The labor policy of the Wilson administration during World War I
A) showed little concern for the working conditions of women and children.
B) sought to protect and extend the rights of organized labor.
C) declared the American Federation of Labor illegal.
D) staunchly opposed efforts to unionize American workers.
Answer: B
You might also like to view...
The most difficult domestic issue faced by President George Herbert Walker Bush was
A) labor relations. B) controlling inflation. C) the environment. D) the growing federal budget deficit.
Why did Empress Dowager Cixi put an end to the so-called One Hundred Days of reform in China in the late nineteenth century? Who were domestic allies in this conservative effort to arrest political, economic, and social reform in China? How did Cixi's decision to cease political, social, and economic reforms in China help pave the way for the Open Door Notes policy of the United States and supported by European powers? .
What will be an ideal response?
Senate opponents of the League of Nations, as proposed in the Treaty of Versailles, argued that it
a. failed to provide enough German financial reparations to the United States. b. violated Wilson's own Fourteen Points. c. robbed Congress of its constitutional war-declaring powers by entangling America in an international organization capable of authorizing collective force against an aggressor nation. d. isolated the United States from postwar world affairs. e. made collective international security and alliances of peaceful democratic states more difficult to construct and sustain.
In 1956, 25 percent of Cuban national income was derived from
a. tin and nickel mining. b. the United Fruit Company. c. sugar manufacture and export. d. United States foreign aid. e. casinos and tourism.