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This review examines the critical events and long-term causes that sparked World War I, focusing on the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, the roles of key figures like George Clemenceau and David Lloyd George, and the impact of militarism, nationalism, and imperialism. It also addresses the opposition to the war from various groups, including socialists and pacifists. Furthermore, the major alliances formed in 1914, such as the Triple Alliance and the Triple Entente, are explored to understand the geopolitical landscape leading to the conflict.
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0 His assassination sparked World War I • Archduke Franz Ferdinand • George Clemenceau • David Lloyd George • Gavrilio Princip
0 This British liner was sunk by a German U-boat. • Sussex • Luisitania • Titantic • Royal Pacific
0 This contained a suggestion of an alliance between Mexico and Germany that deeply angered the American people. • Zimmerman Telegram • Versailles note • German Telegram • Wilson’s note
0 This long-term cause of the war involved the development of the armed forces and their use as a tool of diplomacy. • Totalitarianism • Imperialism • Nationalism • Militarism
0 Closely linked with industrialization, this long-term cause of the war involved a contest for colonies. • Imperialism • Nationalism • Militarism • Isolationism
0 This long-term cause of the war encouraged competitiveness between nations and encouraged various ethnic groups to attempt to create nations of their own. • Militarism • Isolationism • Nationalism • Patriotism
0 These people opposed World War I because they perceived all wars as evil. • Socialist • Anarchist • Pacifist • Communist
0 These people opposed World War I because they saw it as an imperialist struggle. • Socialist • Pacifist • Imperialist • Nationalist
0 In 1914, this alliance consisted of Germany, Austria-Hungary, and the Ottoman Empire. • Triple Entente • Triple Alliance • Central Powers • Allies
7 In 1914, this alliance consisted of France, Great Britain, and Russia. • Triple Threat • Triple Alliance • Central Powers • Triple Play
0 Susette LaFlesche • founder and first president of Vassar College • arrested for attempting to vote in a national election • Native American woman who spoke out for the Ponca peopled. • first woman elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
0 NACW • National Alliance of College Women • National Association of Colored Women • National Association of Clubs for Women • National Association of Childcare Workers
0 Suffrage • discrimination • women's rights • the right to vote • the denial of the right to vote
0 Morrill Act • gave federal land to the states to help finance agricultural colleges • gave land in Kansas to African Americans willing to settle and farm it • gave federal land to railroad companies to encourage railroad building • gave 160 acres of free land to anyone willing to cultivate it for five years
0 homesteader • settler recruited in Europe by a railroad company • African-American settler originally from the South • settler who claimed land in Oklahoma by squatting on it • settler who farmed land given by the federal government
0 bonanza farm • farm claimed in the Oklahoma land rush • farm given away by the federal government • farm taken over by a bank due to bankruptcy • massive single-crop farm owned by railroad companies and private investors
5 Which president did the House of Representatives impeach? • Abraham Lincoln • Andrew Johnson • Ulysses S. Grant • Rutherford B. Hayes
0 To curb the violence of the Ku Klux Klan in the South, Congress passed the • Freedmen's Bureau Act. • Ten Percent Plan • Reconstruction Act of 1870. • Enforcement Acts of 1870 and 1871.
0 Intended to overrule and nullify the Dred Scott decision, Congress drafted the • Thirteenth Amendment. • Fourteenth Amendment. • Tenure of Office Act. • Amnesty Act.
0 Farmers who agreed to give most of their harvest to the landowners in exchange for use of the land, seeds, and tools were known as • tenant farmers. • the planter class. • sharecroppers. • scalawags.
0 This stated that no citizen may be denied the right to vote "on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude." • Thirteenth Amendment • Fourteenth Amendment • Fifteenth Amendment • Civil Rights Act of 1866
0 To which nation did the Treaty of Paris of 1898 guarantee independence from Spain? • Puerto Rico • Cuba • Philippines • China
0 In which nation did the United States use the same sort of concentration camp practices that it had condemned Spain for using in Cuba? • Puerto Rico • Cuba • Philippines • China
0 At the turn of the century, which of these nations could be best described as an independent, though bullied, trading partner of the United States? • Puerto Rico • Cuba • Philippines • China