<p>Can any of you help me figure these answers out? I arleady did the other 56, I need help on these:</p>
<p>Question 34 (Multiple Choice Worth 5 points)</p>
<p>In the 1920s, mass culturemagazines, books, radio, and movies </p>
<p>became increasingly standardized as the same amusements were available in all parts of the country. </p>
<p>still retained regional favor in the South, New England, the Southwest, and other areas with strong cultural traditions. </p>
<p>was available only to the middle class, who could afford it. </p>
<p>became less important as Americans placed renewed emphasis on individualism. </p>
<p>was strongly influenced by the radical, bohemian art world. </p>
<hr>
<p>Question 35 (Multiple Choice Worth 5 points)</p>
<p>In order to manage the nation's agriculture during World War I, Herbert Hoover </p>
<p>instituted strict government controls over what was grown and what consumers were able to purchase. </p>
<p>withheld meat, wheat, and sugar from the Allies as a form of political pressure. </p>
<p>focused on organizing food relief in Belgium. </p>
<p>employed a combination of propaganda and voluntary efforts to ensure adequate food supplies. </p>
<p>acted as a private watchdog to prevent the government from interfering with private agricultural initiative. </p>
<hr>
<p>Question 36 (Multiple Choice Worth 5 points)</p>
<p>In the years immediately after World War II, American civil-rights leaders </p>
<p>ended most of their activity in the South because of intimidation, repression, and murder. </p>
<p>found themselves shut out of the White House because of President Harry Truman's fear of alienating southern white Democrats. </p>
<p>launched aggressive voter-registration drives in the South. </p>
<p>were revealed by congressional investigations to be pro-communist. </p>
<p>celebrated their new status as celebrities and their new power as leaders of the Truman administration. </p>
<hr>
<p>Question 37 (Multiple Choice Worth 5 points)</p>
<p>Generally, what attitude did most American intellectuals, cultural leaders, and reformers have about United States participation in World War I? </p>
<p>They were opposed because they believed that the war was a dirty and cruel business. </p>
<p>They were unconcerned with the war because it had little impact on their intellectual pursuits. </p>
<p>Because they had supported President Wilson in his domestic crusades, they now felt obliged to support him in his international crusade. </p>
<p>They saw the war as a struggle to defend culture and believed that increased government activism during wartime would lead to increased reform at home. </p>
<p>They tended to oppose the war because they believed that German culture was superior and the German social-welfare system more humane. </p>
<hr>
<p>Question 38 (Multiple Choice Worth 5 points)</p>
<p>Who, according to Vice President Spiro Agnew, were "curled-lip boys in eastern ivory towers" and "nattering nabobs of negativism"? </p>
<p>white supporters of George McGovern </p>
<p>entrenched bureaucrats in the Federal Reserve System </p>
<p>antiwar protesters </p>
<p>the justices of the Supreme Court </p>
<p>television network newscasters </p>
<hr>
<p>Question 39 (Multiple Choice Worth 5 points)</p>
<p>The purpose of the Marshall Plan was to </p>
<p>help the hungry and homeless of Europe. </p>
<p>help stop the spread of communism in Europe. </p>
<p>help expand sales of American goods in Europe. </p>
<p>help to build the economies of both the United States and Europe. </p>
<p>all of these </p>
<hr>
<p>Question 40 (Multiple Choice Worth 5 points)</p>
<p>What happened to the white-collar middle class in the United States from 1900 to 1920? </p>
<p>It more than doubled in size and grew at over twice the rate for the work force as a whole during the same period. </p>
<p>Its size remained about the same, but its influence declined dramatically in proportion to the rest of the population. </p>
<p>It disappeared because the changing nature of the American economy required mainly blue-collar workers. </p>
<p>Although it was growing dramatically, it wasn't growing as fast as the work force as a whole. </p>
<p>none of these. </p>
<hr>
<p>Question 41 (Multiple Choice Worth 5 points)</p>
<p>The Reagan administration came to support the widow of an assassinated politician who had led the opposition to which nation's corrupt and tyrannical government? </p>
<p>South Africa </p>
<p>the Philippines </p>
<p>Panama </p>
<p>Russia </p>
<p>Iran </p>
<hr>
<p>Question 42 (Multiple Choice Worth 5 points)</p>
<p>The professional managerial class in the 1950s was composed of </p>
<p>capitalists rather than executives. </p>
<p>conformists. </p>
<p>radicals. </p>
<p>"inner-directed" people. </p>
<p>all of these </p>
<hr>
<p>Question 43 (Multiple Choice Worth 5 points)</p>
<p>Which of the following contributed to the fighting style of the Plains Indians? </p>
<p>gunpowder introduced by Chinese immigrants in the nineteenth century </p>
<p>horses introduced by the Spanish in the sixteenth century </p>
<p>firearms introduced by Hessian soldiers in the eighteenth century </p>
<p>swords introduced by the Spanish in the sixteenth century </p>
<p>none of these </p>
<hr>
<p>Question 44 (Multiple Choice Worth 5 points)</p>
<p>Which of the following groups is correctly paired with its position on the tariff? </p>
<p>businessmen involved in foreign trade: they wanted protection against foreign competition </p>
<p>farmers of the West and South: they opposed tariffs for raising the price of equipment and impeding the sale of American farm products abroad </p>
<p>shoe manufacturers: they opposed tariffs for being the "mother of trusts" </p>
<p>producers of coal, hides, timber, wool: they wanted lower tariffs to encourage foreign trade </p>
<p>immigrants: they wanted lower tariffs on products from the ¡§Old Country¡¨ </p>
<hr>
<p>Question 45 (Multiple Choice Worth 5 points)</p>
<p>The War Industries Board </p>
<p>allocated raw materials. </p>
<p>established production priorities. </p>
<p>coordinated military purchasing. </p>
<p>coordinated competing businesses. </p>
<p>all of these </p>
<hr>
<p>Question 46 (Multiple Choice Worth 5 points)</p>
<p>The American Federation of Labor's main source of strength was in </p>
<p>factories and mills. </p>
<p>skilled trades. </p>
<p>farm workers. </p>
<p>immigrant blue collar workers. </p>
<p>urban white-collar workers.</p>