How did the goals of Samuel Gompers and "Big Bill" Heywood differ?
A) Gompers believed in socialist reforms, whereas Heywood believed in capitalist Darwinism.
B) Heywood believed in socialist reforms, whereas Gompers believed in capitalist Darwinism.
C) Gompers believed in communism, whereas Heywood believed in a free market society.
D) Gompers represented craftsmen and tried to work with business owners, whereas Heywood represented unskilled workers and opposed owners.
E) Heywood represented craftsmen and tried to work with business owners, whereas Gompers represented unskilled workers and opposed owners.
Answer: D
You might also like to view...
According to your text, the cultural chasm between Europeans and Indians was most evident in the area of
A) religion; because the language barrier prevented the "worthy" Indians from being properly converted to Christianity. B) material property; because Europeans could not understand why Indians were so devoted to amassing vast collections of personal property. C) warfare; because Europeans fought in large groups to destroy their enemies, whereas Indians fought more often to display their courage or avenge a wrong. D) gender relations; because Europeans were angered by the fact that Indian women refused to work in the fields.
Which of these is true about the transatlantic slave trade?
A) ?Woman and men were taken, but never children. B) ?Most slaves taken to the Americas were destined to labor in the production of sugar. C) ?The slave trade decreased between 1600-1700. D) ?During the mid-seventeenth century, the Dutch dominated the slave trade. E) ?All of these are correct.
Andrew Jackson's vision of democracy excluded blacks, but included Indians
a. true b. false
The Hopewell tradition is known for all of the following EXCEPT
A) They did not farm. B) They engaged in trade from the Rocky Mountains to the Gulf of Mexico. C) They were a diverse group of societies. D) They had craftspeople living within their societies who created beautiful works of art. E) They had common burial practices and symbols of authority.