The pivotal event that essentially crippled organized labor throughout the 1920s was
a. the Supreme Court's ruling against the union closed shop in the Adkins case.
b. the deportation of the most effective labor organizers to the Communist Soviet Union.
c. the split within the American labor movement between the American Federation of Labor and the Socialists.
d. the federal government's antilabor intervention that broke the 1919 steel strike.
e. repeal of the Clayton Act guaranteeing unions the right to organize.
d
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Henry II gained control of much of the Angevin Empire by marrying
A) Eleanor of Aquitaine. B) Blanche of Castille. C) the empress Matilda. D) Clair of Anjou. E) Hildegard of Bingen.
Who left a family heritage of slave ownership to become an antislavery advocate?
A) Solomon Northrup B) Frederick Douglass C) Sarah Grimké D) David Walker
As a factor in its foreign policy during the late nineteenth century, the United States
A) showed little interest in acquiring territory in the Pacific Ocean region. B) drove Great Britain and Germany out of Pago Pago. C) renounced interest in building a canal across Central America. D) indicated its interest in building an American-controlled canal in Nicaragua.
George W. Bush’s ambitious plan for education reform, passed with bipartisan support, was called __________
a) “No Child Left Behind” b) “The Great Society” c) “Race to the Top” d) “Common Core”