(A) Central America and the Caribbean
(B) the Philippines
(C) North Africa
(D) Asia
(E) Europe
The leaders of the Progressive movement were primarily
(A) farmers interested in improving agricultural production
(B) immigrant activists attempting to change restrictive immigration laws
(C) representatives of industries seeking higher tariffs
(D) workers concerned with establishing industrial unions
(E) middle-class reformers concerned with urban and consumer issues
Jacob Riis’s How the Other Half Lives is a study of
(A) Jim Crow segregation and its effect on African Americans
(B) the plight of Great Plains farmers in the 1890’s
(C) immigrant urban poverty …show more content…
(E) the rise of industrial capitalists in the late nineteenth century
The Republican Presidents of the 1920’s favored
(A) membership in the League of Nations
(B) tax cuts for wealthy Americans
(C) stringent federal regulation of American business (D) reduced American tariffs on foreign imports
(E) forgiveness of European war debts from the First World War
The precipitating factor in the 1894 Pullman strike was Pullman’s
(A) dismissal of union workers
(B) introduction of scrip in part payment of wages
(C) retraction of its promise to provide an employee insurance and retirement plan
(D) employment of immigrant labor at less than a living wage
(E) cutting of wages without proportionate cuts in company housing rents
Throughout the first half of the nineteenth century, women reformers were most active in the cause of
(A) temperance
(B) woman suffrage
(C) pacifism
(D) immigrants’ rights
(E) workers’ rights
Wilson’s Fourteen Points incorporated all of the following EXCEPT
(A) open diplomacy
(B) freedom of the seas
(C) recognition of Allied economic and territorial agreements made during the war
(D) creation of an international organization to preserve the peace and security of its members
(E) national