Ch. 18 – Progressivism on National Stage/EQ: How well did Presidents Roosevelt, Taft, and Wilson promote progressive goals in national policies? 1. In this image, who is sitting on Theodore Roosevelt's shoulder? 2. Why does the artist refer to Taft as the crown prince? 3. Why did President Theodore Roosevelt support Taft as his successor? 4. What is one reason why Roosevelt's support of Taft diminished after Taft became president? 5. What kind of ailments did Brown's Iron Bitters claim to cure? 6. What effect might the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906 have had on the makers of this product? 7. Why didn't products like this one carry a list of ingredients to inform and protect consumers? 8. In addition to the Pure Food and Drug Act, how else did progressive presidents try to protect consumers? 9. How did Pinchot believe Americans should make use of their natural resources? 10. How does Pinchot link conservation and equal opportunity? 11. How does Pinchot see the relationship between the use of natural resources and the preserving of natural resources? 12. By linking the conservation movement to American ideals of democracy, rights, and equal opportunity, Gifford Pinchot appeals to Americans' sense of 13. The Eighteenth Amendment made it illegal to 14. Who had the authority to make laws to enforce the Eighteenth Amendment? 15. Section 3 of the Eighteenth Amendment 16. Of the following, who were the advocates of prohibition? 17. What cause are these women protesting in favor of? 18. Which amendment to the Constitution gave women the results they had been campaigning for? 19. These women were protesting in front of the White House because they wanted the president to 20. What argument finally convinced President Wilson to accept women's suffrage?
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