id
int64 1
1.15k
| subject
stringclasses 2
values | prompt
stringlengths 9
850
⌀ | A
stringlengths 1
156
| B
stringlengths 2
188
| C
stringlengths 3
181
| D
stringlengths 3
188
| E
stringlengths 3
207
| answer
stringclasses 12
values |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
29 |
us_history
|
Which of the following wrote the majority of the Federalist Papers?
|
Benjamin Franklin
|
Alexander Hamilton
|
John Jay
|
James Madison
|
George Washington
|
B
|
30 |
us_history
|
Why did the delegates agree to keep the proceedings of the Constitutional Convention secret?
|
They knew their work would be unpopular with their constituents.
|
They did not want to be subjected to any outside pressures or influences.
|
They had received a number of threats to their lives.
|
They knew there were many foreign spies hoping to betray them.
|
They did not want to provoke an uprising among the people.
|
B
|
31 |
us_history
|
All the following were important influences on the framers of the Constitution EXCEPT:
|
the Magna Carta
|
the English Bill of Rights
|
the Roman republic
|
The Spirit of the Laws
|
the Federalist Papers
|
E
|
32 |
us_history
|
Around which two central figures were the Federalist and Democratic-Republican parties organized?
|
George Washington and John Adams
|
Alexander Hamilton and John Adams
|
Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson
|
Thomas Jefferson and James Madison
|
John Adams and Thomas Jefferson
|
C
|
33 |
us_history
|
What was the major aim of George Washington's foreign policy?
|
To remain friendly with but neutral toward all nations
|
To support the French monarchy during the French Revolution
|
To support the revolutionaries during the French Revolution
|
To stake a claim to the Louisiana territory
|
To settle the Northwest Territory as soon as possible
|
A
|
34 |
us_history
|
What was the Democratic-Republican response to the passage of the Alien and Sedition Acts?
|
The Treaty of Ghent
|
The Virginia and Kentucky resolutions
|
The Battle of Tippecanoe
|
The Judiciary Act
|
The Embargo Act
|
B
|
35 |
us_history
|
All the following major changes first occurred in U.S. society between 1790 and 1825 EXCEPT:
|
More than 100,000 Americans migrated westward.
|
The Industrial Revolution changed the economy and the way people worked.
|
The Erie Canal was completed.
|
Voting rights were expanded to include white men who did not own property.
|
Political leaders began disagreeing over the question of slavery.
|
E
|
36 |
us_history
|
The Missouri Compromise stated all the following EXCEPT:
|
Missouri would be admitted to the Union as a slaveholding state.
|
Maine would be admitted to the Union as a free state.
|
Slavery would be outlawed north of Missouri's southern border, except in Missouri itself.
|
No future state would be admitted to the Union as a slaveholding state.
|
The balance of power in Congress would remain even, with 12 free states and 12 slaveholding states.
|
D
|
37 |
us_history
|
How did the invention of the cotton gin affect the South?
|
Planters divided their large plantations into smaller farms.
|
The economy boomed because one gin could do the work of 1,000 slaves.
|
Slavery began to be less profitable and started to die out.
|
Southerners began to build textile mills and make their own cloth for export and trade.
|
Southerners began building factories to manufacture more cotton gins.
|
B
|
38 |
us_history
|
What was the purpose of the Monroe Doctrine?
|
To support democracy all over the world
|
To ally the United States with European interests
|
To encourage Latin American revolutionaries to rise up against the European colonial powers
|
To warn European nations not to invade or colonize the western hemisphere
|
To declare American neutrality in relations between Latin America and Europe
|
D
|
39 |
us_history
|
Who among the following did not belong to the literary community in Concord, Massachusetts?
|
Louisa May Alcott
|
Nathaniel Hawthorne
|
Bronson Alcott
|
Edgar Allan Poe
|
Henry David Thoreau
|
D
|
40 |
us_history
|
What happened at the Seneca Falls Convention?
|
A constitutional amendment was passed granting women the right to vote.
|
A Declaration of Sentiments listing women's grievances was signed and published.
|
A riot broke out between those who supported and those who opposed women's rights.
|
The president of the United States pledged to make women's rights a major campaign issue.
|
Newspaper articles supporting the abolition of slavery were read and discussed.
|
B
|
41 |
us_history
|
The rebellion of Nat Turner had all the following effects EXCEPT:
|
Fifty or sixty white people were killed.
|
The Southern states passed harsh new laws limiting the rights of slaves.
|
Southerners blamed William Lloyd Garrison and The Liberator for the uprising.
|
Nat Turner and several of his followers were hanged as criminals.
|
The rebellion inspired other successful uprisings throughout the South.
|
E
|
42 |
us_history
|
The Second Great Awakening gave rise to or supported all the following movements EXCEPT:
|
women's education
|
temperance
|
abolition
|
women's suffrage
|
the Whig Party
|
E
|
43 |
us_history
|
All these inventions helped revolutionize the U.S. economy in the early nineteenth century EXCEPT:
|
the cotton gin
|
the locomotive
|
the incandescent lightbulb
|
the steamboat
|
the spinning jenny
|
C
|
44 |
us_history
|
Which of the following social classes did NOT make up a significant part of Southern society?
|
Wealthy planters
|
Immigrants
|
Slaves
|
Small farmers
|
Poor whites
|
B
|
45 |
us_history
|
Which of the following was the primary reason for the wave of Irish immigration in the 1840s?
|
Desire to buy land
|
Desire for economic opportunity
|
Widespread starvation in the wake of the potato famine
|
Religious oppression
|
Political oppression from Great Britain
|
C
|
46 |
us_history
|
Between 1830 and 1850, the United States gained land that would become all the following present-day states EXCEPT:
|
California
|
North Dakota
|
Washington
|
Oregon
|
Texas
|
B
|
47 |
us_history
|
The Gold Rush of 1849 had all the following immediate effects on California society EXCEPT:
|
The population became more ethnically diverse.
|
Many entrepreneurs made their fortunes from the miners.
|
The population grew by many thousands.
|
More and more people turned to farming to make a living.
|
Society became violent and lawless.
|
D
|
48 |
us_history
|
The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 made it legal to do which of the following?
|
Prevent an African American from testifying in his or her own defense
|
Help a slave escape to a free state
|
Become a free person simply by crossing the border into a free state
|
Join the Free-Soil Party and speak out in favor of abolition
|
Execute any slave who was proved to have escaped from his or her owner
|
A
|
49 |
us_history
|
The immediate cause of Southern secession from the Union was
|
the raid on Harpers Ferry
|
the Pottawatomie Massacre
|
the election of Abraham Lincoln
|
the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act
|
the determination of Kansas to be a free state
|
C
|
50 |
us_history
|
In his opinion in the case of Dred Scott v. Sanford, Chief Justice Taney stated all the following EXCEPT:
|
The Fifth Amendment protected slaveowners' rights to their property.
|
The Missouri Compromise had been unconstitutional because it violated slaveowners' property rights.
|
The framers of the Constitution clearly had not intended the Constitution to apply to anyone of African descent.
|
Slave status did not depend on geography but traveled everywhere with a person who was a slave.
|
As long as society provided separate but equal opportunities to African slaves, it did not have to do anything more for them.
|
E
|
51 |
us_history
|
Why did Thoreau and other abolitionists praise John Brown?
|
They approved of using violence to change laws.
|
They looked forward eagerly to a war between North and South.
|
They wanted to see as many slavers killed as possible.
|
They admired his long history of helping African Americans and dealing fairly with them.
|
They felt that Brown had taken an appropriate revenge for Congressman Brooks's attack on Senator Sumner.
|
D
|
52 |
us_history
|
The Union strategy for winning the war included all the following EXCEPT:
|
dividing the Confederacy along the Mississippi River and conquering both halves in turn
|
taking control of the Mississippi so that the South could not use it for trade or communication
|
blockading Confederate ports so that no supplies or reinforcements could come in
|
capturing and killing Confederate President Jefferson Davis
|
capturing the capital city of Richmond, Virginia
|
D
|
53 |
us_history
|
The Union was more likely to win a war of attrition because
|
it had a larger pool of available reinforcements and could resupply its troops
|
the Confederates had not been able to march farther north than Maryland
|
the Confederate officers did not know how to fight a war of attrition
|
African Americans fought only on the Union side
|
its military leaders had no command of strategy and tactics
|
A
|
54 |
us_history
|
The Emancipation Proclamation, by implication, extended which of the following offers to Confederate states?
|
They could keep their slaves if they abandoned the Confederacy and rejoined the Union.
|
The war would continue until they freed their slaves.
|
The Union would pay them for their slaves if they would agree to free them.
|
The Union would surrender if they agreed to free their slaves.
|
The Confederacy could exist as an independent nation if it would build an impregnable border between its territory and that of the United States.
|
A
|
55 |
us_history
|
Andrew Johnson was impeached primarily because he
|
dismissed Edwin M. Stanton from a cabinet post
|
disagreed with the congressional majority on domestic policy
|
committed high crimes and misdemeanors
|
prevented Congress from enacting any legislation that would propel Reconstruction forward
|
failed to carry out any projects that President Lincoln had planned to enact
|
B
|
56 |
us_history
|
Southern Democrats did all the following to bar likely Republican voters from the polls EXCEPT:
|
threatened them with violence
|
charged a poll tax they could not afford
|
made them take a literacy test they were likely to fail
|
shot them to death
|
passed laws that denied them the right to vote
|
E
|
57 |
us_history
|
Many active supporters of the women's suffrage movement opposed the Fifteenth Amendment because
|
the women's movement did not care about the rights of African Americans
|
white suffragists thought that their concerns were more important than those of African Americans
|
women were angry that the Fifteenth Amendment did not give them the right to vote
|
suffragists did not want African Americans to have voting rights
|
women were afraid that the Fifteenth Amendment would jeopardize their fight for women's suffrage
|
C
|
58 |
us_history
|
The U.S. government insisted on moving Native Americans to reservations primarily because
|
settlers from the East were greedy for the Native Americans' ancestral lands
|
Native American hunting practices threatened the survival of the buffalo
|
Native Americans were better at farming and technology than were Americans of European descent
|
settlers from the East did not understand Native American languages
|
government authorities were afraid of a planned Native American rebellion
|
A
|
59 |
us_history
|
The Pacific Railway Act had all the following effects EXCEPT:
|
the arrival in California of thousands of Chinese immigrants
|
a rise in the national rate of employment
|
an increase in westward migration by people in search of jobs with the railroad
|
the sale of surplus railroad land to homesteaders
|
a decline in production in the steel industry
|
E
|
60 |
us_history
|
African Americans traveled west after the Civil War for all the following reasons EXCEPT:
|
to work on the railroad
|
to escape racial segregation
|
to work in the fur-trading industry
|
to mine gold and silver
|
to claim homesteads for themselves and their families
|
C
|
61 |
us_history
|
All the following inventions were developed during the Second Industrial Revolution EXCEPT:
|
the lightbulb
|
the telephone
|
the air brake
|
the cotton gin
|
the typewriter
|
D
|
62 |
us_history
|
In a dispute with owners or management, workers had all the following advantages EXCEPT:
|
There were far more of them.
|
No business could function without them.
|
They could form unions to help them survive financially during strikes.
|
Owners stood to lose substantial profits if workers refused to work.
|
They could not be replaced easily.
|
E
|
63 |
us_history
|
In the early 1900's, nativists supported restrictions on immigration for all the following reasons EXCEPT:
|
They did not want U.S. culture changed.
|
They did not want to learn to speak foreign languages.
|
They feared that immigrants would lower the working wage.
|
They thought immigrants might bring in ideas, values, and ways of thinking that would not fit in.
|
They feared that immigrants would take jobs away from workers born in the United States.
|
B
|
64 |
us_history
|
The settlement-house movement had all the following goals EXCEPT:
|
to train young women for careers in education or social work
|
to integrate city school systems
|
to provide a day-care center for the young children of working parents
|
to provide a social gathering place in a neighborhood
|
to offer classes in English and other subjects for children and adults
|
B
|
65 |
us_history
|
The Populist Party was founded with all the following goals EXCEPT:
|
to support the coinage of silver
|
to return to the gold standard
|
to push for government ownership of the railroads
|
to regulate the banks
|
to restrict immigration
|
B
|
66 |
us_history
|
In the late 1870s, the Republican Party was divided primarily over the issue of
|
the gold standard
|
civil-service reform
|
racial segregation
|
women's rights
|
raising taxes
|
B
|
67 |
us_history
|
Theodore Roosevelt believed that big business should be regulated federally primarily because
|
it was wrong for so few people to control so much money and property
|
owners would not take proper care of the welfare of their workers or customers unless forced to by law
|
businesses were not efficiently run or profitable
|
too many people bought imported goods rather than goods made in the United States
|
businesses were destroying too great a proportion of the nation’s natural resources
|
B
|
68 |
us_history
|
The Seventeenth Amendment, ratified in 1913, established which of the following?
|
Secret ballots in local elections
|
A direct primary
|
Direct popular election of senators
|
An eight-hour workday
|
A federal minimum wage
|
C
|
69 |
us_history
|
Conservatives supported environmental legislation under Roosevelt and Taft because
|
they did not want the natural resources of the United States to die out or be used up
|
they wanted a place in which to go hunting
|
they always sided with the owners in labor disputes
|
they opposed regulation of big business
|
they did not want certain rare species of birds or animals to become extinct
|
A
|
70 |
us_history
|
The United States became an imperialist nation in the late 1800s for all the following reasons EXCEPT:
|
desire to establish new markets for U.S. goods
|
interest in acquiring naval bases in strategic locations
|
need to obtain inexpensive access to certain goods that the United States could not produce for itself, such as sugar and rubber
|
desire to put an end to tyranny in foreign nations
|
wish to be considered a powerful force in world affairs
|
D
|
71 |
us_history
|
By 1920 the United States had acquired partial or total control over all the following EXCEPT:
|
the Canal Zone
|
Puerto Rico
|
China
|
the Philippines
|
Guam
|
C
|
72 |
us_history
|
Which of the following did the Roosevelt Corollary modify?
|
The Monroe Doctrine
|
The Platt Amendment
|
The Hawaiian constitution
|
The Hay–Bunau-Varilla Treaty
|
The Open Door Policy
|
A
|
73 |
us_history
|
All of the following nations were allied with the Central Powers EXCEPT:
|
France
|
Germany
|
Turkey
|
Bulgaria
|
Austria-Hungary
|
A
|
74 |
us_history
|
The United States came out of World War I in a strong international position primarily because
|
it had founded the League of Nations
|
it had lost relatively few of its fighting forces and its economy was prosperous
|
it had had a successful socialist revolution
|
it was geographically isolated from Europe
|
it had dictated the terms of the Treaty of Versailles
|
B
|
75 |
us_history
|
The Treaty of Versailles stated all the following EXCEPT:
|
Germany would have to pay reparations to Allied nations.
|
Alsace-Lorraine would be returned to France.
|
New nations called Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia would be established.
|
Russia would be known as the Soviet Union.
|
Germany would accept total blame for the war.
|
D
|
76 |
us_history
|
All the following characterized the 1920s EXCEPT:
|
a rise in organized crime
|
a wave of prolabor legislation
|
the development of mass entertainment
|
technological advances such as the radio
|
the rise in popularity of the automobile
|
B
|
77 |
us_history
|
Who were "the Untouchables"?
|
Chicago White Sox baseball players who threw the World Series in 1919
|
Organized criminals who worked for Al Capone
|
The murderers involved in the St. Valentine's Day Massacre
|
Characters in a novel by Ernest Hemingway
|
FBI detectives who worked on cases involving violations of Prohibition
|
E
|
78 |
us_history
|
All the following characterized the flapper EXCEPT:
|
bobbed hair
|
short skirts
|
participation in sports
|
political activism
|
cigarette smoking
|
D
|
79 |
us_history
|
All the following were contributing causes of the Great Depression EXCEPT:
|
margin buying
|
frequent fluctuations in share prices
|
widespread bank failures
|
the existence of Hoovervilles
|
widespread business failures
|
D
|
80 |
us_history
|
Which of the following New Deal programs was intended to ensure that no Great Depression could occur again in the future?
|
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
|
Farm Credit Administration
|
Tennessee Valley Authority
|
Public Works Administration
|
Civilian Conservation Corps
|
A
|
81 |
us_history
|
After they drove west from the Dust Bowl seeking work in California, most farmers
|
found good jobs and soon returned to prosperity
|
competed with thousands like themselves for poorly paid work
|
got arrested protesting unfair working conditions
|
crossed the border into Mexico to find work
|
petitioned the White House for help in fighting the growers' association
|
B
|
82 |
us_history
|
All the following nations were under Axis control by the end of 1940 EXCEPT:
|
Poland
|
the Soviet Union
|
France
|
Italy
|
the Netherlands
|
B
|
83 |
us_history
|
All the following were U.S. victories in the Pacific EXCEPT:
|
Bataan
|
Guadalcanal
|
Coral Sea
|
Midway
|
Solomon Islands
|
A
|
84 |
us_history
|
Which of the following was the purpose of the Lend-Lease Act?
|
To guarantee the territorial integrity of China
|
To permit Roosevelt to run for a third presidential term
|
To set limits on the size of the British and Japanese navies
|
To spell out the war aims of the Allied Powers
|
To provide military aid to defend Britain and other Allied countries
|
E
|
85 |
us_history
|
The Battle of the Bulge took place when Allied troops
|
invaded North Africa
|
approached Germany's western border
|
fought German troops in Italy
|
landed on the beaches of Normandy
|
fought the Japanese at Iwo Jima
|
B
|
86 |
us_history
|
Which of the following was among the reasons why President Truman decided to drop atomic bombs on Japan?
|
He wanted to free the Philippines from Japanese occupation.
|
He feared a Japanese invasion of the United States.
|
He believed the bombing would shorten the war and save U.S. lives.
|
He wanted to impress the British with U.S. strength.
|
He wanted to destroy every city in Japan.
|
C
|
87 |
us_history
|
The Potsdam Conference provided for all the following EXCEPT:
|
the division of Germany into four occupied zones
|
the payment of reparations to the Allies
|
the reorganization of the Soviet government
|
the acknowledgment that Poland could keep the German territory it had claimed
|
the conversion of the German economy to agriculture and light industry.
|
C
|
88 |
us_history
|
Which of the following prompted the first use of UN military forces?
|
Tension between the Soviet Union and the United States
|
The nuclear arms race between the Soviet Union and the United States
|
The North Korean invasion of South Korea
|
The international agreement to put Nazi officials on trial for their crimes
|
Anticommunist hysteria in the United States
|
C
|
89 |
us_history
|
The primary purpose of the Marshall Plan was to
|
reestablish democratic governments in Western Europe
|
provide military assistance to Britain and its empire
|
offer financial aid for reconstruction to European nations
|
help Japan rebuild its cities and its economy
|
increase U.S. power in the world
|
C
|
90 |
us_history
|
All the following advances were made in race relations in the United States between 1940 and 1960 EXCEPT:
|
In Brown Vs. Board of Education, the U.S. Supreme Court declared that segregated public schools were unconstitutional.
|
Public transportation was desegregated.
|
Major league baseball was desegregated.
|
The Chinese Exclusion Act was repealed.
|
A voting rights act was passed.
|
E
|
91 |
us_history
|
The Civil Rights Act of 1964 had all the following provisions EXCEPT:
|
It banned racial, gender, religious, and ethnic discrimination in employment.
|
It removed certain voter-registration restrictions.
|
It made segregation illegal in all public places.
|
It allowed the federal government to sue public schools that did not desegregate.
|
It integrated the federal government and the armed forces.
|
E
|
92 |
us_history
|
The Cuban missile crisis ended when
|
the Soviets agreed to withdraw their missiles from Cuba if U.S. missiles were withdrawn from sites in Turkey
|
President Kennedy ordered the U.S. Navy to turn back Soviet ships headed for Cuba
|
a CIA-sponsored invasion of Cuba by Cuban exiles was defeated at the Bay of Pigs
|
President Kennedy was assassinated
|
the East German government built a wall around the perimeter of West Berlin
|
A
|
93 |
us_history
|
All the following characterized the civil rights movement EXCEPT:
|
advocating legislation that would outlaw segregation
|
nonviolent demonstrations
|
sit-ins at segregated lunch counters and restaurants
|
police brutality against civil rights marchers
|
violent attacks on segregated restaurants and other public facilities
|
E
|
94 |
us_history
|
All the following are programs of the Great Society EXCEPT:
|
the National Organization for Women
|
Head Start
|
the Corporation for Public Broadcasting
|
Medicare
|
Medicaid
|
A
|
95 |
us_history
|
A major achievement of the civil rights movement in the 1960s was
|
equality in pay for white and African-American workers doing the same jobs
|
a huge increase in the number of African-American voters in the South
|
equal access to higher education for African Americans
|
appointment of African Americans to leading posts in major corporations
|
election of African-American majorities in state legislatures
|
B
|
96 |
us_history
|
President Johnson called for a voting rights bill in 1965 after
|
Martin Luther King., Jr., was assassinated
|
he defeated the Republican Barry Goldwater in a landslide election
|
Betty Friedan and others formed the National Organization for Women
|
racial disturbances broke out in Detroit and Los Angeles
|
a protest march let by Martin Luther King, Jr., was met with violence
|
E
|
97 |
us_history
|
Which of the following presidents sent troops to Vietnam?
|
Truman, Eisenhower, and Kennedy
|
Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon
|
Johnson and Nixon
|
Kennedy and Johnson
|
Johnson
|
B
|
98 |
us_history
|
Which of the following was NOT settled in the U.S.–North Vietnamese peace agreement of 1973?
|
An exchange of prisoners of war
|
The political future of South Vietnam
|
The withdrawal of U.S. troops
|
The end of U.S. military aid to South Vietnam
|
A cease-fire
|
B
|
99 |
us_history
|
All the following turned people in the United States against the Vietnam War EXCEPT:
|
the Kent State and Jackson State massacres
|
publication of the Pentagon Papers
|
disclosure of the bombing of Cambodia
|
repeal of the Tonkin Gulf Resolution
|
revulsion against the horrors of war as shown on television news broadcasts
|
D
|
100 |
us_history
|
Nixon's foreign policy of détente was meant to improve relations between the United States and
|
North Vietnam
|
Cambodia
|
Taiwan
|
China
|
the Soviet Union
|
E
|
101 |
us_history
|
The "energy crisis" of 1973 started when
|
Arab countries refused to ship petroleum to countries friendly to Israel
|
Congress refused to authorize oil drilling in Alaska
|
oil reserves in Texas and Oklahoma began to run dry
|
the public refused to support the building of nuclear power plants
|
the United States decided to end all imports of foreign petroleum
|
A
|
102 |
us_history
|
The Watergate burglars were
|
newspaper reporters investigating a crime story
|
FBI agents looking for evidence of wrongdoing by Nixon
|
thieves looking for money in the Democratic Party offices
|
operatives in the pay of Nixon's reelection committee
|
Democratic Party members looking for evidence to discredit Republicans
|
D
|
103 |
us_history
|
President Jimmy Carter helped work out a peace agreement between
|
Palestine and Israel
|
Israel and Egypt
|
Egypt and Jordan
|
Iraq and Kuwait
|
East Germany and West Germany
|
B
|
104 |
us_history
|
The Cold War ended primarily because
|
Germans destroyed the Berlin Wall
|
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev introduced new policies
|
the United States defeated communism in Vietnam
|
the United States created a rebel army in Nicaragua
|
the workers of Poland staged a series of strikes
|
B
|
105 |
us_history
|
The Gulf War of 1991 was fought to liberate
|
Iran
|
Israel
|
Kuwait
|
Saudi Arabia
|
Nicaragua
|
C
|
106 |
us_history
|
President Bill Clinton suffered defeat in Congress when he
|
sought to reform the nation's largely private system of health-care insurance
|
attempted to reduce the federal government's financial deficit
|
tried to impose strict requirements on recipients of public assistance
|
sought passage of an act requiring corporations to provide workers with unpaid leave to cope with family medical emergencies
|
chose Senator Al Gore to be his vice president
|
A
|
107 |
us_history
|
The presidential election of 2000 was decided when
|
a recount of votes in Florida showed that Bush had won the popular vote
|
a recount of electoral votes was ordered by the Supreme Court
|
a vote recount in Florida was barred by the Supreme Court, effectively making Bush president
|
a recount of the popular vote nationwide showed that Gore was the loser
|
Republicans agreed to permit a recount of the popular vote in Florida
|
C
|
108 |
us_history
|
The Bush administration launched the war in Iraq in 2003 in alliance with
|
the United Nations Security Council
|
Saudi Arabia and other Middle Eastern countries
|
Germany, France, and other major U.S. allies
|
Great Britain, along with token forces from several smaller countries
|
no other countries or international organizations
|
D
|
109 |
us_history
|
At the start of his term, President Barack Obama faced all the following challenges in office EXCEPT:
|
a housing and mortgage crisis
|
flood relief for the city of New Orleans
|
a war in Iraq
|
a crashing stock market
|
soaring unemployment
|
B
|
110 |
us_history
|
"Slavery now stands erect, clanking its chains on the territory of Kansas, surrounded by a code of death, and trampling upon all cherished liberties." This statement was most likely made by a(n)
|
Whig
|
muckraker
|
plantation owner
|
Democrat
|
abolitionist
|
E
|
111 |
us_history
|
The president's power to veto a bill is checked by Congress's power to
|
override the veto with a two-thirds majority vote
|
filibuster
|
call for a referendum
|
petition the states
|
impeach
|
A
|
112 |
us_history
|
The Olmec, the Maya, the Toltec, the Aztec, and the Inca are the earliest major civilizations of the Americas and are termed the
|
Paleolithic migrations
|
cultures of "blue men"
|
Mesoamerican cultures
|
Tewa nations
|
sun worshippers
|
C
|
113 |
us_history
|
Even though the Tea Act of 1773 lowered the price of East India tea, the colonists opposed it primarily because
|
the British were selling the colonies inferior tea
|
the price of the tea included a tax the colonists did not want to pay
|
the Dutch threatened to stop trading with the colonies
|
the act gave trading privileges to Dutch merchants over colonial merchants
|
the British colonial governors took the tea for themselves
|
B
|
114 |
us_history
|
Most European immigrants at the turn of the nineteenth century passed through:
|
Castle Garden, New York
|
Roosevelt Island, New York
|
The Port of Boston, Massachusetts
|
Ellis Island, New York
|
Plymouth, Massachusetts
|
D
|
115 |
us_history
|
Henry Clay's proposal that Maine enter the Union as a free state and Missouri enter as a slave state was called
|
the Maine Compromise
|
the Missouri Compromise
|
the Clay Compromise
|
Clay's Folly
|
the Know-Nothing Agreement
|
B
|
116 |
us_history
|
In a 1906 speech, Theodore Roosevelt described a man with a muckrake who "fixes his eyes . . . only on that which is vile and debasing." His speech gave rise to the new word muckrakers, referring to
|
farmers in lowland areas
|
trial lawyers
|
religious leaders
|
judges in criminal courts
|
investigative journalists
|
E
|
117 |
us_history
|
The only United States president who was not a member of a Protestant sect was
|
Franklin D. Roosevelt
|
Harry S Truman
|
Dwight D. Eisenhower
|
John F. Kennedy
|
Lyndon B. Johnson
|
D
|
119 |
us_history
|
In the aftermath of President Kennedy's assassination, a commission was formed to review the evidence and publish a report. The commission was headed by
|
Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson
|
Pierre Salinger
|
Senator J. William Fulbright
|
Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy
|
Chief Justice Earl Warren
|
E
|
120 |
us_history
|
The Fourteen Points, presented in January 1918, were
|
Winston Churchill's plans for dealing with Hitler
|
American suffragists' demands for women's rights
|
Woodrow Wilson's plan for building peace in the post-World War I world
|
sections of the income tax amendment to the Constitution
|
the Socialist Party's proposal for economic fairness
|
C
|
121 |
us_history
|
White Southerners were opposed to Northerners who trav eled south after the Civil War to work for racial justice and/or make money. They called these people:
|
mugwumps
|
Whigs
|
dog robbers
|
Southern sympathizers
|
carpetbaggers
|
E
|
122 |
us_history
|
President James Monroe issued the Monroe Doctrine in 1823, warning European powers not to establish new colonies in the western hemisphere. This policy was supported by
|
Spain
|
Russia
|
England
|
France
|
Cuba
|
C
|
123 |
us_history
|
The voyage that brought African captives across the Atlantic to the Americas and the West Indies is referred to as the
|
Middle Passage
|
Northwest Passage
|
China Passage
|
Passage to India
|
Bermuda Passage
|
A
|
124 |
us_history
|
Gifford Pinchot is associated with a movement that began in the nineteenth century and focused on protecting the country's natural environment. Thismovement is called the
|
Greenpeace movement
|
emancipation movement
|
enfranchisement movement
|
conservationist movement
|
emigration movement
|
D
|
125 |
us_history
|
"Tippecanoe and Tyler, too" was a campaign slogan in the presidential election of 1840. "Tippecanoe" refers to
|
John Tyler
|
Andrew Jackson
|
Benjamin Harrison
|
William Henry Harrison
|
George Rogers Clark
|
D
|
126 |
us_history
|
Beginning in 1663 with Carolina, a second wave of colonization in British North America was facilitated by
|
the restoration of Oliver Cromwell and the Puritans to power in Great Britain
|
King George II of Great Britain
|
the restoration of the monarchy in Britain and land grants in the New World from Charles II to his supporters
|
the voyages of exploration by John Cabot
|
peace pacts between French missionaries and Native American tribes
|
C
|
127 |
us_history
|
Jazz, flappers, bathtub gin, red-hot flannels, speakeasies, and radio stations were all elements of the era known as
|
the Gay Nineties
|
the Roaring Twenties
|
the Fabulous Sixties
|
Reconstruction
|
the turn of the century
|
B
|
128 |
us_history
|
The first U.S. military response to a suspected terrorist act came in 1986 when President Ronald Reagan ordered a bombing attack on which country?
|
Syria
|
Pakistan
|
Turkey
|
Uganda
|
Libya
|
E
|
129 |
us_history
|
Automation in the 1950s and 1960s brought about what two significant economic changes in the United States?
|
Increased hiring and tax cuts
|
An increase in manufacturing jobs and lower unemployment
|
Reductions in farm employment and elimination of factory jobs
|
Higher taxes and inflation
|
No changes
|
C
|
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.