The liberators of Venezuela and Argentina, respectively, were

a. Simón Bolívar and José de San Martín.
b. Augustín de Iturbide and Toussaint Prado.
c. José de San Martín and Alfonso Stroessner.
d. Santa Ana and Toussaint L'Ouverture.
e. Benito Juarez and Vicente Rojas.


a

History

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How did new methods of production affect workers in the first years of the twentieth century?

a. They were large-scale and mechanized, which made workers almost part of the machinery, endangered, and bored. b. They relied heavily on keeping workers satisfied, which led to safety, wage, and workweek reforms. c. They depended on the workers' willingness to work, which led to incentives, benefits, and human resource departments. d. They depended almost totally on automation, eliminating low-skilled jobs and creating high unemployment in this sector. e. They emphasized a unique product that would be better than the one before, increasing pressure on workers and materialism in consumers.

History

What was the main motivation that brought so many Scots-Irish to America in the 1700s?

A) They came to practice Catholicism freely, something they could not do in Ireland. B) They came in search of freedom and prosperity, two things they lacked in Ireland. C) They came to work as indentured servants in the New World. D) Their main goal was to form new Presbyterian congregations in America. E) They came to earn money in America and planned to return to Scotland.

History

The loyalty program

a. was used for intimidation, not personnel decisions. b. was strongly opposed by Truman's Justice Department. c. resulted in the firings and resignations of many innocent Americans. d. was ruled unconstitutional in 1952.

History

The author compares the early years of the computer industry to the early years of the

a) oil industry. b) textile industry. c) automobile industry. d) steel industry. e) railroad industry.

History