Both Indians and Hispanics were hardly "monolithic" ethnic groups in American life. Explain how that led to a variety of responses to the activist currents of the 1960s and 1970s, among both Hispanics and Indians.
What will be an ideal response?
Answers will vary.
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“In studying interlocked networks, we may miss out important cities that are at the centre of sub-networks within the larger whole… These are key cities that are strategically positioned in the network at the intersections of regional locations and functional activities. To identify such cities requires techniques that divide the overall network into coherent parts wherein key cities can be identified.” What do we call these cities?
a. Secondary Cities b. Nodes c. Regional Capitals d. Sub-net articulator Cities
When Lincoln made his call to arms, many northern communities:
A) responded enthusiastically. B) agreed to send money and supplies but not men. C) were ambivalent about joining up. D) rioted against fighting a war to free slaves.
Why was the wealth that Spain acquired from the New World considered to be a mixed blessing?
A) Spain was forced to send a large proportion of its population to the New World to help ship gold and silver back to Spain. B) The Spanish got wealthy from silver and gold in the New World, but lost most of their army and navy in battles with Native Americans. C) Spain only used the New World as a source of wealth; it did not consider establishing real settlements there. D) Great inflation for ordinary Spaniards resulted from Spain's quick acquisition of its wealth. E) The Spanish who got wealthy very quickly did not know how to manage their wealth and lost it just as quickly.
Unlike in earlier centuries when "Christians and spices" were the motives for acquiring colonies, by the nineteenth century the primary function of colonies was to provide raw materials and purchase European manufactured products
a. True b. False Indicate whether the statement is true or false