Based on your reading in this chapter, have the "new immigrants" to America generally benefited from their experiences in the United States?
What will be an ideal response?
Answers will vary.
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In Britain, the Labor Party seemed better equipped to deliver on the promise of providing a national health service as opposed to the Conservatives under Churchill who were strongly opposed to the idea of a welfare state
Indicate whether the statement is true or false.
By the beginning of World War I, how did most Americans view their role in the world?
A) They had rejected the isolationism of earlier generations. B) They were keenly aware of the implications of extending American influence into underdeveloped nations. C) They did as they wanted in foreign affairs, unlimited by any rational analysis of the probable consequences. D) They had a sophisticated understanding of the implications of America's new status as a world power.
Which of these roughly doubled the size of the United States at the time it was added?
A) Mexican cessions of 1848 B) Louisiana Purchase C) Oregon Country D) Texas
The stories of the Leepers and Ebbesons illustrate some of the problems confronting rural America in the last part of the nineteenth century
Indicate whether the statement is true or false.