Question 1
· What was the major goal of the United States' policy toward Indians in the early 1800s?
·
· A.
· to spread the Christian faith throughout native tribes
·
· B.
· to protect white frontier settlers from attacks by natives
·
· C.
· to assimilate native tribes into white American culture and society
·
· D.
· to acquire for white society the land occupied by native tribes
·
1 points
Question 2
· In 1794, President George Washington sent Federal troops into western Pennsylvania to deal with an uprising known as the Whiskey Rebellion. The significance of President Washington's action is that it
·
· A.
· strengthened the power of local and state governments
·
· B.
· forced congress to pass the Bill of Rights
·
· C.
· weakened the power of the Federal Government to collect sales taxes
·
· D.
· showed the strength of the Federal Government under the Constitution
·
1 points
Question 3
· The first state to secede from the Union was
·
· A.
· Alabama
·
· B.
· South Carolina
·
· C.
· Virginia
·
· D.
· Mississippi
·
1 points
Question 4
· Which event was an immediate cause of the Spanish-American War (1898)?
·
· A.
· The United States annexed Cuba and the Philippines
·
· B.
· The destruction of the Maine in the harbor at Havana, Cuba
·
· C.
· Spain destroyed American-owned sugar plantations in Cuba
·
· D.
· The Spanish navy sank two American ships in the Pacific Ocean
·
1 points
Question 5
· What was the significance of the Dred Scott v. Sanford (1857) case?
·
· A.
· It upheld the Missouri Compromise of 1820
·
· B.
· It reduced sectional feelings about slavery
·
· C.
· It declared that slaves had no rights as citizens
·
· D.
· It violated the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution
·
1 points
Question 6
· The American Federation of Labor was different from the Knights of Labor in that the American Federation of Labor
·
· A.
· accepted only railroad workers
·
· B.
· accepted only skilled workers
·
· C.
· accepted both skilled and unskilled workers
·
· D.
· organized workers into one large union
·
1 points
Question 7
· How did the Radical Republicans view the issue of Reconstruction?
·
· A.
· They thought the South should be forced to industrialize
·
· B.
· They wanted the Southern states to be kept out of the Union
·
· C.
· They wanted the South to be punished for trying to secede
·
· D.
· They thought the South should be helped to regain sound economic footing
·
1 points
Question 8
· The Hartford Convention and the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions demonstrated what domestic condition?
·
· A.
· Sectionalism was increasing in the United States
·
· B.
· America was united in the war against the British
·
· C.
· New England was doing its part to help defeat the British
·
· D.
· Connecticut was the only area in New England resisting the War of 1812
·
1 points
Question 9
· The main purpose of the Lewis and Clark expedition was
·
· A.
· to trade with the ...
Question 1· What was the major goal of the United States policy.docx
1. Question 1
· What was the major goal of the United States' policy toward
Indians in the early 1800s?
·
· A.
· to spread the Christian faith throughout native tribes
·
· B.
· to protect white frontier settlers from attacks by natives
·
· C.
· to assimilate native tribes into white American culture and
society
·
· D.
· to acquire for white society the land occupied by native tribes
·
1 points
Question 2
· In 1794, President George Washington sent Federal troops into
western Pennsylvania to deal with an uprising known as the
Whiskey Rebellion. The significance of President Washington's
action is that it
·
· A.
· strengthened the power of local and state governments
·
· B.
· forced congress to pass the Bill of Rights
·
· C.
· weakened the power of the Federal Government to collect
sales taxes
·
2. · D.
· showed the strength of the Federal Government under the
Constitution
·
1 points
Question 3
· The first state to secede from the Union was
·
· A.
· Alabama
·
· B.
· South Carolina
·
· C.
· Virginia
·
· D.
· Mississippi
·
1 points
Question 4
· Which event was an immediate cause of the Spanish-American
War (1898)?
·
· A.
· The United States annexed Cuba and the Philippines
·
· B.
· The destruction of the Maine in the harbor at Havana, Cuba
·
· C.
· Spain destroyed American-owned sugar plantations in Cuba
·
· D.
· The Spanish navy sank two American ships in the Pacific
3. Ocean
·
1 points
Question 5
· What was the significance of the Dred Scott v. Sanford (1857)
case?
·
· A.
· It upheld the Missouri Compromise of 1820
·
· B.
· It reduced sectional feelings about slavery
·
· C.
· It declared that slaves had no rights as citizens
·
· D.
· It violated the Fifth Amendment to the United States
Constitution
·
1 points
Question 6
· The American Federation of Labor was different from the
Knights of Labor in that the American Federation of Labor
·
· A.
· accepted only railroad workers
·
· B.
· accepted only skilled workers
·
· C.
· accepted both skilled and unskilled workers
·
· D.
· organized workers into one large union
4. ·
1 points
Question 7
· How did the Radical Republicans view the issue of
Reconstruction?
·
· A.
· They thought the South should be forced to industrialize
·
· B.
· They wanted the Southern states to be kept out of the Union
·
· C.
· They wanted the South to be punished for trying to secede
·
· D.
· They thought the South should be helped to regain sound
economic footing
·
1 points
Question 8
· The Hartford Convention and the Virginia and Kentucky
Resolutions demonstrated what domestic condition?
·
· A.
· Sectionalism was increasing in the United States
·
· B.
· America was united in the war against the British
·
· C.
· New England was doing its part to help defeat the British
·
· D.
· Connecticut was the only area in New England resisting the
War of 1812
5. ·
1 points
Question 9
· The main purpose of the Lewis and Clark expedition was
·
· A.
· to trade with the Native Americans in the West
·
· B.
· to force the Native American population westward
·
· C.
· to explore the Mississippi River and reach New Orleans
·
· D.
· to explore the Missouri River and reach the Pacific Ocean
·
1 points
Question 10
· Tecumseh
·
· A.
· was known as "the Prophet"
·
· B.
· encouraged Indian assimilation into the United States to save
them
·
· C.
· believed Indian tribal unity was the only effective means to
resist white settlers
·
· D.
· fought against William Henry Harrison at the Battle of
Tippecanoe
·
6. 1 points
Question 11
· What was the goal of the Emancipation Proclamation?
·
· A.
· Free all slaves
·
· B.
· Free slaves in the Northern states
·
· C.
· Free slaves in the Border states
·
· D.
· Free slaves in the seceded states
·
1 points
Question 12
· What political issue was most important in the creation of the
Missouri Compromise?
·
· A.
· Whether slavery would be prohibited north or south of the
36'30 parallel
·
· B.
· Deciding if either Maine or Missouri would be admitted as
new states
·
· C.
· If the idea of popular sovereignty would be applied to some or
all of the territories
·
· D.
· Keeping the number of free states and slave states represented
in Congress equal
7. ·
1 points
Question 13
· Which of the following statements best describes the economic
impact of the transcontinental railroad?
·
· A.
· It created a national market for producers of goods
·
· B.
· It provided employment for poor Irish and Chinese laborers
·
· C.
· It provided easy transport of Western manufactured goods to
the East
·
· D.
· It allowed railroad owners to gain access to huge tracts of land
in the West
·
1 points
Question 14
· The purpose of the Morrill Act was to
·
· A.
· encourage settlement of the West
·
· B.
· establish land-grant agricultural colleges
·
· C.
· set up reservations of Native Americans
·
· D.
· assist in the construction of transcontinental railroads
·
8. 1 points
Question 15
· Speaker A: The United States should remain neutral in foreign
affairs.
· Speaker B: The United States will give economic aid to needy
countries anywhere in the world, but will not provide military
aid.
· Speaker C: The United States must prevent the growth of
communism.
· Speaker D: The United States can take over other countries to
help them become more like us.
·
· Which speaker states a policy most similar to the foreign
policy under Washington, Adams, and Jefferson?
·
· A.
· Speaker A
·
· B.
· Speaker B
·
· C.
· Speaker C
·
· D.
· Speaker D
·
1 points
Question 16
· The international incident known as the XYZ Affair
involved
·
· A.
· a French foreign minister's demand for a bribe before he
would meet with the U.S. envoys
·
9. · B.
· the British refusal to evacuate the forts they held in U.S.
territory
·
· C.
· General Jackson's incursion into Spanish-held Florida
·
· D.
· the British seizure of American crewmen from a U.S. Navy
ship
·
1 points
Question 17
· The decision of the United States Supreme Court in Marbury
v. Madison (1803) established the power of the
·
· A.
· Congress to override a presidential veto
·
· B.
· President to veto Congressional legislation
·
· C.
· Supreme Court to determine laws unconstitutional
·
· D.
· House of Representatives to impeach the president
·
1 points
Question 18
· The Seneca Falls Convention of 1848 was mainly concerned
with
·
· A.
· expanding women's rights
·
10. · B.
· extending slavery in all the states
·
· C.
· reducing consumption of alcoholic beverages
·
· D.
· improving treatment of the mentally ill
·
1 points
Question 19
· "This, then, is held to be the duty of the man of Wealth: First,
to set an example of modest, unostentatious living, shunning
display or extravagance; to provide moderately for the
legitimate wants of those dependent upon him; and after doing
so to consider all surplus revenues which come to him simply as
trust funds, which he is called upon to administer, and strictly
bound as a matter of duty to administer in the manner which, in
his judgment, is best calculated to produce the most beneficial
results for the community."-Andrew Carnegie, "Wealth," 1889
·
· According to this passage, what is the responsibility of the
wealthy?
·
· A.
· to invest in a future industry to increase their wealth
·
· B.
· to maintain a lifestyle consistent with their wealth
·
· C.
· to share their excess wealth with the community
·
· D.
· to influence government to assist all people
·
11. 1 points
Question 20
· Which battle is considered the turning point of the Civil
War?
·
· A.
· Vicksburg
·
· B.
· Gettysburg
·
· C.
· Antietam
·
· D.
· First Bull Run
·
1 points
Question 21
· Which of the following did the greatest damage to the public
image of the Knights of Labor in the 1880s?
·
· A.
· Competition from the American Federation of Labor
·
· B.
· The membership policies of President Terence Powderly
·
· C.
· The bombing incident in Chicago's Haymarket Square
·
· D.
· The election of James Garfield as President of the United
States
·
1 points
12. Question 22
· During George Washington's presidency, what was the major
reason for conflict between Thomas Jefferson and Alexander
Hamilton?
·
· A.
· Washington's decision not to seek a third term
·
· B.
· Hamilton's objection to Jefferson's strict interpretation of the
Constitution
·
· C.
· the distribution of power between the judicial branch and the
legislative branch
·
· D.
· the U.S. government's decision to remain neutral in the war
between France and Britain
·
1 points
Question 23
· How did Jane Addams work to improve the social welfare of
people in cities in the late 1800s?
·
· A.
· She founded the March of Dimes Foundation to find a cure for
polio
·
· B.
· She organized a women's club to support schools and libraries
in cities
·
· C.
· She organized the International Woman Suffrage Alliance to
give the vote to women
13. ·
· D.
· She opened the first settlement house to provide assistance to
new immigrants
·
1 points
Question 24
· During the early 1900's, the initiative, recall, and referendum
were changes made in many states to give
·
· A.
· citizens the right to choose Presidential candidates
·
· B.
· voters greater direct participation in government
·
· C.
· workers more rights in the collective bargaining process
·
· D.
· business leaders more control over their industries
·
1 points
Question 25
· "We were like deer. They were like grizzly bears. We had
small country. Their country was larger. We were contented to
let things remain as the Great Spirit Chief made them. They
were not, and would change the rivers and mountains if they did
not suit them."
·
· Which best explains Chief Joseph's meaning in the quote
above?
·
· A.
· The U.S. troops had overpowered and defeated his people
·
14. · B.
· His people would never willingly become a part of the United
States
·
· C.
· He was asking the U.S. troops to permit the Nez Perce to
emigrate to Canada
·
· D.
· He was explaining the reason for his alliance with Geronimo
and the Apache
·
1 points
Question 26
· Which of the following does not go along with Henry Clay's
American System?
·
· A.
· National transportation system
·
· B.
· the issue of slavery in new states
·
· C.
· establishment of a national bank
·
· D.
· protective tariffs on imported goods
·
1 points
Question 27
· Who was the cartoonist who exposed corruption in the
government of New York?
·
· A.
· William Tweed
15. ·
· B.
· Stephen Crane
·
· C.
· Thomas Nast
·
· D.
· James Whistler
·
1 points
Question 28
· Prior to 1815, the best indication of the disrespect European
nations had for the United States was
·
· A.
· boycotting of trade with America
·
· B.
· construction of forts on American soil
·
· C.
· criticism of American policies by other nations
·
· D.
· impressment of American sailors on the seas
·
1 points
Question 29
· One result of Nat Turner's rebellion was
·
· A.
· the launching of the abolitionist movement
·
· B.
· the liberation of hundreds of slaves
16. ·
· C.
· the founding of the African Methodist Episcopal Church
·
· D.
· the tightening of laws controlling African-American slaves
·
1 points
Question 30
· Hudson River School was to the American landscape as
Horace Mann was to ___________.
·
· Which best completes the analogy?
·
·
· A.
· education
·
· B.
· civil rights
·
· C.
· utopian communities
·
· D.
· transcendentalism
·
1 points
Question 31
· In the Nullification controversy over the Tariff of
Abominations (1828), some Southerners took the position
that:
·
· A.
· the federal government had the right to nullify state laws that
interfered with the right to hold property in slaves
17. ·
· B.
· the federal courts had the right to nullify acts of Congress that
restricted the spread of slavery in the territories
·
· C.
· the states had the right to nullify acts of the federal
government they deemed to be unconstitutional
·
· D.
· Southern states had the right to nullify statutes of Northern
states interfering with the recapture of escaped slaves
·
1 points
Question 32
· All of the following American beliefs promoted the concept of
Manifest Destiny except
·
· A.
· The United States was justified by God and history to expand
its lands
·
· B.
· America was a promised land where racial groups would find
eventual equal social status
·
· C.
· There was growing American national pride and confidence
·
· D.
· The American reform movement sought national social
perfection
·
1 points
Question 33
· In which of the following treaties did the U.S. gain Florida?
18. ·
· A.
· Jay's Treaty
·
· B.
· Adams-Onis Treaty
·
· C.
· Treaty of Paris of 1783
·
· D.
· Pinckney's Treaty
·
1 points
Question 34
· "Having behind us the producing masses of this nation and the
world, supported by the commercial interests, the laboring
interests, and the toilers everywhere, we will answer their
demand for a gold standard by saying to them: You shall not
press down upon the brow of labor this crown of thorns, you
shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold."
·
· In the excerpt from the 1896 speech above, William Jennings
Bryan is advocating:
·
· A.
· Government subsidies to farmers
·
· B.
· Passage of higher protective tariffs
·
· C.
· Free and unlimited coinage of silver
·
· D.
· Reduction of the work day to eight hours
19. ·
1 points
Question 35
· What did the North give the South in the Compromise of
1850?
·
· A.
· They agreed to reduce all tariffs
·
· B.
· They passed a stronger fugitive slave law
·
· C.
· They promised to allow slavery in the new territories
·
· D.
· They passed a law that gave the South more votes in Congress
·
1 points
Question 36
· Many nativists thought that immigrants were:
·
· A.
· helpful additions to society
·
· B.
· too heavily concentrated in the north and northwest
·
· C.
· the best hope for building America's industrial base
·
· D.
· socialists and anarchists who might overthrow the United
States
·
1 points
20. Question 37
· The "spoils system" refers to
·
· A.
· making illegal payoffs to political supporters
·
· B.
· giving away land taken from Native Americans to white
settlers
·
· C.
· the destruction of land by overly aggressive settlement
·
· D.
· giving away jobs as political rewards
·
1 points
Question 38
· What did the Compromise of 1877 do?
·
· A.
· It pulled troops out of the South and ended Reconstruction
·
· B.
· It admitted all northern states into the Union and ended
Reconstruction
·
· C.
· It ended martial law and restored basic civil rights
·
· D.
· It allowed Southern states to reestablish the governments that
existed before the Civil War
·
1 points
Question 39
21. · The vast new territories gained in the Mexican War
·
· A.
· Proved to be not as valuable as once was hoped
·
· B.
· Occasioned a gag rule in Congress
·
· C.
· Brought about a new debate over the issue of slavery in the
territories
·
· D.
· Were off limits to new settlers until the issue of slavery could
be resolved
·
1 points
Question 40
· How did the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act increase
sectional tension?
·
· A.
· It financed southern slave owners with federal tax dollars
·
· B.
· It approved a northern route for the transcontinental railroad
·
· C.
· It permitted banks to borrow money from wealthy
industrialists
·
· D.
· It allowed the issue of slavery to be decided by popular
sovereignty
·
1 points
22. Question 41
· Reform movements in American in the mid-nineteenth century
emerged in part because
·
· A.
· of a belief in the basic good of individuals
·
· B.
· of a desire for more social order and control
·
· C.
· both a and b
·
· D.
· neither a nor b
·
1 points
Question 42
· Who told about the horrible conditions of the poor in
American cities in the book, How the Other Half Lives?
·
· A.
· Jacob Riis
·
· B.
· Jane Addams
·
· C.
· Louis Sullivan
·
· D.
· Upton Sinclair
·
1 points
Question 43
· Which philosophical movement believed that all truths could
23. be found within oneself and in nature?
·
· A.
· Utopianism
·
· B.
· Unitarianism
·
· C.
· Humanitarianism
·
· D.
· Transcendentalism
·
1 points
Question 44
· Early in his presidency, Abraham Lincoln declared that his
primary goal as President was to
·
· A.
· preserve the Union
·
· B.
· end slavery throughout the entire country
·
· C.
· encourage sectionalism
·
· D.
· enforce the Emancipation Proclamation
·
1 points
Question 45
· Which group made up the greatest proportion of voters in the
early 1800s?
·
24. · A.
· northern women
·
· B.
· landless farmers
·
· C.
· white men with property
·
· D.
· slaves and American Indians
·
1 points
Question 46
· The Battle of New Orleans
·
· A.
· took place after the Treaty of Ghent, officially ending the
conflict, had been negotiated
·
· B.
· represented one of the few American military successes during
the War of 1812
·
· C.
· resulted in 2,100 British killed and wounded compared to 21
American casualties
·
· D.
· all of the above
·
1 points
Question 47
· In 1823, the Monroe doctrine was established mainly because
the United States wanted to
·
25. · A.
· keep control of Alaska and Hawaii
·
· B.
· establish more colonies in Latin America
·
· C.
· support England's attempt to keep its empire in Central
America
·
· D.
· warn Europe against any further colonization in the Western
Hemisphere
·
1 points
Question 48
· The principle that the United States has the right to act as the
"policeman of the Western Hemisphere" and intervene in the
internal affairs of Latin American nations was established by
the
·
· A.
· Good Neighbor policy
·
· B.
· Open Door Policy
·
· C.
· Marshall Plan
·
· D.
· Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine
·
1 points
Question 49
· When President Thomas Jefferson acquired the Louisiana
26. Territory from France, he demonstrated that he had modified his
belief that
·
· A.
· adding territory would lead to regional rivalries
·
· B.
· the Constitution should be strictly interpreted
·
· C.
· the federal government should limit individual rights
·
· D.
· commercial development was the main goal of the federal
government
·
1 points
Question 50
· Which name would be the best description of a category
including: Hudson River School
·
James Fenimore Cooper
·
Nathaniel Hawthorne
·
Daniel Webster
·
· A.
· Examples of American sectionalism
·
· B.
· Examples of American nationalism
·
27. · C.
· Examples of European artistic work
·
· D.
· Examples of the transcendentalist movement
·
1 points
Question 1
· What specific industry was finally brought under effective
government regulation by the Elkins Act and the Hepburn
Act?
·
·
· railroads
·
·
· steel
·
·
· oil
·
·
· banking
·
1 points
Question 2
· Which amendment to the constitution prohibited the sale,
manufacture, or importation of alcoholic beverages?
·
·
· 17
·
·
28. · 16
·
·
· 18
·
·
· 19
·
1 points
Question 3
· Which of the following muckraking novels had the greatest
impact on the American consumer during Teddy Roosevelt's
administration?
·
·
· Luck and Pluck
·
·
· The Jungle
·
·
· History of Standard Oil Company
·
·
· The Shame of our Cities
·
1 points
Question 4
· Which of the following reforms allows voters to choose the
candidates that will eventually run in general elections?
·
·
· recall
·
·
· direct primary
29. ·
·
· referendum
·
·
· party caucus
·
1 points
Question 5
· In which of the following situations did President Eisenhower
use federal troops to support efforts of the Civil Rights
Movement?
·
·
· Integration of Central High School in Arkansas
·
·
· Atlanta Sit-Ins
·
·
· Birmingham Church Bombing
·
·
· Montgomery Bus Boycott
·
1 points
Question 6
· Which of the following laws established a comprehensive
system of old age pensions and unemployment insurance?
·
·
· National Labor Relations Act
·
·
· Glass-Stegall Act
·
30. ·
· Social Security Act
·
·
· Fair Labor Standards Act
·
1 points
Question 7
· Why did the Cuban Missile Crisis develop between the US and
the USSR in 1962?
·
·
· Cuba appealed to the USSR after discovering the US had
missiles in Florida pointed at Cuba
·
·
· The US discovered missile sites to hold Soviet nuclear
weapons in Cuba
·
·
· The USSR threatened to retaliate against the US because of
the US embargo against Cuba
·
·
· Cuban rebels theatened to invade the US to start a communist
revolution in the US
·
1 points
Question 8
· Why did the Soviet Union and East Germany decide to
construct the Berlin Wall in 1961?
·
·
· to prevent people living in communist controlled Eastern
Europe from escaping to the West
·
31. ·
· becauseKhruschev was unable to bully John F. Kennedy into
pulling US forces out of Berlin
·
·
· to control access into East Berlin
·
·
· all of the above
·
1 points
Question 9
· A major effect of the Watergate scandal of the 1970s was that
it
·
· A.
· increased presidential power
·
· B.
· resulted in term limits for elected officials
·
· C.
· reduced people’s trust in government
·
· D.
· led to the Arab oil embargo
·
1 points
Question 10
· In the 1950s, the domino theory was used by President Dwight
D. Eisenhower to justify
·
· A.
· opposing Britain and France in the Suez Canal crisis
·
· B.
32. · United States involvement in Vietnam
·
· C.
· sending federal troops into Little Rock, Arkansas
·
· D.
· joining the United Nations
·
1 points
Question 11
· In the Camp David Accords (1978), President Jimmy Carter
succeeded in
·
· A.
· suspending grain sales to the Soviet Union and China
·
· B.
· returning the Panama Canal Zone to Panama
·
· C.
· freeing hostages being held in Iran
·
· D.
· providing a foundation for a peace treaty between Egypt and
Israel
·
1 points
Question 12
· In the Supreme Court cases New Jersey v. T.L.O. and
Tinker v. Des Moines School District, the Court ruled that
·
· A.
· students can be expelled from school without a hearing
·
· B.
· civil liberties can be both protected and limited in schools
33. ·
· C.
· individual student rights are more important than a safe school
environment
·
· D.
· the Bill of Rights does not apply to minors
·
1 points
Question 13
· In the United States, support for the passage and expansion of
the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) has been
strongest among
·
· A.
· labor unions
·
· B.
· environmentalists
·
· C.
· farmers
·
· D.
· big business
·
1 points
Question 14
· A major goal of the women’s movement over the past twenty
years has been to gain
·
· A.
· equal economic opportunity
·
· B.
· the right to vote
34. ·
· C.
· better access to Social Security
·
· D.
· full property rights
·
1 points
Question 15
· Books such as Uncle Tom’s Cabin, How the Other Half
Lives, and The Feminine Mystique all show that literature can
sometimes
·
· A.
· begin military conflict
·
· B.
· cause violent revolution
·
· C.
· expose government corruption
·
· D.
· encourage social reform
·
1 points
Question 16
· How were the presidential elections of 1876 and 2000
similar?
·
· A.
· The outcome of the election was decided by Congress.
·
· B.
· The winner of the popular vote lost the electoral vote.
·
35. · C.
· Third-party candidates did not affect the outcome.
·
· D.
· The winner was decided by the Supreme Court.
·
1 points
Question 17
· The main goal of affirmative action programs is to
·
· A.
· promote economic gains for minorities and women
·
· B.
· enforce racial segregation laws
·
· C.
· provide affordable child care
·
· D.
· secure equal voting rights for African Americans
·
1 points
Question 18
· A dramatic symbol of the end of the Cold War was
·
· A.
· Chinese actions in Tiananmen Square
·
· B.
· Iraqi invasion of Kuwait
·
· C.
· tearing down the Berlin Wall
·
· D.
36. · Iran-Contra Affair
·
1 points
Question 19
· Although officially the Marshall Plan was directed “not
against any country or doctrine but against hunger, poverty,
desperation, and chaos” what was its underlying intent?
·
·
· to prevent the spread of communism in Western Europe
·
·
· to form an alliance with South American democracies
·
·
· to prevent a communist takeover in Vietnam
·
·
· to divide postwar Germany into four zones
·
1 points
Question 20
· During the 1950s, school enrollments increased by 13 million.
School districts struggled to build more facilities, and a new
school was built in California every seven days. What was
responsible for this post-World War II growth rate?
·
·
· the Supreme Court decision if Brown vs. Board of Education
of Topeka
·
·
· Norman Vincent Peale and The Power of Positive Thinking
·
·
· The baby boom, which continued into the mid-1960s
37. ·
·
· Dr. Benjamin Spock’s book, Baby and Child Care
·
1 points
Question 21
· How did the domino theory influence the United States’ role
in the Vietnam War?
·
·
· The United States adopted a position of neutrality
·
·
· Vietnamization became the new U.S. foreign policy.
·
·
· It convinced the United States to become involved in the
war.
·
·
· It forced the United States to support the Vietcong.
·
1 points
Question 22
· How did the invention of the atomic bomb affect the postwar
world?
·
·
· European nations were afraid to stand up to United States
aggression.
·
·
· The United Nations became merely a symbolic organization
with no real power.
·
·
38. · The Japanese people continued to defy the United States, even
with the prospect of total annihilation.
·
·
· A nuclear arms race developed between the United States and
the Soviet Union.
·
1 points
Question 23
· What event would John F. Kennedy and many others have
considered the most dangerous Cold War confrontation during
his presidency and perhaps the entire era?
·
·
· The space race
·
·
· The Cuban missile crisis
·
·
· The SALT II talks
·
·
· The Berlin Wall Crisis
·
1 points
Question 24
· What impact did the arrival of the American Expeditionary
Force (A.E.F) have on the outcome of the Great War?
·
·
· The arrival of the “Doughboys” encouraged Russia not to pull
out of the war as many expected they would have done.
·
·
· The arrival of American soldiers and resources encouraged
39. Germany to ask for peace talks with the other Allied powers.
·
·
· The Americans were fresh and eager to engage the enemy in
battle and their arrival marked a turning point in the war.
·
·
· General John. J. “Blackjack” Pershing’s arrival brought about
a restructuring of the Allied High command and resulted in
American leadership on the Eastern front.
·
1 points
Question 25
· What was the main purpose of the George Creel led Committee
on Public Information during World War I?
·
·
· to persuade United States citizens to support the war
·
·
· to recruit young United States citizens for the armed forces
·
·
· to raise money for the government by selling stocks and
securities
·
·
· to enlist the aid of women and children in producing more
food
·
1 points
Question 26
· What was the intension of Franklin Roosevelt’s Lend Lease
proposal?
·
·
40. · To give aid to German minorities stuck behind enemy lines
without officially entering the war
·
·
· To forgive the World War I debts of Great Britain, Russia, and
France and help the allies without officially entering the war
·
·
· To allow United States companies the right to sell supplies to
any Allied country without officially entering the war
·
·
· To provide arms for the Allies to use against the Germans
without officially entering the war
·
1 points
Question 27
· Which best describes the goal of the Manhattan
Project?
·
·
· The U.S. government program intended to increase radar air
defense for coastal cities.
·
·
· The U.S. government program with the goal of constructing
five new aircraft carriers for the Pacific theater between 1942-
1943.
·
·
· The U.S. government program intended to end World War II
by stimulating anti-Nazi sentiment through controlling the
German press.
·
·
· The U.S. government program focused on the development of
41. an atomic bomb.
·
1 points
Question 28
· Who was most responsible for championing the rights of poor
migrant workers during the 1960s?
·
·
· Dennis Banks
·
·
· Stokely Carmichael
·
·
· Malcolm X
·
·
· Cesar Chavez
·
1 points
Question 29
· Which statement best describes the term “muckraking”
journalism? .
·
· A style of journalism popularized by Joseph Pulitzer and
William Randolph Hearst that relied heavily on sensationalized
and exaggerated reporting.
·
·
· A style of political campaigning popularized by Theodore
Roosevelt which utilized a tactic known as holding the “Bully
Pulpit” or manipulating the press.
·
·
· A style of journalism popularized by individuals such as
42. Lincoln Steffens and Ida Tarbell who used journalism to expose
the corruption present in business and politics.
·
·
· A genre of fiction popularized by Upton Sinclair and Theodore
Dreiser the focused on greatly exaggerated tales of wealth and
propagated the “rages to riches” mentality
·
1 points
Question 30
· Which action most profoundly changed national election
politics?
·
·
· The Hepburn Act
·
·
· The Elkins Act
·
·
· The Eighteenth Amendment
·
·
· The Nineteenth Amendment
·
1 points
Question 31
· How did the 1929 stock market crash negatively impact
American banks? A.
·
·
· It produced a ripple effect, forcing many banks to close.B.
·
·
· It affected only small banks and not larger ones.C.
·
43. ·
· It caused a few banks closures but most reopened within
days.D.
·
·
· It had little impact on banking as compared to the impact on
other industries.
·
1 points
Question 32
· How did the Soviet launch of Sputnik (1957) impact American
society?
·
·
· It proved that the Soviet Union could merely duplicate
American accomplishments which cased a great degree of
national pride.
·
·
· It caused a demand for more emphasis on math and science in
American schools because the Russians had bested American
ingenuity.
·
·
· It resulted in a better relationship and scientific sharing
between the Soviet Union and the United States.
·
·
· It resulted in the federal government cutting back on spending
for education in an effort to increasing defense spending.
·
1 points
Question 33
· Which of the following became the leading organization that
fought for legislation to protect African-American rights in the
early 20th century?
44. ·
·
· ACLU
·
·
· CORE
·
·
· UNIA
·
·
· NAACP
·
1 points
Question 34
· Although it was not the cause, the most striking signal of the
start of the Great Depression occurred on October 29 with
which of the following events?
·
·
· President Franklin Roosevelt was elected
·
·
· The Stock Market crashed as investors dumped worthless
stock
·
·
· Business leaders announced they would not accept collective
bargaining
·
·
· announced the end to direct relief programs
·
1 points
Question 35
· How did the Reconstruction Finance Corporation represent
45. typical conservative Republican beliefs of the 1920's?
·
·
· providing direct assistance to citizens
·
·
· providing no assistance in any form from the Federal
Government
·
·
· providing handouts to wealthy supporters of the Republican
party
·
·
· providing assistance to business and industry rather than
individuals
·
1 points
Question 36
· Mobilization of economic resources for WWII was
administered and directed by which of the following agencies in
the United States?
·
·
· Civilian-War Corps
·
·
· War Production Board
·
·
· Selective Service and Training Act
·
·
· Tennesee Valley Authority
·
1 points
46. Question 37
· To protest discrimination in wartime industries, ________
organized a march on Washington that convinced FDR to set up
the Fair Employment Practices Commission.
·
·
·
· Harry S. Truman
·
·
·
· Erwin Rommel
·
·
·
· General George Marshall
·
·
·
· A. Phillip Randolph
·
·
1 points
Question 38
· What characteristic did the US and the USSR have in common
in the Cold War era?
·
·
· opportunity to participate in free enterprise economy
·
·
· Emphasis on the importance of individual freedom
·
·
· Desire to increase international power
·
47. ·
· federal government protection of civil liberties
·
1 points
Question 39
· Which of the following institutions provided services in urban
communities to assist the poor and the immigrant in the late
19th century?
·
·
· public school systems
·
·
· settlement houses
·
·
· internal development boards
·
·
· public housing authorities
·
1 points
Question 40
· Which of the following descriptions of the Federal Reserve
Act is not true?
·
·
· Established a Federal Reserve Board to oversee the system of
banks
·
·
· Established federal regulation of currency through interest
rates
·
·
· Created 12 regional banks as "banker"s banks? (lend money to
48. banks as a set interest rate)
·
·
· Created 12 regional banks that offer interest free loans to
consumers
·
1 points
Question 41
· Which of the following is an accurate comparison of life in
rural areas and life in urban areas during the Depression?
·
·
· In urban areas people went hungry while in rural areas there
was a surplus of agricultural products
·
·
· In both areas people faced shortages of food and clothing
·
·
· In rural areas people were not effected by the Depression but
they were effected in urban areas
·
·
· People in cities often moved to Oklahoma and Texas to
become farmers
·
1 points
Question 42
· Which of the following developments of the 1920?s is not
related to the Red Scare?
·
·
· the arrest of Margaret Sanger
·
·
· the return of isolationism in American politics
49. ·
·
· the establishment of strict immigration quotas
·
·
· the trial of Sacco and Vanzetti
·
1 points
Question 43
· Which of the following statements is not an accurate
interpretation of the impact of the New Deal on the United
States?
·
·
· New Deal insured that the Congress would limit the role of the
federal government in the economy
·
·
· Programs such as Social Security and the FDIC have helped to
prevent other "Great Depressions" in the US.
·
·
· The expanded role of the federal government became a
permanent part of America
·
·
· The federal government would permanently accept
responsibility for insuring the basic economic welfare of the
American people
·
1 points
Question 44
· The Harlem Renaissance refers to which of the following?
·
·
· a program to promote African-American owned businesses
50. ·
·
· a struggle for civil rights led by the NAACP
·
·
· a population increase in Harlem in the 1920's
·
·
· a flowering and celebration of African-American culture in
literature and art
·
1 points
Question 45
· What does the term "Totalitarianism" refers to?
·
·
· total anarchy and lack of government
·
·
· total control of government by the people
·
·
· total control of society by the state
·
·
· total fear of outsiders or foreigners
·
1 points
Question 46
· Where did the last German offensive against the Western
Allies occurr?
·
·
· Battle of Berlin
·
·
51. · Battle of Stalingrad
·
·
· Battle of the Bulge
·
·
· Battle of the Marne
·
1 points
Question 47
· Which of the following agreements was least likely to be
included in The Atlantic Charter?
·
·
· freedom of the seas
·
·
· self-determination for all nations
·
·
· division of Germany into many small nations
·
·
· international cooperation to maintain peace after WWII
·
1 points
Question 48
· Why were the conquests of Okinawa and Iwo Jima were
important to U.S. strategy against Japan?
·
·
· they were far enough away from Japan to prevent attack
·
·
· they were the traditional homeland of Japanese people
·
52. ·
· they provided bases from which an invasion of Japan could be
launched
·
·
· they were rich in many resources such as oil and coal
·
1 points
Question 49
· Which event led to the other three?
·
· A.
· United States overthrow of the Taliban in Afghanistan
·
· B.
· September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks against the United
States
·
· C.
· creation of the Department of Homeland Security
·
· D.
· passage of the Patriot Act
·
1 points
Question 50
· Two hotly debate cultural issues that embroiled the Supreme
Court during the Reagan-Bush administrations were
·
· A.
· hair styles and rock music
·
· B.
· affirmative action and abortion
·
· C.
53. · language teaching and dress in the workplace
·
· D.
· child-rearing practices and television