Late nineteenth-century Jewish immigrants to America
A) usually worked in steel mills, mines, and construction.
B) did not usually intend to remain in America.
C) usually migrated in family units.
D) usually purchased land and became farmers.
C
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Which of the following is true of the multi-candidate presidential race of 1824?
A. Although John Quincy Adams was second in the electoral vote, he was elected because he led in popular votes. B. John Quincy Adams had a majority of electoral votes and became president, but his major opponent, Andrew Jackson, became vice president. C. Because no candidate received a majority of electoral votes, the Speaker of the House, Henry Clay, assumed the presidency. D. Although Andrew Jackson led in both popular and electoral votes, he was not elected.
The first Popular Front government in France
A) solved the depression by eliminating workers' benefits. B) gave ordinary workers new rights and benefits including a minimum wage. C) was able to end the problems of economic depression. D) collapsed in 1926, allowing Raymond Poincaré's Cartel of the Left to take power. E) remained in power until the German invasion of 1942.
The Supreme Court, in two rulings related to the 1916 Keating-Owen Act,
A. illustrated how quickly Justice Louis Brandeis had changed the Court. B. displayed support for using federal authority to create social change. C. demonstrated its support for President Wilson's political agenda. D. struck down reform legislation. E. validated an expansion of congressional authority.
Which of the following statements about abolitionism and women’s rights is MOST accurate?
a. White women’s rights leaders such as Angela and Sarah Grimké opposed abolitionism as a distraction from their own cause. b. Most prominent male abolitionists, including William Lloyd Garrison and Frederick Douglass, opposed the women’s rights movement. c. Women who spoke publicly in support of abolitionist causes faced verbal and physical attacks from hostile audiences. d. All men engaged in the anti-slavery struggle recognized that a true commitment to freedom and equality required them to support the women’s rights movement as well.