Question 1
The objects in the drawing Nova Reperta represent __________.
A) religious artifacts used to convert Indians to Christianity
B) new products introduced to Europe from North and South America
C) technology borrowed from the Islamic world
D) new discoveries that made the exploration and settlement of the New World possible
Question 2
Josiah Strong's comments that The city has become a serious menace to our civilizationIt has a peculiar attraction for the immigranthere roughs, gamblers, thieves, robbers, lawless and desperate men of all sorts, congregate reflect
nativist comments found in which of the following writings? A) How the Other Half Lives: Studies among the Tenements of New York
B) the 1892 Platform of the People's Party
C) Our Country: Its Possible Future and Present Crisis
D) the text to The Cross of Gold speech
Question 3
Although Hiram Powers's sculpture The Greek Slave stirred up Northern sympathies against slavery, this sculpture also appealed to Southerners because it __________.
A) compared the plight of ancient Greek slaves to Southern slaves
B) shocked society with its nude depiction of the slave
C) raised sympathy with contemporary Greece, which was in a republican revolution against
their Turkish oppressors
D) praised Christian values that were symbolized by her crucifix
Question 4
Based on these maps, one common feature in the Allied military strategy in both the Pacific and European theaters of war was to __________.
A) detonate atomic weapons in both Germany and Japan
B) initially attack Germany and Japan through the soft underbellies of their empires
C) use an extensive island-hopping strategy in the Pacific and Mediterranean
D) rely on numerous Allied military bases in Europe and the Pacific to launch attacks