During negotiations for the Kellogg-Briand Pact in 1928, the United States worked to __________
A) limit industrial overproduction
B) withdraw its commitment to free trade
C) start an arms race with European powers
D) renounce aggression and condemn war
D
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In the election of 2004, George W. Bush won a wide victory over Democrat John Kerry, winning a popular vote margin of 58 percent to Kerry's 40 percent.
Answer the following statement true (T) or false (F)
Which of the following is true of the War on Poverty?
A. It provided public-works jobs to millions of poor people. B. It especially benefited female-headed families. C. It directly attacked the housing, health, and nutritional problems of the poor. D. It alone was responsible for alleviating hunger in the United States.
Which of the following was a weakness of Congress under the Articles of Confederation?
A. It could only levy taxes. B. It could not declare war or regulate Indian affairs. C. Its structure meant that national leadership was marked by weakness and discontinuity. D. It could only regulate trade.
Why did American cities in the Northeast and Midwest experience the problems of poverty, slum housing, and cultural dislocations with new intensity in the postwar period?
A) These social problems were a byproduct of economic stagnation. B) The manufacturing sector was losing thousands of unskilled and semiskilled jobs. C) These social conditions were the product of an oppressive police force. D) They were produced by children who suffered the neglect of their working mothers.