APUSH Chapter 31 Test Flashcards
Mr. Jones
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683366452 | President Wilson broke diplomatic relations with Germany when | Germany announced that it would wage unrestricted submarine warfare in the Atlantic | 0 | |
683366453 | The Zimmermann note involved a proposed secret agreement between | Germany and Mexico | 1 | |
683366454 | The U.S. declared war on Germany | after German U-boats sank four unarmed American merchant vessels | 2 | |
683366455 | President Woodrow Wilson persuaded the American people to enter World War I by | pledging to make the war a war to end all wars and to make the world safe for democracy | 3 | |
683366456 | President Wilson viewed America's entry into World War I as an opportunity for the U.S. to | shape a new international order based on the ideals of democracy | 4 | |
683366457 | Of Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points, the one that he hoped would provide asystem of collective security was the | League of Nations | 5 | |
683366458 | The major problem for George Creel and his Committee on Public Informationwas that | he oversold Wilson's ideals and led the world to expect too much. | 6 | |
683366459 | Match each civilian administrator below with the World War I mobilizationagency that he directed | A-2, B-3, C-1, D-4 | 7 | |
683366460 | When the U.S. entered World War I, it was | poorly prepared to leap into global war | 8 | |
683366461 | During World War I, civil liberties in America were | denied to many, especially those suspected of disloyalty | 9 | |
683366462 | Two constitutional amendments adopted in part because of because of wartime influences were the 18, which dealt with _________________, and the 19, whose subject was _______________. | prohibition; woman suffrage | 10 | |
683366463 | As a result of their work supporting the war effort, women | finally received the right to vote | 11 | |
683366464 | During World War I, the government's treatment of labor could be best describedas | fair | 12 | |
683366465 | The strikes and sabotage of the Industrial Workers of the World during WWIwere | the result of some of the worst working conditions in the country | 13 | |
683366466 | Grievances of labor during and shortly after World War I include all of the following except | suppression of the American Federation of Labor | 14 | |
683366467 | The 1919 steel strike resulted in | a grievous setback crippling the union movement for a decade | 15 | |
683366468 | The movement of tens of thousands of Southern blacks north during WWIresulted in | racial violence in the North | 16 | |
683366469 | Most wartime mobilization agencies relied on _____________ to prepare the economy for war. | voluntary compliance | 17 | |
683366470 | Most of the money raised to finance World War I came from | loans | 18 | |
683366471 | In an effort to make economic mobilization more efficient during World War I,the federal government took over and operated | the railroads | 19 | |
683366472 | The U.S. used all of the flowing methods to support the war effort except | using government power extensively to regulate the economy | 20 | |
683366473 | During World War I the U.S. used naval vessels | made from concrete | 21 | |
683366474 | When the U.S. entered WWI in 1917, most Americans did not believe that | it would be necessary to send a large American army to Europe | 22 | |
683366475 | Those who protested conscription during World War I did so because | they disliked the idea of compelling a person to serve | 23 | |
683366476 | During WWI, American troops fought in all of the following countries except | Czechoslovakia | 24 | |
683366477 | A unique feature of the U.S. armed forces during World War I was | the entry of women for the first time | 25 | |
683366478 | Russia's withdrawal from World War I in 1918 resulted in | the release of thousands of German troops for deployment on the front in France | 26 | |
683366479 | The first significant engagement of American troops in a European battle in American history came in the spring of 1918 | Chateau-Thierry | 27 | |
683366480 | The Second Battle of the Marne was significant because it | marked the beginning of a German withdrawal that was never reversed | 28 | |
683366481 | As a condition of ending World War I, Woodrow Wilson demanded that | the German Kaiser be forced from power | 29 | |
683366482 | The U.S.' main contributions to the Allied victory in World War I included all of the following except | battlefield victories | 30 | |
683366483 | The Germans were eventually demoralized by | the U.S. troop reserves | 31 | |
683366484 | The chief difference between Woodrow Wilson and the parliamentary statesmenat the Paris peace table was that Wilson | did not command a legislative majority at home | 32 | |
683366485 | Woodrow Wilson's ultimate goal at the Paris Peace conference was to | establish the League of Nations | 33 | |
683366486 | At the Paris Peace Conference, Wilson sought all of the following goals except | an end to the European colonial empires in Africa and Asia | 34 | |
683366487 | Opposition to the League of Nations by the U.S. Senate during the Paris PeaceConference | gave Allied leaders in Paris a stronger bargaining position | 35 | |
683366488 | After the Treaty of Versailles had been signed, Wilson | was condemned by both disillusioned liberals and frustrated imperialists | 36 | |
683366489 | In the U.S., the most controversial aspect of the Treaty of Versailles was | Article X | 37 | |
683366490 | The Republican strategy regarding the Treaty of Versailles was to | delay and amend the treaty | 38 | |
683366491 | Senate opponents of the League of Nations as proposed in the Treaty of Versaillesargued that it | robbed Congress of its war-declaring powers | 39 | |
683366492 | In Congress, the most reliable support for Wilson's position on the League of nations came from | Democrats | 40 | |
683366493 | The Senate likely would have accepted American participation in the League of Nations had Wilson | had been willing to compromise with League opponents in Congress | 41 | |
683366494 | Who was most responsible for the Senate defeat of the Treaty of Versailles? | Woodrow Wilson | 42 | |
683366495 | Wilson's "solemn referendum" in 1920 concerned | his attempt to use the presidential election as a public vote on the Treaty of Versailles | 43 | |
683366496 | Republican isolationists successfully turned Warren Harding's 1920 presidentialvictory into a | death sentence for the League of Nations | 44 | |
683366497 | The major weakness of the League of Nations was that it | did not include the U.S | 45 |