What concerns did Americans raise about the League of Nations?

What will be an ideal response?


Opposition to the League of Nations, led by Senator Lodge, was based on the idea that the United States would lose some of its valued autonomy by joining such a group. Many Americans worried that involvement in the League of Nations would mean that U.S. foreign policy would be shaped, in part, by European interests. Additionally, the League could open the Western Hemisphere, which had been primarily under U.S. control as a result of the Roosevelt Corollary, to European activity.

History

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The concerns of reformers included all of the following EXCEPT

A. the threat of slavery spreading to the North. B. how cities might undermine the character of their families. C. threats to the social order posed by a growing labor class who did not attend church. D. transmitting values to their children that might secure a promising future for them.

History

In the context of postwar civil rights, what baseball player joined the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947, challenging the longstanding exclusion of black players from Major League Baseball?

What will be an ideal response?

History

The defeat and the dispersal of the Yamasee Indians by South Carolinians in 1715 a. resulted in the devastation of virtually all of the coastal Indian tribes in the souther colonies by about 1720. b. proved to be a short-lived victory for the South Carolina colonists, as the Yamasees re-grouped and regained their lost coastal lands with the help of their Cherokee, Creek, and Iroquois

allies. c. prompted the weakened Cherokees, Creeks, and Iroquois to abandon their settlements in the hills and valleys of the Appalachian Mountains and move westward. d. proved to be very unpopular among the many Carolinian colonists sympathetic to the Yamasee Indians. e. none of the choices.

History

Praetorian Guard

What will be an ideal response?

History