Some free blacks in the South also owned slaves

Indicate whether the statement is true or false


True

History

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Which statement about colonial newspaper printer John Peter Zenger is FALSE?

a. He was charged with seditious libel against the royal governor of New York. b. He was found innocent of the charges brought against him. c. He helped lay the foundations for a critical press in a diverse society. d. His lawyer, Andrew Hamilton, was so eloquent in his defense that the jury was persuaded to defy the judge in finding him innocent. e. He was responsible for temporary restrictions on the free press.

History

Unlike other east-central European Communists, Tito was able to break with the Soviet Union because

A) the West supported him. B) having liberated Yugoslavia on their own, the Yugoslav Communists possessed a legitimacy that other east-central European Communists did not have. C) unlike the other Communists, Stalin trusted Tito. D) Yugoslavia immediately joined NATO. E) his forces were able to repulse all military actions of the Soviet Union.

History

Christian monasteries promoted what as a type of prayer?

a. warfare b. sexual c. work d. mercantile e. politics

History

What was the English Bill of Rights (1689)?

a) This foundational document helped convert England from an absolute to a constitutional monarchy and protected personal liberty, speech, and property. b) This essential document reiterated the absolute royal rights of William and Mary, as they agreed to become monarchs. Consider This: To what extent did the Bill of Rights echo the Petition of Right of 1628? See 2.4.2: England’s True Sovereign. c) This important document guaranteed freedom of religion in England and in all of its colonies. Consider This: To what extent did the Bill of Rights echo the Petition of Right of 1628? See 2.4.2: England’s True Sovereign. d) Mostly an afterthought, this document was mainly a way to keep the complaints of London shopkeepers at bay. Consider This: To what extent did the Bill of Rights echo the Petition of Right of 1628? See 2.4.2: England’s True Sovereign.

History