What do the patterns of the internal slave trade in the first half of the nineteenth century suggest?
A) that there was a strong and growing demand for slaves in the Upper South
B) that demand for slaves in the Lower South was in decline
C) that there was a strong and growing demand for slaves in the Lower South
D) that demand for slaves was equally strong in the Upper and Lower South
Answer: C
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The causes of the Great Migration include all of the following EXCEPT:
A) depleted soil that led to agricultural failure. B) a boll weevil infestation. C) opportunities in northern factories. D) expulsion decrees from southern states.
The authors argue that though women did not compete with men for jobs,
A) efforts to take jobs from women had a positive psychological effect. B) taking their jobs away improved men's chances of finding jobs. C) their greater skills often pushed men out. D) they often made more at the same job.
Nation building did not work as President Kennedy had envisioned because
a. the monetary aid was usually funneled through a self-interested elite and often did not reach the very poor. b. Congress refused to appropriate the sums of money needed to make the program succeed. c. the Soviet Union gave more foreign aid to the Third World than did the United States. d. Communist subversives staged violent protests, which forced many countries to reject the U.S. offer ofassistance.
Immigration restrictions of the 1920s were introduced as a result of
a. increased migration of blacks to the North. b. the nativist belief that northern Europeans were superior to Southern and Eastern Europeans. c. a desire to rid the country of the quota system. d. the desire to halt immigration from Latin America. e. the rampant spread of infectious diseases from southern and eastern European immigrants to native-born Americans across all of America.