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Ch. 34
Ch. 35
Ch. 36
Game design by Mary Catherine McGillvray
Ch. 37
Ch. 38
Final
Jeopardy!
Ch. 34
Ch. 35
Ch. 36
Ch. 37
Ch. 38
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The spark for World War I was provided
when Gavrilo Princip assassinated
a. Francis Joseph.
b. Nicholas II.
c. Alexander Kerensky.
d. Francis Ferdinand.
e. Otto von Bismarck.
The nationalistic aspirations of subject
minorities was most threatening to a
state such as
a. England.
b. Austria-Hungary.
c. Spain.
d. France.
e. Germany.
In 1914, England’s share of the world’s
industrial output stood at
a. 3 percent, tied for tenth in the
world.
b. 9 percent, having dropped
behind the United States and Germany.
c. 14 percent, roughly the same as
Germany.
d. 32 percent, the world’s largest.
e. 62 percent, twice as large as the
nearest competitor.
The Triple Alliance was threatened from the
very beginning by
a. the traditional rivalry between England and
France.
b. long-standing mistrust between France
and Russia.
c. continuous disagreements between
Germany and Austria over Alsace.
d. English and Russian competition in central
Asia as part of the Great Game.
e. the Italian policy of aggrandizement at the
expense of Russia and Austria.
Gavrilo Princip was a member
of a secret Serbian society
known as the
a. Black Shirts.
b. Black Hand.
c. Young Serbians.
d. Yugoslavs.
e. White Lodge.
In a purely scientific sense, the uncertainty
principle proposes that
a. cloning was essentially impossible because of
the difficulty of accounting for genetic mutation.
b. it is impossible to specify simultaneously both
the position and velocity of a subatomic particle.
c. complex factors make accurately predicting
economic trends essentially impossible.
d. a country’s successful transition to democracy
was dependent on internal rather than external
factors.
e. human behavior is driven more by psychological
than by physiological factors.
The Kristallnacht was
a. a new artistic movement that flourished
after World War I.
b. a Nazi-arranged attack on thousands of
Jewish stores.
c. Hitler’s political treatise that expressed his
main ideas.
d. the Russian term for the destructive civil
war that followed the revolution.
e. a German term for the sense of
disillusionment that World War I veterans
felt.
The 1935, Nuremberg Laws
a. made Austria part of Germany.
b. removed any democratic restraints on
Hitler’s power and made him the dictator
of Germany.
c. recognized the Japanese as honorary
Aryans.
d. outlawed the communist parties in
Germany.
e. deprived German Jews of their
citizenship.
The term fascism was first
used by
a. Mussolini.
b. Hitler.
c. Franco.
d. Stalin.
e. Lenin.
This individual believed in a philosophy
of promoting communism primarily in
the Soviet Union rather than trying to
export the revolution to other nations.
a. Lenin
b. Marx
c. Trotsky
d. Gorbachev
e. Stalin
QuestioThis Mexican president
nationalized his country’s oil industry,
thus posing a challenge to the United
States policy of non-intervention in
Latin American affairs.
a. Lázaro Cárdenas
b. Diego Rivera
c. José Carlos Mariátegui
d. Juan Batista Sacasa
e. Anastacio Somoza Garcian C100
One of the greatest
proponents of Pan-Africanism
was
a. Martin Luther King, Jr.
b. Malcolm X.
c. Jomo Kenyatta.
d. Marcus Garvey.
e. Jesse Jackson.
Africans were participants in World War I
because
a. they were paid a great deal of money by
the Europeans to participate.
b. many believed in the cause of the
Entente powers versus the Central powers.
c. many believed in the cause of the
Central powers versus the Entente powers.
d. they were bound by colonial ties to
European powers.
e. both a. and b
Maoism was
a. a political ideology that held that the urban
proletariat was that foundation for a successful
communist revolution.
b. solely an economic policy based on
encouraging agrarian growth in China.
c. solely an economic plan that encouraged the
growth of industry in China.
d. a political ideology that held that peasants
were the foundation for a successful communist
revolution.
e. a foreign policy agenda that actively
encouraged open relations with democratic
Western powers.
Which of the following are U.S. policies
towards Latin America?
a. New Deal
b. Dollar Diplomacy
c. Good Neighbor Policy
d. Latin American Assistance Plan
e. both b and c
The Marshall Plan was
a. the U.S. plan for the final defeat of
Germany through an invasion at
Normandy.
b. the code name for the German
invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941.
c. the secret United States code during
World War II.
d. a U.S. financial plan to rebuild Europe
and stop Soviet expansion.
e. the official name for the Final Solution
One of the biggest arguments among the
Allies in World War II was
a. Hitler’s dissatisfaction with the
contributions of Italy.
b. Roosevelt’s insistence on an invasion
through northern France.
c. the U.S. refusal to share financial
assistance with the British and Soviets.
d. Jiang Jieshi’s unhappiness with the
United States’s support of Mao Zedong.
e. Stalin’s demand for a second front.
Eighty percent of the comfort
women in World War II were
a. Japanese.
b. Russian.
c. American.
d. Chinese.
e. Korean.
The term “genocide” was coined to refer to
the systematic killings of which of the
following?
a. Soviet Union
b. Nazi Germany
c. Japan
d. Italy
e. Vichy France
At the Wannsee Conference,
a. the British agreed to hand over the
Sudetenland to Hitler.
b. Germany officially surrendered and
signed the peace treaty.
c. the United Nations was founded.
d. the Nazis put in place the Final
Solution.
e. differences among the former Allies
helped lead to the cold war.
Who finally dismantled the Soviet
Communist party and pushed the
country toward free market reforms?
a. Mikhail Gorbachev
b. Erich Honecker
c. Vladimir Putin
d. Boris Yeltsin
e. Nikita Khrushchev
The first of the Soviet republics to
declare independence
a. were the Baltic states of Latvia,
Estonia, and Lithuania.
b. was Belarus.
c. was Kazakhstan.
d. was Georgia.
e. was Kazakustan.
Mikhail Gorbachev
a. intended from the very beginning to tear
down the Soviet system.
b. was influenced by the economic reforms of
Deng Xiaoping.
c. was mainly inspired by Leonid Brezhnev.
d. never intended to abolish the existing
Soviet political and economic system.
e. had been a capitalist reformer since his
college education in London.
The East German leader who rejected
Gorbachev’s reforms and clung to the
traditional Soviet pattern was
a. Erich Honecker.
b. Nicolae Ceauşescu.
c. Todor Zhivkov.
d. Boris Yeltsin.
e. Josip Broz.
The Russian leader who brought
massive reform to the Soviet Union
beginning in 1985 was
a. Boris Yeltsin.
b. Mikhail Gorbachev.
c. Leonid Brezhnev.
d. Nikita Khrushchev.
e. Vladimir Putin.
d. Francis Ferdinand.
b. Austria-Hungary.
c. 14 percent, roughly the same as
Germany.
e. the Italian policy of aggrandizement at the
expense of Russia and Austria.
b. Black Hand.
b. it is impossible to specify simultaneously both
the position and velocity of a subatomic particle.
b. a Nazi-arranged attack on thousands of
Jewish stores.
e. deprived German Jews of their
citizenship.
a. Mussolini.
e. Stalin
a. Lázaro Cárdenas
d. Marcus Garvey.
d. they were bound by colonial ties to
European powers.
d. a political ideology that held that peasants were
the foundation for a successful communist
revolution.
e. both b and c
d. a U.S. financial plan to rebuild Europe
and stop Soviet expansion.
e. Stalin’s demand for a second front.
e. Korean.
b. Nazi Germany
d. the Nazis put in place the Final
Solution.
d. Boris Yeltsin
a. were the Baltic states of Latvia,
Estonia, and Lithuania.
d. never intended to abolish the existing
Soviet political and economic system.
a. Erich Honecker.
b. Mikhail Gorbachev.
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