front 1 President Wilson broke diplomatic relations with Germany when | back 1 b |
front 2 The Zimmermann note involved a proposed secret agreement
between | back 2 c |
front 3 The United States declared war on Germany | back 3 e |
front 4 President Woodrow Wilson persuaded the American people to enter World
War I by | back 4 c |
front 5 President Wilson viewed America's entry into World War I as an
opportunity for the United States to | back 5 e |
front 6 Which one of the following was not among Wilson's Fourteen Points,
upon which he based America's c. Abolition of secret treaties | back 6 b |
front 7 The major problem for George Creel and his Committee on Public
Information was that | back 7 a |
front 8 Match each civilian administrator below with the World War I
mobilization agency that he directed. | back 8 d |
front 9 When the United States entered World War I, it was | back 9 e |
front 10 During World I, civil liberties in America were | back 10 e |
front 11 Although German-Americans were generally loyal citizens, during the
war they were subjected to all e. renaming German foods; sauerkraut became liberty cabbage. | back 11 c |
front 12 Prosecutions under the Espionage Act (1917) and the Sedition Act
(1918) can be characterized in all of | back 12 d |
front 13 Two constitutional amendments, adopted in part because of World War
I, were the Eighteenth, which | back 13 c |
front 14 In adopting the Nineteenth Amendment, giving women the right to vote,
the United States was | back 14 d |
front 15 Women's participation in the war effort contributed greatly to the
fact that they | back 15 b |
front 16 In the decade after the war, feminists | back 16 a |
front 17 Congress's passage of the Sheppard-Towner Maternity Act demonstrated
that the federal government d. supported pregnancy and maternity-leave benefits for
women. | back 17 e |
front 18 During World War I, the government's treatment of labor could be best
described as | back 18 a |
front 19 The two groups who suffered most from the violation of civil
liberties during World War I were | back 19 e |
front 20 Grievances of labor during and shortly after World War I include all
of the following except | back 20 c |
front 21 The enormous nationwide steel strike of 1919 resulted in | back 21 d |
front 22 The movement of tens of thousands of Southern blacks north during
World War I resulted in | back 22 b |
front 23 Most wartime mobilization agencies primarily relied on ____ to
prepare the economy for war. | back 23 b |
front 24 World War I was the first time that | back 24 b |
front 25 Two examples of forceful federal government action to organize the
nation for war were | back 25 c |
front 26 Most of the money raised to finance World War I came from | back 26 e |
front 27 The United States used all of the following methods to support the
war effort except | back 27 c |
front 28 The World War I military draft | back 28 a |
front 29 When the United States entered the war in 1917, most Americans did
not believe that | back 29 e |
front 30 Despite reluctance by both the president and Congress, the United
States resorted to forced | back 30 a |
front 31 The conscription law during World War I differed from the Civil War
draft especially because it | back 31 d |
front 32 For German military strategists, the entry of the United States into
the war meant that | back 32 b |
front 33 The Germans gained an immense military advantage in the first months
of 1918 because | back 33 c |
front 34 The two major battles of World War I in which United States forces
engaged were | back 34 e |
front 35 Russia's withdrawal from World War I in 1918 resulted in c. the release of hundreds of thousands of German troops for
deployment on the front in | back 35 c |
front 36 The Second Battle of the Marne was significant because it | back 36 e |
front 37 Before Woodrow Wilson would agree to an armistice ending World War I
fighting, he demanded that | back 37 d |
front 38 The United States' main contributions to the Allied victory in World
War I included all of the | back 38 a |
front 39 Which of these is NOT a true statement about black soldiers during
World War I? | back 39 b |
front 40 The Germans were heavily demoralized by | back 40 c |
front 41 The chief difference between Woodrow Wilson and the parliamentary
statesmen at the Paris peace a. lacked their popularity in Europe. | back 41 b |
front 42 Woodrow Wilson's ultimate goal at the Paris Peace Conference was
to | back 42 d |
front 43 At the Paris Peace Conference, Wilson sought all of the following
goals except | back 43 b |
front 44 Opposition to the League of Nations by many United States senators
during the Paris Peace | back 44 a |
front 45 After the Treaty of Versailles had been signed, Woodrow
Wilson | back 45 b |
front 46 In the United States, the most controversial aspect of the Treaty of
Versailles was the | back 46 e |
front 47 Senator Henry Cabot Lodge effectively stalled the Treaty of
Versailles by speak. | back 47 a |
front 48 Senate opponents of the League of Nations, as proposed in the Treaty
of Versailles, argued that it | back 48 c |
front 49 In Congress, the most reliable support for Wilson's position on the
League of Nations came from | back 49 e |
front 50 The Senate likely would have accepted American participation in the
League of Nations if Wilson had | back 50 d |
front 51 Republican isolationists successfully turned Warren Harding's 1920
presidential victory into a | back 51 e |
front 52 During the course of World War I | back 52 b |