During the 1920s, when $1,800 was considered the minimum annual income for a decent standard of living, the average annual income of a worker was approximately
A. $1,900.
B. $700.
C. $1,100.
D. $1,500.
E. $2,400.
Answer: D
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The Jane Club in Chicago illustrates
A) how hard things were for factory workers at the turn of the century. B) the scarcity of good lodgings available at the turn of the century. C) how helpful Jane Addams was. D) attempts by women to maintain their independence.
William Randolph Hearst:
a. consistently wrote anti-war editorials during the Cuban crisis b. published the New York World and other papers that criticized Cuba c. published the strongly anti-Spanish, pro-war New York Journal d. opposed war sentiments, until his reporters told him about Cuban atrocities they had witnessed
Which of the following is NOT a similarity between Christianity and Islam?
A) Each of the faiths had a holy book. B) Both Muhammad and Jesus considered themselves to be divine. C) Both religions were monotheistic. D) Both religions had as part of their scriptures divine revelation. E) Both religions envisioned heaven or paradise for believers.
The international situation in the mid-eighteenth century included
a. amicable cooperation between Austria and Prussia for control of central Europe. b. a declining role for the aristocracy. c. an intense rivalry between France and Britain in northern Europe and North America. d. a prolonged period of peace on the continent. e. a rejection of Prussian militarism by all of the philosophes.