Woodrow Wilson's early efforts to conduct a non-imperialistic foreign policy were first undermined when he

a. sought support from jingoist publisher William Randolph Hearst.
b. prohibited other great powers from using the Panama Canal.
c. sent American marines to Haiti.
d. revoked promises to grant independence to the Philippines.
e. dispatched American forces to protect U.S. missionaries in China.


c

History

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In his ____, Richard Nixon tried to recruit formerly Democratic southern voters to the Republican party by focusing on law and order and racial issues

a. sunbelt strategy b. beltway strategy c. white collar strategy d. southern strategy e. rainbow coalition strategy

History

In 1861, many Northerners were willing to let the Southern states leave the Union until

a. the Confederates began burning the American flag. b. the South attacked Fort Sumter. c. Robert E. Lee was named to head the potential new nation's army. d. South Carolina seceded from the United States. e. Virginia and Tennessee joined the seceding states.

History

Under mercantilist doctrine, the American colonies were expected to do all of the following EXCEPT

a. supply Britain with raw materials not available there. b. become economically self-sufficient as soon as possible. c. not indulge in dangerous dreams of economic independence. d. provide a market for British manufactured goods. e. refrain from manufacturing finished goods for trade.

History

When colonists protested the Stamp Tax with the cry "no taxation without representation," George Grenville argued that

A) each member of Parliament, regardless of his residence, represented all colonists in the empire. B) colonists, through their agents in London, were represented in Parliament. C) the colonists were adequately represented in their own colonial assemblies. D) Parliament could tax the colonists even though they were not represented in the House of Commons.

History