Which group overwhelmingly supported Carter in the 1980 presidential election?
A) African Americans
B) blue-collar workers
C) Jewish voters
D) voters in the Sunbelt states
E) voters in the South
Answer: A
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Answer the following statements true (T) or false (F)
1. The article talks about two forces--the top-down push of corporate convergence and the bottom-up pull of grassroots convergence. These forces intersect to produce what might be called global convergence, the unidirectional flow of consumer goods around the country. 2. Toffler describes the age of prosumption as the arrival of a new form of political and capitalistic autocracy, class-determined work, power-dependent labor, centralized production, and government-focused production. 3. In the registers of emotion and affect, Asian American youth also work through and against the specter of the model minority as a prescriptive racial fiction. Throughout its popular cultural history, Asian America has propagated the “grander passions” of anger, rage, and shame. 4. According to authors, prior research demonstrates that people of color are not commonly perceived as a possible threat to society and that Latino immigrants are not an exception.
Which of these describes attitudes toward the Versailles settlement in the 1920s and 1930s?
A. near-unanimous opposition B. general satisfaction C. discontent among the defeated parties D. widespread optimism
Which statement is true about both lynch mobs and the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s?
A) They revived their activities after being suppressed during Reconstruction. B) Their targets included not only African Americans, but also Jews, Catholics, immigrants and feminists. C) They were unashamed of their actions and unafraid to reveal their identities. D) Although they were usually prosecuted for their crimes, juries rarely found them guilty. E) Federal law soon constrained their activities.
The formal event which led to the break between the American colonies and England was the
A. creation of the Articles of Confederation. B. confrontation at Yorktown. C. confrontation over the Stamp Act. D. signing of the Declaration of Independence. E. creation of the United States Constitution.