Boarding houses for women, such as those of the Lowell mills,

A) were run by women specifically hired as boardinghouse keepers.
B) ?enforced curfews for their young female tenants.
C) ?mandated church attendance for their tenants.
D) ?had rules that limited mixed-sex socialization.
E) ?All of these are correct.


E

History

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The most striking change in American family life in the early nineteenth century was the

a. end of the taboo on birth control. b. pronounced increase in married women´s employment. c. dramatic rise of boarding and extended-family living arrangements. d. harsher treatment of male children to prepare them for economic competition. e. decline in birthrates and trend toward smaller families.

History

No one was ever convicted under the 1917 Espionage Act or the 1918 Sedition Act.

a. true b. false

History

Despite President Wilson's desire to respect Mexico's sovereignty, Americans disagreed because

A) the U.S. economy was bad and a war would help. B) Americans had investments in Mexico and many American citizens worked in Mexico. C) Americans were angry at the bloody military coups in Mexico. D) Americans were concerned about the U.S./Mexico border.

History

Settlers from the North who moved to the Old Northwest clashed with transplanted Southerners over

a. taxes for public improvements and education. b. Indian rights. c. universal manhood suffrage. d. manufacturing tariffs. e. the Missouri Compromise.

History