From the experience of the Navajo people, one can conclude that ______________.
A. unity among the Indian tribes of a particular region could prevent white encroachment on Indian lands
B. the federal government actively attempted to protect Indian cultures from aggressive white settlers
C. some Indians were able to retain their traditional culture by refusing to trade with whites
D. the economic power of whites increasingly placed Indians in a dependent and thus weakened position
Answer: D
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The passage of Great Society programs was made possible primarily by __________
A) a series of favorable Supreme Court rulings on their potential constitutionality B) the support of many moderate Republicans C) the support of nearly all southern Democrats D) the large majorities Democrats gained in Congress in the 1964 elections
Which of the following countries were new imperial powers in the late nineteenth century?
A. Russia and Japan B. Russia and China C. Japan and China D. Japan and the United States
One of the West's persistent political demands was for
a. a strong gold-back monetary system. b. a stronger Bank of the United States. c. cheap money issued by unregulated banks. d. federal aid to agriculture. e. a homestead act offering free land to settlers.
The Enlightenment was the ________
A. the eighteenth-century movement that held that change and reform were both desirable through the application of reason and science B. the twentieth-century movement that brought scientists and philosophers together to reconcile their differences on the state of the natural world C. the eighteenth-century movement that attempted to interpret the events of scripture based on scientific observations of the natural world D. the nineteenth-century movement that saw the growth of industry and the increase of manufacturing E. the sixteenth-century movement in which people returned to the ideas of antiquity and was characterized by a flourishing of art and culture