The pre-Columbian North American peoples in the Pacific Northwest
A. were the most peaceful of pre-Columbian societies.
B. did not have permanent settlements.
C. fished salmon as their principal occupation.
D. developed political systems as sophisticated as those of the Maya and Aztecs.
E. were known as the Inuit.
Answer: C
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Historians like Frank Tannenbaum traditionally argued that Latin American experience with slavery was different than in the United States because creole independence leaders like Simón Bolívar
A) were far more conservative and avoided discussions of emancipation. B) uniformly opposed slavery and secured its abolition without violence. C) favored gradual abolition of slavery, but opposed racial discrimination. D) never embraced racism, although they supported slavery.
The Senate approved the worship of the Phrygian goddess Cybele but reversed itself when the cult proved to be __________.
A. a financial scam B. promoting Phrygia at the expense of Rome C. a time-sink D. too ecstatic and sensual
Alfred Krupp made his fortune in
A) armaments. B) banking. C) textiles. D) railroads. E) labor union leadership.
The new spirit that came to life in American politics and rhetoric in the years after 1840 found expression in the phrase
a. "Freedom Now" b. "Manifest Destiny" c. "Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men" d. "Forty Acres and a Mule"