"<span>d. raising their hands for or against proposed legislation" is the correct response, since trying to decipher how many shouts were in favor or against a piece of legislation would be almost impossible and coins would be impractical. </span>
If I was an ordinary person in my 1930s and aged 40 with a middle income job such as an 'office assistant', I would not be in favour of helping other countries.
I would personally prefer a policy of isolation from the rest of the world. Primarily, this would be because I had seen with my very won eyes, the death and destruction bought on by World War I and more importantly the Great Depression.
With millions of job less people, poverty and people barely making ends meet, I would want our government to concentrate on the welfare of our own people, rather than go to war with countries thousands of miles away.
Jane Addams' social work movement was sparked through the witnessing of social injustice toward women of her time. In the United States at the time, women lacked many rights that men already had. Seeing this as a problem of inequality in the United States, this inspired Jane Addams to begin her movement of social work to aid women's causes in the United States with the ultimate goal of equality in the form of voting rights, property ownership, etc
Answer:
This visual narration is called The Bayeux Tapestry, a tapestry crafted in the 11th century and served as a journal relating to the Norman invasion of the British Islands in 1066. The historical significance of this art is that the tapestry tells the story of the conquest of England by William trough the Norman perspective, highlighting each aspect of this war, creating an interesting narrative.
Explanation:
The Bayeux Tapestry, 69 meters long, about 50 cm wide and 58 scenes, tells the story of the Norman conquest of England in 1066 (from the Norman point of view), and magnificently depicts many scenes of noble everyday life of the late 11th century, in addition to the Anglo-Saxon defeat of the forces of Harold II, king of England at the battle of Hastings in 1066.