EMRICAN HISTORY

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Democrat Woodrow Wilson won election as president in 1912 in large part because

  1. he appealed to both northerners and southerners.
  2. President Taft and former President Roosevelt split the Republican vote.
  3. President Taft was under investigation for bribery.
  4. he was endorsed by former President Roosevelt, a Republican.

The thousands of out-of-work World War I veterans who marched in Washington in 1932 demanding payments that had been promised by Congress were known as

  1. the Whiskey Rebellion.
  2. the Hooverville Rebellion.
  3. the Veterans Village.
  4. the Bonus Army.

Released in 1927, the first motion picture with sound synchronized to the action was

  1. The Jazz Singer.
  2. The Wizard of Oz.
  3. Gone With the Wind.
  4. The Gold Rush.

The devastating fire at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in New York City in 1911 that killed 146 garment workers

  1. prompted government regulation of the quality of clothing produced in the United States.
  2. forced improvements in 9-1-1 call centers in New York City.
  3. helped bring about changes in regulations concerning workplace safety.
  4. helped to change existing child labor laws in New York.

In the 1900s, Margaret Sanger was an early advocate for

  1. safe birth control for women.
  2. the right to vote for women.
  3. equal pay for women in the workplace.
  4. better housing options for the poor.

The organization that revived in 1915 with an agenda to promote hatred of Jews, Catholics, immigrants, and African Americans was the

  1. Anti-Defamation League.
  2. National Urban League.
  3. Ku Klux Klan.
  4. Posse Comitatus.

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Course Name: American History 2 Student: Omar Hassan Course ID: SSTH034060 ID: E93324820 Submittal: 51 Progress Test 1 Although the progress test is similar in style to the unit evaluations, the progress test is a closed-book, proctored test. You may not have access to notes or any of the course materials while you are taking the test. It is important that you do your own work. Select the response that best completes the statement or answers the question. ____ 1. Democrat Woodrow Wilson won election as president in 1912 in large part because a. b. c. d. ____ 2. The thousands of out-of-work World War I veterans who marched in Washington in 1932 demanding payments that had been promised by Congress were known as a. b. c. d. ____ 3. prompted government regulation of the quality of clothing produced in the United States. forced improvements in 9-1-1 call centers in New York City. helped bring about changes in regulations concerning workplace safety. helped to change existing child labor laws in New York. In the 1900s, Margaret Sanger was an early advocate for a. b. c. d. ____ 6. The Jazz Singer. The Wizard of Oz. Gone With the Wind. The Gold Rush. The devastating fire at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in New York City in 1911 that killed 146 garment workers a. b. c. d. ____ 5. the Whiskey Rebellion. the Hooverville Rebellion. the Veterans Village. the Bonus Army. Released in 1927, the first motion picture with sound synchronized to the action was a. b. c. d. ____ 4. he appealed to both northerners and southerners. President Taft and former President Roosevelt split the Republican vote. President Taft was under investigation for bribery. he was endorsed by former President Roosevelt, a Republican. safe birth control for women. the right to vote for women. equal pay for women in the workplace. better housing options for the poor. The organization that revived in 1915 with an agenda to promote hatred of Jews, Catholics, immigrants, and African Americans was the a. b. c. d. Anti-Defamation League. National Urban League. Ku Klux Klan. Posse Comitatus. ____ 7. When Congress passed the Coinage Act of 1873, it became a controversial issue because a. b. c. d. ____ 8. The Nineteenth Amendment allowing women the right to vote was approved in 1919 in large part because a. b. c. d. ____ 9. it allowed the use of both gold and silver coins. it prohibited the minting of silver coins because of fears that using silver would hurt the economy. the United States Mint in Philadelphia stopped making the popular half-dollar coins. it overturned the existing gold standard and allowed silver, platinum, and other precious metals to be used in making U.S. coins. women's advocacy groups had sued and won a case for voting rights. women's work in non-traditional roles during World War I convinced many that they deserved the right to vote. President Warren G. Harding came out in support of women's voting rights. a group of women advocating voting rights went on a hunger strike. All of the following were causes of World War I except a. b. c. d. imperialism. alliances. militarism. isolationism. ____ 10. She was the first woman elected to Congress in 1916 and opposed declaring war on Germany. a. b. c. d. Jeannette Rankin Susan B Anthony Alice Paul Carrie Catt ____ 11. The woman's voting rights leader who was convicted in 1872 for voting in an election in Rochester, New York was a. b. c. d. Amelia Bloomer. Sojourner Truth. Carrie Chapman Catt. Susan B. Anthony. ____ 12. All of the following were reactions to the influx of Chinese immigrants on the American west coast in the late nineteenth century except a. b. c. d. the city of San Francisco established a segregated "Oriental" school. Congress passed the Chinese Exclusion Act. Chinese immigrants were kept in internment camps at various sites in the west. various California cities prohibited Chinese immigrants from being employed. ____ 13. The big issues that brought about the creation of the Populist Party in the 1890s were a. b. c. d. political corruption, an inadequate monetary supply, and unresponsive government. not enough railroads, war with Spain, and drought in the American South. the huge increase in the price of steel and government subsidies for dairy farms. bribery scandals in the Cleveland and McKinley administrations. ____ 14. The Espionage and Sedition Acts were responsible for ________________during World War I. a. b. c. d. finding scarce materials and regulating war industries creating propaganda and explaining the causes of the war banning treasonous print materials and speaking out against the government regulating agricultural production and setting commodity prices ____ 15. When an imperial country takes raw materials from a colony and ships them back to the home country, that colony is known as a. b. c. d. an extractive economy. a satellite nation. an alliance. an importing economy. ____ 16. All of the following were new weapons used during World War I except a. b. c. d. poison gas. submarines. missiles. machine guns. ____ 17. Farmers sought to control production costs, such as rates for grain storage and shipping, by joining reform organizations such as a. b. c. d. the Pony Express. the Grange. the Democratic Party. the Food and Drug Administration. ____ 18. The industrialist who introduced the concept of mass production to the manufacturing of automobiles in the early twentieth century was a. b. c. d. Ransom E. Olds. Francis Stanley. Thomas Alva Edison. Henry Ford. ____ 19. One of the new technologies used in World War I by the Germans to try to blockade shipping to the island of Britain was a. b. c. d. the airplane. the submarine. poison gas. the machine gun. ____ 20. A group of writers during the 20s that no longer had faith in their cultural guideposts of the Victorian era were known as a. b. c. d. the faithless generation. the hopeless generation. the lost generation. the disillusioned generation. ____ 21. The event that caused the United States to send troops to fight Spanish troops in Cuba in 1898 was a. b. c. d. the Spanish invasion of New Orleans, Louisiana. the election of William McKinley as president of the United States. an explosion on board the battleship Maine in Havana Harbor that sank the ship. the publication of The Jungle by Upton Sinclair. ____ 22. Wilson called his new foreign policy plan _________________ which would promote human rights, national integrity, and opportunity a. b. c. d. big stick diplomacy moral diplomacy dollar diplomacy foreign diplomacy ____ 23. The large American corporation that was judged a monopoly under the provisions of the Sherman Antitrust Act by the Supreme Court and broken up into smaller companies in 1911 was a. b. c. d. United States Steel. General Electric. Standard Oil. Union Pacific Railroad. ____ 24. "The chief business of the American people is business." The American president who spoke these words in a 1925 speech expressing his economic policies was a. b. c. d. Warren G. Harding. Herbert Hoover. Calvin Coolidge. Andrew Mellon. ____ 25. In order to secure control of the land for the construction of the Panama Canal, the United States a. b. c. d. purchased the land from the nation of Colombia. signed a treaty with the French to develop the canal together. orchestrated a revolution in Panama against Colombia and negotiated a deal with the Panamanians. invaded Colombia and took over that country's government. ____ 26. The issue of whether the United States' import tariff, or tax, should be high or low first appeared in public policy debates a. b. c. d. in the 1870s between Democrats and Republicans. in the 1830s between Democrats and Whigs. in the 1850s between Republicans and Know-Nothings. in the 1790s between Hamilton's Federalists and Jefferson's Republicans. ____ 27. The 1920 trial of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti was an example of a wave of widespread fear of communists and radicals that became known as the a. b. c. d. Great Influenza. Red Scare. Communist Plague. American Civil Liberties Union. ____ 28. The rural families of the Great Plains who were forced to flee the Dust Bowl for farms in California and Midwestern cities were generally referred to as a. b. c. d. Okies. sodbusters. bowlers. grangers. ____ 29. The Progressive movement election reform that allowed voters to remove an elected official from office was and is a. b. c. d. the recall vote. the direct primary. the general election. the referendum. ____ 30. The United States government decided to overthrow the government of Hawaiian Queen Liliuokalani in 1893 because a. b. c. d. Hawaiian troops had fired on American warships that were docked in Pearl Harbor. she abolished the Hawaiian constitution that had given power to American sugar farmers in Hawaii. an American dictator was threatening to execute native Hawaiians. the queen was threatening to invade the west coast of California. ____ 31. The first nationally prominent African-American leader to advocate black pride and a separation of races in the United States was a. b. c. d. W.E.B. DuBois. Booker T. Washington. Marcus Garvey. Edward "Duke" Ellington. ____ 32. This muckraker targeted John D. Rockefeller and his Standard Oil Company's ruthless methods used to destroy his competition. a. b. c. d. Lincoln Steffens Upton Sinclair Ida Tarbell Florence Kelley ____ 33. __________________ expanded the size of the U.S. military in preparation for World War I. a. b. c. d. The National Defense Act The Sussex Pledge The Naval Construction Act Council of National Defense ____ 34. In January, 1918, President Woodrow Wilson spoke to Congress and outlined his vision of what the postWorld War I world would look like. His plan became known as a. b. c. d. the Wilsonian template. the League of Nations. the Fourteen Points. the Treaty of Alsace-Lorraine. ____ 35. The explosion of African-American music and literature in the 1920s was known as a. b. c. d. the Sussex Movement. the Harlem Renaissance. the Beiderbecke Collective. Beale Street. ____ 36. What did Teddy Roosevelt's "Great White Fleet" demonstrate to Japan? a. b. c. d. America's support for Japan America's support for colonies in Asia America's increased military power America's imperialist ideas ____ 37. President Theodore Roosevelt's progressive plan to protect the interests of small business owners and average Americans was the a. b. c. d. New Deal. Fair Deal. Hepburn Act. Square Deal. ____ 38. The late nineteenth-century American concept that new ideas and honest, efficient government could bring about social justice was a. b. c. d. Republicanism. Progressivism. Populism. classism. ____ 39. How did the sinking of the Lusitania affect American attitudes toward World War I? a. b. c. d. It increased support for neutrality. It made Americans suspicious of the British. It made Americans suspicious of Mexico. It turned public opinion against Germany. ____ 40. Augusto Sandino from Nicaragua felt that the United States policy known as the Roosevelt Corollary, threatened the sovereignty and liberty of his people; and eventually led a rebellion against marines in the 20s. a. b. True False ____ 41. Teddy Roosevelt, once elected, promised a square deal to Americans. Its goal was to a. b. c. d. keep the corporations from taking advantage of the small businesses. promised tax breaks to all corporations. penalize companies with less than 50 employees. removed all tariffs from the largest corporations. ____ 42. To continue making selling alcohol during prohibition, many bars called ___________ were created which allowed people to get in with a password. a. b. c. d. underground factories speakeasies wet bars stills ____ 43. The American naval commander credited with "opening" Japan in 1853 to trade with the rest of the world was a. b. c. d. Matthew Perry. Stephen Decatur. John Paul Jones. Alfred Thayer Mahan. ____ 44. To put more electoral power in the hands of voters, Wisconsin Progressive governor Robert Lafollette established a new way to select candidates, known as a. b. c. d. the referendum. the direct primary. the electoral college. the special election. ____ 45. Why was President Woodrow Wilson unable to fight for American ratification of the Versailles Treaty? a. b. c. d. He was assassinated. He suffered a stroke. He lost the election to William Jennings Bryan. He lost the election to Theodore Roosevelt. ____ 46. The Pendleton Civil Service Act was passed by Congress in 1883 in reaction to a. b. c. d. the "stolen" election of 1876, which put Rutherford B. Hayes in the White House. the abuse of the "spoils" system awarding political appointments to government jobs. the low price of grain and high price of transportation for farmers. the Populist Party's support of "free" silver. ____ 47. The biggest impact of the Ford Motor Company's Model T automobile was that a. b. c. d. it made the automobile affordable for the average American. it was the fastest car manufactured in the world and won the most races. it promoted the expansion of the motion picture industry. it made American more likely to invest in the stock market. ____ 48. The aftermath of the Bonus Army march and riots was a direct cause for citizens not re-electing Hoover in 1932. a. b. True False ____ 49. One place families could possibly turn for food during the depression was a. b. c. d. breadlines. the federal government. tenant farmers. Hoovervilles. ____ 50. As opposed to the views of Booker T. Washington, NAACP founder W. E. B. DuBois believed that a. b. c. d. blacks should work hard and well in common laboring jobs and assimilate into middle class society. blacks should aspire to the professions. blacks should demand access to trade and agricultural schools. blacks should go on strike against unreasonable employers. Carefully review your answers on this progress test and make any corrections you feel are necessary. When you are satisfied that you have answered the questions to the best of your ability, transfer your answers to the online test submission page in the presence of your proctor. The University of Nebraska is an equal opportunity educator and employer. ©2018, The Board of Regents of the University of Nebraska. All rights reserved. Course Name: American History 2 Student: Omar Hassan Course ID: SSTH034060 ID: E93324820 Submittal: 51 Progress Test 1 Although the progress test is similar in style to the unit evaluations, the progress test is a closed-book, proctored test. You may not have access to notes or any of the course materials while you are taking the test. It is important that you do your own work. Select the response that best completes the statement or answers the question. ____ 1. Democrat Woodrow Wilson won election as president in 1912 in large part because a. b. c. d. ____ 2. The thousands of out-of-work World War I veterans who marched in Washington in 1932 demanding payments that had been promised by Congress were known as a. b. c. d. ____ 3. prompted government regulation of the quality of clothing produced in the United States. forced improvements in 9-1-1 call centers in New York City. helped bring about changes in regulations concerning workplace safety. helped to change existing child labor laws in New York. In the 1900s, Margaret Sanger was an early advocate for a. b. c. d. ____ 6. The Jazz Singer. The Wizard of Oz. Gone With the Wind. The Gold Rush. The devastating fire at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in New York City in 1911 that killed 146 garment workers a. b. c. d. ____ 5. the Whiskey Rebellion. the Hooverville Rebellion. the Veterans Village. the Bonus Army. Released in 1927, the first motion picture with sound synchronized to the action was a. b. c. d. ____ 4. he appealed to both northerners and southerners. President Taft and former President Roosevelt split the Republican vote. President Taft was under investigation for bribery. he was endorsed by former President Roosevelt, a Republican. safe birth control for women. the right to vote for women. equal pay for women in the workplace. better housing options for the poor. The organization that revived in 1915 with an agenda to promote hatred of Jews, Catholics, immigrants, and African Americans was the a. b. c. d. Anti-Defamation League. National Urban League. Ku Klux Klan. Posse Comitatus. ____ 7. When Congress passed the Coinage Act of 1873, it became a controversial issue because a. b. c. d. ____ 8. The Nineteenth Amendment allowing women the right to vote was approved in 1919 in large part because a. b. c. d. ____ 9. it allowed the use of both gold and silver coins. it prohibited the minting of silver coins because of fears that using silver would hurt the economy. the United States Mint in Philadelphia stopped making the popular half-dollar coins. it overturned the existing gold standard and allowed silver, platinum, and other precious metals to be used in making U.S. coins. women's advocacy groups had sued and won a case for voting rights. women's work in non-traditional roles during World War I convinced many that they deserved the right to vote. President Warren G. Harding came out in support of women's voting rights. a group of women advocating voting rights went on a hunger strike. All of the following were causes of World War I except a. b. c. d. imperialism. alliances. militarism. isolationism. ____ 10. She was the first woman elected to Congress in 1916 and opposed declaring war on Germany. a. b. c. d. Jeannette Rankin Susan B Anthony Alice Paul Carrie Catt ____ 11. The woman's voting rights leader who was convicted in 1872 for voting in an election in Rochester, New York was a. b. c. d. Amelia Bloomer. Sojourner Truth. Carrie Chapman Catt. Susan B. Anthony. ____ 12. All of the following were reactions to the influx of Chinese immigrants on the American west coast in the late nineteenth century except a. b. c. d. the city of San Francisco established a segregated "Oriental" school. Congress passed the Chinese Exclusion Act. Chinese immigrants were kept in internment camps at various sites in the west. various California cities prohibited Chinese immigrants from being employed. ____ 13. The big issues that brought about the creation of the Populist Party in the 1890s were a. b. c. d. political corruption, an inadequate monetary supply, and unresponsive government. not enough railroads, war with Spain, and drought in the American South. the huge increase in the price of steel and government subsidies for dairy farms. bribery scandals in the Cleveland and McKinley administrations. ____ 14. The Espionage and Sedition Acts were responsible for ________________during World War I. a. b. c. d. finding scarce materials and regulating war industries creating propaganda and explaining the causes of the war banning treasonous print materials and speaking out against the government regulating agricultural production and setting commodity prices ____ 15. When an imperial country takes raw materials from a colony and ships them back to the home country, that colony is known as a. b. c. d. an extractive economy. a satellite nation. an alliance. an importing economy. ____ 16. All of the following were new weapons used during World War I except a. b. c. d. poison gas. submarines. missiles. machine guns. ____ 17. Farmers sought to control production costs, such as rates for grain storage and shipping, by joining reform organizations such as a. b. c. d. the Pony Express. the Grange. the Democratic Party. the Food and Drug Administration. ____ 18. The industrialist who introduced the concept of mass production to the manufacturing of automobiles in the early twentieth century was a. b. c. d. Ransom E. Olds. Francis Stanley. Thomas Alva Edison. Henry Ford. ____ 19. One of the new technologies used in World War I by the Germans to try to blockade shipping to the island of Britain was a. b. c. d. the airplane. the submarine. poison gas. the machine gun. ____ 20. A group of writers during the 20s that no longer had faith in their cultural guideposts of the Victorian era were known as a. b. c. d. the faithless generation. the hopeless generation. the lost generation. the disillusioned generation. ____ 21. The event that caused the United States to send troops to fight Spanish troops in Cuba in 1898 was a. b. c. d. the Spanish invasion of New Orleans, Louisiana. the election of William McKinley as president of the United States. an explosion on board the battleship Maine in Havana Harbor that sank the ship. the publication of The Jungle by Upton Sinclair. ____ 22. Wilson called his new foreign policy plan _________________ which would promote human rights, national integrity, and opportunity a. b. c. d. big stick diplomacy moral diplomacy dollar diplomacy foreign diplomacy ____ 23. The large American corporation that was judged a monopoly under the provisions of the Sherman Antitrust Act by the Supreme Court and broken up into smaller companies in 1911 was a. b. c. d. United States Steel. General Electric. Standard Oil. Union Pacific Railroad. ____ 24. "The chief business of the American people is business." The American president who spoke these words in a 1925 speech expressing his economic policies was a. b. c. d. Warren G. Harding. Herbert Hoover. Calvin Coolidge. Andrew Mellon. ____ 25. In order to secure control of the land for the construction of the Panama Canal, the United States a. b. c. d. purchased the land from the nation of Colombia. signed a treaty with the French to develop the canal together. orchestrated a revolution in Panama against Colombia and negotiated a deal with the Panamanians. invaded Colombia and took over that country's government. ____ 26. The issue of whether the United States' import tariff, or tax, should be high or low first appeared in public policy debates a. b. c. d. in the 1870s between Democrats and Republicans. in the 1830s between Democrats and Whigs. in the 1850s between Republicans and Know-Nothings. in the 1790s between Hamilton's Federalists and Jefferson's Republicans. ____ 27. The 1920 trial of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti was an example of a wave of widespread fear of communists and radicals that became known as the a. b. c. d. Great Influenza. Red Scare. Communist Plague. American Civil Liberties Union. ____ 28. The rural families of the Great Plains who were forced to flee the Dust Bowl for farms in California and Midwestern cities were generally referred to as a. b. c. d. Okies. sodbusters. bowlers. grangers. ____ 29. The Progressive movement election reform that allowed voters to remove an elected official from office was and is a. b. c. d. the recall vote. the direct primary. the general election. the referendum. ____ 30. The United States government decided to overthrow the government of Hawaiian Queen Liliuokalani in 1893 because a. b. c. d. Hawaiian troops had fired on American warships that were docked in Pearl Harbor. she abolished the Hawaiian constitution that had given power to American sugar farmers in Hawaii. an American dictator was threatening to execute native Hawaiians. the queen was threatening to invade the west coast of California. ____ 31. The first nationally prominent African-American leader to advocate black pride and a separation of races in the United States was a. b. c. d. W.E.B. DuBois. Booker T. Washington. Marcus Garvey. Edward "Duke" Ellington. ____ 32. This muckraker targeted John D. Rockefeller and his Standard Oil Company's ruthless methods used to destroy his competition. a. b. c. d. Lincoln Steffens Upton Sinclair Ida Tarbell Florence Kelley ____ 33. __________________ expanded the size of the U.S. military in preparation for World War I. a. b. c. d. The National Defense Act The Sussex Pledge The Naval Construction Act Council of National Defense ____ 34. In January, 1918, President Woodrow Wilson spoke to Congress and outlined his vision of what the postWorld War I world would look like. His plan became known as a. b. c. d. the Wilsonian template. the League of Nations. the Fourteen Points. the Treaty of Alsace-Lorraine. ____ 35. The explosion of African-American music and literature in the 1920s was known as a. b. c. d. the Sussex Movement. the Harlem Renaissance. the Beiderbecke Collective. Beale Street. ____ 36. What did Teddy Roosevelt's "Great White Fleet" demonstrate to Japan? a. b. c. d. America's support for Japan America's support for colonies in Asia America's increased military power America's imperialist ideas ____ 37. President Theodore Roosevelt's progressive plan to protect the interests of small business owners and average Americans was the a. b. c. d. New Deal. Fair Deal. Hepburn Act. Square Deal. ____ 38. The late nineteenth-century American concept that new ideas and honest, efficient government could bring about social justice was a. b. c. d. Republicanism. Progressivism. Populism. classism. ____ 39. How did the sinking of the Lusitania affect American attitudes toward World War I? a. b. c. d. It increased support for neutrality. It made Americans suspicious of the British. It made Americans suspicious of Mexico. It turned public opinion against Germany. ____ 40. Augusto Sandino from Nicaragua felt that the United States policy known as the Roosevelt Corollary, threatened the sovereignty and liberty of his people; and eventually led a rebellion against marines in the 20s. a. b. True False ____ 41. Teddy Roosevelt, once elected, promised a square deal to Americans. Its goal was to a. b. c. d. keep the corporations from taking advantage of the small businesses. promised tax breaks to all corporations. penalize companies with less than 50 employees. removed all tariffs from the largest corporations. ____ 42. To continue making selling alcohol during prohibition, many bars called ___________ were created which allowed people to get in with a password. a. b. c. d. underground factories speakeasies wet bars stills ____ 43. The American naval commander credited with "opening" Japan in 1853 to trade with the rest of the world was a. b. c. d. Matthew Perry. Stephen Decatur. John Paul Jones. Alfred Thayer Mahan. ____ 44. To put more electoral power in the hands of voters, Wisconsin Progressive governor Robert Lafollette established a new way to select candidates, known as a. b. c. d. the referendum. the direct primary. the electoral college. the special election. ____ 45. Why was President Woodrow Wilson unable to fight for American ratification of the Versailles Treaty? a. b. c. d. He was assassinated. He suffered a stroke. He lost the election to William Jennings Bryan. He lost the election to Theodore Roosevelt. ____ 46. The Pendleton Civil Service Act was passed by Congress in 1883 in reaction to a. b. c. d. the "stolen" election of 1876, which put Rutherford B. Hayes in the White House. the abuse of the "spoils" system awarding political appointments to government jobs. the low price of grain and high price of transportation for farmers. the Populist Party's support of "free" silver. ____ 47. The biggest impact of the Ford Motor Company's Model T automobile was that a. b. c. d. it made the automobile affordable for the average American. it was the fastest car manufactured in the world and won the most races. it promoted the expansion of the motion picture industry. it made American more likely to invest in the stock market. ____ 48. The aftermath of the Bonus Army march and riots was a direct cause for citizens not re-electing Hoover in 1932. a. b. True False ____ 49. One place families could possibly turn for food during the depression was a. b. c. d. breadlines. the federal government. tenant farmers. Hoovervilles. ____ 50. As opposed to the views of Booker T. Washington, NAACP founder W. E. B. DuBois believed that a. b. c. d. blacks should work hard and well in common laboring jobs and assimilate into middle class society. blacks should aspire to the professions. blacks should demand access to trade and agricultural schools. blacks should go on strike against unreasonable employers. Carefully review your answers on this progress test and make any corrections you feel are necessary. When you are satisfied that you have answered the questions to the best of your ability, transfer your answers to the online test submission page in the presence of your proctor. The University of Nebraska is an equal opportunity educator and employer. ©2018, The Board of Regents of the University of Nebraska. All rights reserved.
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