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The quintessential force in late-nineteenth-century city government was |
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The skyscrapers celebrated which of the following? |
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The primary motivation for late-nineteenth-century immigration was |
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For the most part, native-born Americans viewed the "new immigrants" as |
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racially inferior and culturally impoverished. |
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Most African Americans were |
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sharecroppers and tenant farmers. |
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Most European immigrants who arrived between 1880 and 1914 came from |
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eastern and southern Europe. |
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America's first illegal aliens were |
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All of the following are true of Chicago except |
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it had no architects to adequately address major urban problems. |
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Some Japanese immigrants achieved success as |
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The nation's first subways were constructed in |
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The political boss of Boston was |
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The audience for novelist Laura Jane Libbey was mostly |
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Which of the following is true about the 1893 Columbian Exhibition? |
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It deliberately rejected displaying achievements by black Americans. |
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By 1920, the majority of workers in American cities were |
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The most popular form of entertainment in turn-of-the-century urban America was |
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X initially catered to the wealthy, leisure class. |
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Older middle-class Americans had a problem with Coney Island. That problem had to do with which of the following? |
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The fact that young men and women were unchaperoned. |
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The "White City" refers to which of the following? |
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The one major issue that all writers discussing nationality ignored was |
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In African American communities one would find which of the following? |
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all of these choices newspapers. doctor's offices. grocery stores. funeral homes. |
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The living conditions for most of the working class can best be described as |
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Museums in the Gild Age worked the hardest to attract the attention of the |
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X widest possible audience. |
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Which of the following is true about labor in the early twentieth century? |
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Margaret Sanger crusaded for |
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The Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) was |
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X a conservative craft union that advocated collective bargaining agreements. |
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One of the new elements to the dime novels were |
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The idea of American's nationality being cosmopolitan was first discussed by which of the following? |
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Most Japanese and Chinese immigrants came to America |
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because of economic deprivation. |
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Chinese and Japanese immigrants |
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were ineligible for citizenship. |
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A major problem with waterworks in the large cities was |
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In the early twentieth century, the American middle class |
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X slowed assimilation of ethnic groups. |
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All of the following are true of women in this time period except |
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some women were championing for female leaders in Congress. |
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As a result of the new emphasis on productivity in manufacturing, |
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the United States had the world's highest rate of on-the-job injuries. |
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