A woman who entered the workforce in the 1960s could expect to
  • supporting the Equal Rights Amendment.
  • political advocacy group.
  • were helped by new household technology.(CONFIRMED)
  • work for male supervisors and managers.
The National Organization for Women (NOW) is primarily a
  • government agency.
  • labor union.
  • cultural society.
  • political advocacy group.
Which statement best explains the outcome of Roe v. Wade?
  • Women gained the right to end pregnancies, while states gained the right to restrict abortions.
  • work for male supervisors and managers.
  • were helped by new household technology.(CONFIRMED)
  • political advocacy group.
One way many women's lives changed in the 1950s was that they
  • were helped by new household technology.(CONFIRMED)
  • few changes by either the government or employers.
  • work for male supervisors and managers.
  • Women gained the right to end pregnancies, while states gained the right to restrict abortions.
In The Feminine Mystique, the author argued that
  • They work both to restrict and to outlaw abortions.
  • Betty Friedan.
  • they thought it undermined traditional values.
  • women feel worthless when they deny themselves freedom of expression.
In the 1970s, the National Organization for Women expanded its goals by
  • supporting the Equal Rights Amendment.
  • few changes by either the government or employers.
  • work for male supervisors and managers.
  • political advocacy group.
What do womens' rights groups today focus on in regard to abortion?
  • they had time and opportunity to reinvent themselves but still faced barriers.
  • fighting to keep abortions legal
  • they thought it undermined traditional values.
  • they work both to restrict and to outlaw abortions.
Which statement best expresses the dilemma women faced in the 1950s and 1960s?
  • fighting to keep abortions legal
  • They work both to restrict and to outlaw abortions.
  • They had time and opportunity to reinvent themselves but still faced barriers.
  • women feel worthless when they deny themselves freedom of expression.
The Feminine Mystique was written by
  • Betty Friedan.
  • Simone De Beauvoir.
  • Gertrude Stein.
  • Imre Nagy.
In the 1950s and 1960s, many women were attracted by new jobs in the developing
  • Betty Friedan.
  • They had time and opportunity to reinvent themselves but still faced barriers.
  • fighting to keep abortions legal
  • service industry.
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