Which group(s) of people failed to benefit from the changes made by the Third Republic in France?

a) unskilled laborers, landless rural people, ethnic and religious minorities
b) upper- and middle-class professionals: doctors, lawyers, journalists
Consider This: How did rural and city life differ in this period? See 9.4.2: The Fin de Siècle.
c) members of the remaining noble families and the high clergy
Consider This: How did rural and city life differ in this period? See 9.4.2: The Fin de Siècle.
d) unionized workers
Consider This: How did rural and city life differ in this period? See 9.4.2: The Fin de Siècle.


a) unskilled laborers, landless rural people, ethnic and religious minorities

History

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Collectively the Allies, despite early defeats, enjoyed significant strengths that would bring victory in the long haul, including all EXCEPT

A) a professed public commitment to Wilsonian ideals that managed to sustain morale. B) able political leadership that managed to maintain a unified purpose. C) Soviet manpower. D) American industrial production.

History

Comparing and contrasting McKinley and Bryan in the election of 1896,

A) Bryan was pragmatic, while McKinley was an uncompromising idealist. B) McKinley looked toward an idealized rural past, but Bryan welcomed revolutionary forces of the next century. C) Bryan's approach was parochial, whereas McKinley's was national. D) Bryan's approach was national, whereas McKinley's was parochial.

History

The chief subject of discussion at the convention held in Seneca Falls, New York, was:

A) revolutions abroad and their effect on the United States. B) prison reform. C) educational reform. D) women's rights.

History

In the massive fire-bombing raid on _____ in March 1945, the destruction was comparable to that later inflicted by atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki

a. Berlin b. Dresden c. Tokyo d. Okinawa e. Yokohama

History