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.
D
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In the 1920s, President Coolidge famously said that "the business of America is business." How did contemporary trends reflect this statement?
A) Americans exhausted from the war effort were indulging in consumerism and entertainment. B) Economic prosperity was widespread amongst all classes of society. C) The growth of American wealth proved that capitalism was more influential and successful than communism. D) The Harding and Coolidge administrations generally favored industrial and business interests. E) With most serious artists and intellectuals living abroad, the elite at home were focusing their efforts in industry and finance.
Which of the following bills, passed in 1930, raised American tariffs on foreign agricultural and manufactured goods by as much as 50 percent?
A) The Hawley-Smoot Tariff B) The McKinley Tariff C) The Wilson-Gorman Tariff D) The Payne-Aldrich Tariff E) The Fordney-McCumber Tariff
In Worcester v. Georgia (1832), the Marshall Court affirmed federal authority over
A. all American Indian tribes. B. both individual states and all American Indian tribes. C. both American Indian tribes and the remainder of the Louisiana Purchase. D. individual states. E. the remainder of the Louisiana Purchase.
Like many early white rock musicians, Elvis Presley drew heavily from black traditions in
A. folk. B. rhythm and blues. C. country western. D. gospel. E. jazz.