By the 1920s the United States
a. conducted no acts of military intervention in Latin America until after World War I.
b. was the major source of outside investment capital for Latin America since the 1820s.
c. was seen as an imperialist power by many Latin Americans, particularly because of the activities of the United Fruit Company in Central America.
d. began the "Good Neighbor" policy during World War I to reinforce its policy of "leading" Latin Americans toward "good business" and "good government."
e. turned its back entirely on Latin America, pursuing an Asian directed policy instead.
c
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Who won the Nobel prize for literature in 1971?
a. Salman Rushdie b. Ernest Hemingway c. Jorge Amado d. Pablo Neruda e. Jose Saramago
In the American business community at the end of the nineteenth century,
A. rampant competitiveness and labor shortages helped to keep prices down and wages up. B. one percent of corporations controlled one-third of all manufacturing. C. federal reforms of corporations had ended the most predatory business practices. D. almost all corporations had achieved stability through "pool" arrangements. E. most states had made it illegal for one corporation to buy another one.
Peter Lombard used the story of Adam and Eve to argue that Christians should view women as __________.
A. spiritual equals to men B. inferior to men C. delicate and needing protection D. inherently sinful
In the early 1920s, the United States' ____ was a glaring exception to its isolationism and general indifference to the outside world
a. involvement in the World Court b. armed intervention in the Caribbean and Central America c. establishment of bases in the Philippines d. naval buildup e. support for "white" anticommunist forces inside the Soviet Union