<p>Medicare, Medicaid
Office of Economic Opportunity created
Head Start for preschoolers, Job Corps for high schoolers
umm…Community Action Program…</p>
<p>This was made by slavery advocates and said that slavery would be settled in Kansas by vote. If the vote was yes, then slavery would exist. If the vote was no, further slavery would not exist, but the slaves already there would remain. This really frustrated aboltionists.</p>
<p>Lecompton Constitution changed Kansas’s constitution and allowed slavery in the state. It only let voters choose whether to allow additional slaves into the state.</p>
<p>Hepburn act increased the power of the ICC by increasing its membership from five to seven and allowing it to determine reasonable rates upon the complaint of a shipper. Also prohibited free railroad passes and forbade railroads to haul commodities they had produced themselves.</p>
<h2>The civil rights act wasn’t part of "The Great Society. Yes, Johnson passed the progressive bill along with the immigration and voting rights acts.</h2>
<p>1.Devised in kansas by pro-slavery advocates; it was a document that would ask for statehood, but as a slave state. The document didn’t “fly” so to speak.</p>
<p>goals of political progressivism…achieved in many states…
intitiative…umm…don’t remember…
referendum…if a state spends over a certain amount of money, it would send to bill to be approved direcly by the citizenry
recall…the people of a state, if dissatisfied, could essentially impeach a governor.</p>
<p>In what actions/events did Thomas Jefferson “flip flop” (so to speak)?</p>
<p>What was Transcendentalism all about? I know writers like Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry Thoreau where involved in that movement, but what did the movement actually preach?</p>
<h2>iniative gave a population to propose a law or develop an idea (patitioning basically), while referendum was the counterpart, which allowed the iniative or “law” voted on by the people to be passed.</h2>
<h2>Thomas Jefferson: flip flopper in a sense with his vowing to be a strict constructionist (state’s rights), and eventually advocating loose construction during his presidency with the purchase of the Lousiana Territory from Napoleon, and the Barbary Pirates controversy.</h2>
<p>Transcendentalism was all about individualism and doing what you believe in. It involved natural human rights, appreciation of nature, and relying on your intution to transcend to your true potential.</p>