<p>Who were Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein and what are they famous for?
Also…which book did they write (that was later turned into a movie)?</p>
<p>yeah, Dr. Benjamin Spoke became popular during the late 40s-50s with his “Baby and Child Care” book. It reflected the popular culture and conformity of the 50s.</p>
<p>Why was the movie Birth of a Nation so important?</p>
<p>Coicided with the revival of the KKK. However, this KKK was based more on advertisement and membership. It still was anti-Catholic, anti-black, pro-prohibition, anti-pacifist, anti-radicalism (irony).</p>
<p>Yeah, acacia, and whenever we went to the doctor’s, I used to always read those parenting magazines! They always have really good articles in them.</p>
<p>And what’s funny about that is this summer, I was a CIT at this summer camp, and one of my campers ran up to me, so I was holding her. And my friend who I’d been talking to was like, you’d make a great teen mother.</p>
<p>Yeah… I guess you had to be there…</p>
<p>Who were Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein and what are they famous for?</p>
<p>They were journalists in the 1970s who wrote about Watergate and Nixon’s resignation, the whole scandal. The book and movie was All the President’s Men. (I had to look this one up)</p>
<p>Ambrosia, I’m really glad I didn’t try to answer that question. I was extremely tempted to say West Side Story.</p>
<p>“Ambrosia, I’m really glad I didn’t try to answer your question. I was extremely tempted to say West Side Story.”</p>
<p>That made me giggle, for some reason.</p>
<p>Still some of Ambrosia’s court cases up for grabs. </p>
<p>Cherokee v. Georgia: Cherokees tried to appeal to Supreme Court but they weren’t considered a nation or something… yeah, I’ll just stop now.</p>
<p>(Did this one lead to Trail of Tears?)</p>
<p>I’m sure you guys explained many of these but just to refresh
Cherokee v. Georgia: Ruled by john marshall. Cherokee is a sovereign nation and Georgia can’t force them out.
Schenk v. U.S.: The espionagea and sedition acts were constitutional because it concerned national security.
Fletcher v. Peck:I think this is the land speculation in the Yazoo County GA. Fletcher was the former owner and Peck was trying to buy it. Ruled that the contract are forever valid and thus fletcher had the right to the land.
Gibbons v. Ogden: It stated that the federal government could regulate interstate commerce not states. Also broke up the steamboat trust in NY.
Worcestor v. Georgia: what’s the difference between this one and the cherokee nation case?</p>