Sample responses may include:
Anasazi
Algonkian
Iroquois
Settlement
Large cliff dwellings
Tribal settlements of wigwams
Villages of longhouses
Food source
Farming
Hunting and fishing as well as farming
Farming
Geographic area
Southwest United States
New England through the Mid-Atlantic coast
Inland New England and Mid-Atlantic as well as Canada
End of civilization
Unknown
Many conquered and died of illness due to European settlers. Many were also assimilated into Iroquois tribes.
Some tribes still around today as independent entities. Others were disbanded by the Canadian and American governments.
Artifacts
Baskets and pottery
Smaller hunting items, such as arrowheads, and cultural influences on settlers (such as farming corn, beans, and squash).
Government ideas influenced American government formation.
Answer:
Suffragists in both nations formed organizations to win the vote and achieved their goals gradually, with some militant protests as part of their approach. Adult women in America achieved their goal in 1920; British women of that age not until 1928. The success of the militant group was not achieved until the end of World War I, but it did call attention to their goals.
Answer:
The act of draft card burning was defended as a symbolic form of free speech, a constitutional right guaranteed by the First Amendment.
Explanation:
The Supreme Court decided against the draft card burners; it determined that the federal law was justified and that it was unrelated to the freedom of speech.
He asked Henry Kissinger to continue as Secretary of State
Answer:
a strong central government and the Federalist Party
Explanation:
By giving the central government with the power to pay of the States' debt, the congress will also granted the right of the central government to impose high tax rates that it could accumulate from the corporations and the citizens and through the creation of tariffs for business transactions in the country.
The power to do this actually make the central government become more powerful.
This idea proposed by Alexander Hamilton which at that time was the leader of the Federalist party.