front 1 *All of the following were targets of criticism by progressive social
critics during the progressive era, 1890-1916, EXCEPT
- bloated
trusts.
- slum conditions.
- dangerous and
exploitative working hours and conditions in factories.
- child labor.
- efforts to assimilate and educate
recent immigrants.
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front 2 *All of following political, economic, or social reform initiatives
were connected to the progressive movement EXCEPT
- rooting out graft and
corruption in big-city political machines
- woman suffrage
- a constitutional amendment to guarantee
the popular direct election of U.S. senators
- a temperance
movement aimed at curbing alcohol sales and consumption.
- nationalizing the railroads and utilities in the United
States
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front 3 *How did the muckrakers signify the ideological nature of the
progressive reform movement?
- They proposed
detailed, scientific remedies for social problems.
- They
sought to overturn the major features of industrial and financial
capitalism.
- Their reform prescriptions were closely allied
with those of the Socialist party.
- They trusted that media
exposures of political corruption and economic exploitation could
reform capitalism rather than overthrow it.
- They looked to
start a third political party that would overturn the corrupt and
stalemated two-party system.
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front 4 *Which statement most accurately characterizes a key belief of
advocates of political progressivism during this era?
- Progressive political
reforms such as the secret ballot, referendum and recall, and limits
on political contributions from corporate interests would curb the
excesses of industrial and financial capitalism and stave off
socialism in the United States.
- Political reforms had to be
instituted initially at the federal government level before they
could be successfully implemented in states and municipalities.
- Progressive political reforms should first be developed,
implemented, and evaluated in northeastern big cities before being
tried in midwestern and western states.
- Political alliances
with socialists and other political radicals should be forged in
order to pass these political reforms on the federal, state, and
local government levels.
- The achievement of woman suffrage
would not significantly aid political progressivism.
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front 5 *Why were the settlement-house and women's club movements considered
crucial centers of female progressive activity?
- They provided literary
and philosophical perspectives on social questions.
- They
broke down the idea that women had special concerns as mothers.
- They introduced many middle-class women to a broader array of
urban social problems and civic concerns.
- They helped
children living in urban slums read classic literature by Dante and
Shakespeare.
- They become launching pads for women seeking
political office.
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front 6 *What laws or regulations did the tragic Triangle Shirtwaist fire
prompt states to pass?
- Laws requiring
mandatory fire escapes for all businesses employing more than ten
people
- Laws prohibiting women from working in the needle
trades
- Anti-sweatshop laws and workers' compensation laws
for job injuries
- Zoning regulations governing where
dangerous industrial factories could be located
- Laws
guaranteeing unions the right to raise safety concerns
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front 7 *The Supreme Court ruling in the business and labor case of
Lochner v. New York did NOT represent a
- legal victory for the
efforts of progressives and labor advocates to institute
maximum-hour laws for workers.
- legal victory for the
efforts of business to use the courts to overturn the political
successes of progressives and labor advocates in achieving social
reforms.
- legal departure from the Court's progressive
decision in Muller v. Oregon, upholding the
constitutionality of state laws mandating special protections and
work rules for women workers.
- legal victory for the
laissez-faire, conservative wing of the Supreme Court.
- setback in the efforts of progressive-era labor advocates and
progressives to institute maximum-hour and minimum-wage laws in the
states.
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front 8 *As part of his reform program, President Theodore Roosevelt
advocated all of the following EXCEPT
- federal regulation of
corporations.
- guaranteed legal recognition of labor
unions.
- consumer protection.
- conservation of natural
resources.
- federal regulation of railroad rates and an end to
shipping rebates.
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front 9 *What were the Elkins and Hepburn Acts designed to accomplish?
- regulation of
municipal utilities and the end of private utility companies
- guaranteeing the purity and safety of food and drugs
- providing federal protection for natural resources
- improving women's working conditions
- ending corrupt and
exploitative practices by the railroad trusts
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front 10 *What was the actual purpose of Teddy Roosevelt's assault on bad trusts?
- To fragment the
political power of big business
- To prove that the federal
government, not private business, governed the United States
- To assist labor unions in their organizing efforts
- To
halt the trend toward combination and integration in business in the
United States
- To uphold the legal right of small business
to compete fairly with big business in the United States
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front 11 *Which literary work inspired the publication of the Federal Meat
Inspection Act of 1906
- Theodore Dreiser's
The Titan
- Jack London's The Call of the
Wild
- Henry Demarest Lloyd's Wealth Against
Commonwealth
- Jacob Riis's How the Other Half
Lives
- Upton Sinclair's The Jungle
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front 12 *What was a fundamental belief of the multiple-use conservationists?
- preserving scenic
beauty and natural wonders was incompatible with human
activity.
- the environment could be effectively protected
and managed without shutting it off from human use.
- forests and rivers could be used for recreation but not for
economic purposes
- federal lands should be divided into
separate and distinct economically useful areas, recreational
areas, and wilderness.
- cattlemen, lumbermen, and
farmers should be entrusted with the development of sustainable-use
policies
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front 13 *What shortcoming in the U.S. economy did the panic of 1907 reveal?
- the need for
substantial reform of U.S. banking and currency policies
- the need to raise tariffs on imported goods
- insufficient government regulation of corporations
- the
need to regulate Wall Street stock trading
- the need for a
federally mandated minimum wage for workers
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front 14 *Why did Teddy Roosevelt decide to run for the presidency in 1912?
- Teddy Roosevelt
believed that President William Howard Taft was discarding
Roosevelt's progressive policies.
- President Taft decided
not to seek a second term as president.
- Senator Robert
LaFollette encouraged him to do so.
- The Socialist party
candidate threatened to swing the election to Woodrow Wilson and
the Democrats.
- Roosevelt was fiercely opposed to Taft's
dollar diplomacy.
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front 15 **How did muckrakers in the early twentieth century use tactics
employed by the "yellow press" in the late nineteenth century?
- They wrote
scandalous articles for widely published magazines revealing the
ills in American society.
- They sent reporters and
photographers around the country to create news where none
existed.
- They used their publications to convince people to
recognize wrongdoing in other nations.
- They were
single-minded in their focus on reforming the practices of big
businesses and trusts.
- They exploited people affected by
society's ills for their own gain.
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front 16 **Taft's "dollar diplomacy" ultimately failed to change
American foreign policy because
- many financial
institutions had no desire to become involved in Latin American
affairs.
- Latin American nations were too opposed to U.S.
intervention to accept financial aid.
- European spheres of
influence prevented the United States from purchasing the Manchurian
railroads.
- disorder and revolt led to U.S. military
intervention in Latin America despite massive financial aid.
- "big-stick diplomacy" was still overwhelmingly favored
by many of Taft's closest advisers.
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front 17 ~The "real heart" of the progressive movement was the
effort by reformers to
- preserve world
peace.
- use the government as an agency of human welfare.
- ensure the Jeffersonian style of government.
- get the
government off the backs of the people.
- promote economic
and social equality.
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front 18 ~The political roots of the progressive movement lay in the
- the
Federalists.
- the Greenback Labor party and the
Populists.
- the German Social Democratic Party.
- the
pre-Civil War antislavery movement.
- social
Darwinists.
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front 19 ~Match each late-nineteenth-century social critic below with the
target of his criticism.
- Thorstein Veblen
- Jack London
- Jacob
Riis
- Henry Demarest Lloyd
- "bloated
trusts"
- slum conditions
- "conspicuous
consumption"
- destruction of nature
-
1-d, 2-b, 3-c, 4-a
-
1-a, 2-c, 3-d, 4-b
-
1-c, 2-d, 3-b, 4-a
-
1-c, 2-b, 3-a, 4-d
-
1-b, 2-a, 3-d, 4-c
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front 20 ~Progressivism
- was closely tied to
the feminist movement and women's causes.
- offered little
to the growing women's movement.
- supported better
treatment of women but not women's suffrage.
- followed
examples set by women's reform movements in Europe.
- reflected the views of working-class women.
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front 21 ~Female progressives often justified their reformist political
activities on the basis of
- the need to assert
female power against male oppression.
- America's need to
catch up with more progressive European nations.
- women's
inherent rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
- the harsh treatment of working women by their employers.
- there being essentially an extension of women's traditional
roles as wives and mothers.
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front 22 ~Match each early-twentieth-century muckraker below with the target
of their exposé.
- David G. Phillips
- Ida Tarbell
- Lincoln
Steffens
- Ray Stannard Baker
- The United States
Senate
- The Standard Oil Company
- City
governments
- The condition of black people
-
1-a, 2-b, 3-c, 4-d
-
1-d, 2-b, 3-c, 4-a
-
1-c, 2-a, 3-b, 4-d
-
1-c, 2-b, 3-d, 4-a
-
1-a, 2-d, 3-b, 4-c
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front 23 ~Lincoln Steffens, in his series of articles entitled "The Shame
of the Cities,"
- attacked the United
States Senate.
- exposed the deplorable condition of blacks
in urban areas.
- laid bare the practices of the stock
market.
- uncovered official collusion in prostitution and
"white slavery."
- unmasked the corrupt alliance
between big business and municipal government.
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front 24 ~The muckrakers signified much about the nature of the progressive
reform movement because they
- counted on drastic
political change to fight social wrongs.
- thrived on
publicity rather than social change.
- believed that the cure
for the ills of American democracy lay in less democracy and more
government control.
- sought not to overthrow capitalism but
to cleanse it with democratic controls.
- refused to look
beyond middle-class concerns
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front 25 ~Most muckrakers believed that their primary function in the
progressive attack on social ills was to
- formulate a
consistent philosophy of social reform.
- explain the causes
of social ills.
- devise solutions to society's
problems.
- make the public aware of social problems.
- link up with movements for social justice.
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front 26 ~The leading progressive organization advocating prohibition of
liquor was
- the National
Consumers League.
- Hull House.
- the General
Federation of Women's Clubs.
- the Progressive Party.
- the Women's Christian Temperance Union.
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front 27 ~Progressive reformers were mainly men and women from the
- middle class.
- lower class
- upper class.
- new wave of
immigrants.
- small towns.
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front 28 ~Political progressivism
- made little
difference in American life.
- died out shortly after Teddy
Roosevelt stepped down as president.
- emerged in both major
parties, in all regions, at all levels of government.
- was
more a minority movement than a majority mood.
- began in
Northeastern big cities.
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front 29 ~According to progressives, the cure for all of American democracy's
ills was
- technical and
scientific expertise.
- a third political party.
- socialism.
- a more conservative government.
- more democracy.
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front 30 ~To regain the power that the people had lost to the
"interests," progressives advocated all of the following except
- initiative.
- referendum.
- recall.
- socialism.
- direct
election of U.S. senators.
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front 31 ~All of the following were prime goals of earnest progressives except
- the direct election of
senators.
- prohibition.
- women's suffrage.
- ending prostitution and "white slavery."
- abolishing special workplace protections for women.
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front 32 ~The progressive movement was instrumental in getting the Seventeenth
amendment added to the Constitution, which provided for __________
- prohibition.
- direct election of senators.
- woman suffrage.
- the income tax.
- elimination of child labor.
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front 33 ~The settlement house and women's club movements were crucial centers
of female progressive activity because they
- provided literary
and philosophical perspectives on social questions.
- broke
down the idea that women had special concerns as wives and
mothers.
- introduced many middle-class women to a broader
array of urban social problems and civic concerns.
- helped
slum children learn to read Dante and Shakespeare.
- became
the launching pads for women seeking political office.
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front 34 ~Which of the following was not among the issues addressed by women
in the progressive movement?
- ending special
regulations governing women in the workplace
- preventing
child labor in factories and sweatshops
- insuring that food
products were healthy and safe
- attacking tuberculosis and
other diseases bred in slum tenements
- creating pensions for
mothers with dependent children
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front 35 ~In Muller v. Oregon, the Supreme Court upheld the principle promoted
by progressives like Florence Kelley and Louis Brandeis that
- child labor under the
age of fourteen should be prohibited.
- the federal
government should regulate occupational safety and health.
- factory labor should be limited to ten hours a day five days a
week.
- female workers should receive equal pay for equal
work.
- female workers required special rules and protection on
the job.
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front 36 ~The public outcry after the horrible Triangle Shirtwaist fire led
many states to pass
- mandatory fire escape
plans for all businesses employing more than ten people.
- restrictions on female employment in the clothing industry.
- safety regulations and workmen's compensation laws for job
injuries.
- zoning regulations governing where factories could
be located.
- laws guaranteeing unions the right to raise
safety concerns.
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front 37 ~The case of Lochner v. New York represented a setback for
progressives and labor advocates because the Supreme Court in its ruling
- declared a law
limiting work to ten hours a day unconstitutional.
- declared unconstitutional a law providing special protection
for women workers.
- declared that prohibiting child labor
would require a constitutional amendment.
- upheld the
constitutionality of a law enabling business to fire labor
organizers.
- ruled that fire and safety regulations were
local and not state or federal concerns.
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front 38 ~The progressive-inspired city-manager system of government
- brought democracy to
urban dwellers.
- was developed in Wisconsin.
- was
designed to remove politics from municipal administration.
- made giant strides under the leadership of Hiram Johnson.
- opened urban politics to new immigrants.
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front 39 ~Progressive reform at the level of city government seemed to
indicate that the progressives' highest priority was
- democratic
participation.
- governmental efficiency.
- free
enterprise.
- economic equality.
- urban planning.
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front 40 ~While president, Theodore Roosevelt chose to label his reform
proposals as the
- Fair Deal.
- Big Deal.
- Big Stick.
- New Deal.
- Square Deal.
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front 41 ~As a part of his reform program, Teddy Roosevelt advocated all of
the following except
- control of labor.
- control of corporations.
- consumer protection.
- conservation of natural resources.
- an end to railroad
rebates.
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front 42 ~Teddy Roosevelt helped to end the 1902 strike in the anthracite coal
mines by
- using the military to
force the miners back to work.
- passing legislation making
the miners' union illegal.
- helping the mine owners to
import strike-breakers.
- appealing to mine owners' and
workers' sense of the public interest.
- threatening to seize
the mines and to operate them with federal troops.
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front 43 ~Teddy Roosevelt believed that large corporate trusts
- had to all be busted
up if the American economy were to thrive.
- were essential
to American national power and economic growth.
- were
simply too powerful to be broken up or regulated.
- were bad
only if they acted as monopolies against the public interest.
- should be balanced by strong labor unions.
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front 44 ~One unusual and significant characteristic of the anthracite coal
strike in 1902 was that
- the coal miners' union
was officially recognized as the legal bargaining agent of the
miners.
- for a time the mines were seized by the national
government and operated by federal troops.
- the national
government did not automatically side with the owners in the
dispute.
- the owners quickly agreed to negotiate with labor
representatives in order to settle their differences
peacefully.
- it generated widespread middle-class
support.
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front 45 ~Teddy Roosevelt believed that trusts
- could be destroyed
without damage to the American economy.
- were greedy for
power and wealth.
- were too powerful to be regulated.
- were here to stay with their efficient means of production.
- should be balanced by strong labor unions.
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front 46 ~President Roosevelt believed that the federal government should
adopt a policy of ___________trusts.
- dissolving
- ignoring
- regulating
- collusion with
- monitoring
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front 47 ~When Upton Sinclair wrote The Jungle, he intended his book to focus
attention on the
- unsanitary
conditions that existed in the meat-packing industry.
- plight of workers in the stockyards and meat-packing
industry.
- corruption in the United States Senate.
- deplorable conditions in the drug industry.
- unhealthy
effects of beef consumption.
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front 48 ~Of the following legislation aimed at resource conservation, the
only one associated with Roosevelt's presidency was the
- Desert Land Act.
- Forest Reserve Act.
- Newlands Act.
- Cary
Act.
- Clean Water Act.
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front 49 ~According to the text, Teddy Roosevelt's most enduring achievement
may have been
- the Panama Canal.
- his trust busting.
- mediating an end to the
Russo-Japanese War.
- his efforts supporting the
environment.
- his efforts at consumer protection.
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front 50 ~The idea of "multiple-use resource management" included
all of the following practices except
- recreation.
- damming of rivers.
- sustained-yield logging.
- summer stock grazing.
- watershed protection.
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front 51 ~Teddy Roosevelt weakened himself politically after his election in
1904 when he
- got into a quarrel
with his popular secretary of war, William Taft.
- refused
to do anything in response to the "Roosevelt Panic."
- supported the Federal Reserve Act.
- began to reduce his
trust-busting activity.
- announced that he would not be a
candidate for a third term as president.
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front 52 ~The panic of 1907 stimulated reform in __________ policy.
- banking
- tariff
- land-use
- industrial
- stock-trading
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front 53 ~Theodore Roosevelt is probably most accurately described as
- an ardent defender of
American individualism.
- a near-socialist.
- a
middle-of-the-road reformer.
- a champion
"trustbuster."
- a political elitist.
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front 54 ~While president, Theodore Roosevelt
- greatly increased the
power and prestige of the presidency.
- showed no skill and
little interest in working with Congress.
- was a poor judge
of public opinion.
- was surprisingly unpopular with the
public.
- held rigidly to ideological principles.
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front 55 ~During his presidency, Teddy Roosevelt did all of the following except
- expand presidential
power.
- shape the progressive movement.
- aid the cause
of the environment.
- provide an international
perspective.
- tame capitalism.
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front 56 ~As president, William Howard Taft
- was a good judge of
public opinion.
- held together the diverse wings of the
Republican party.
- was wedded more to the status quo than to
progressive change.
- adopted a confrontational attitude
toward Congress.
- carried on the legacy of Theodore
Roosevelt
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front 57 ~President Taft's foreign policy was dubbed
- big-stick
diplomacy.
- the Open Door policy.
- the Good Neighbor
policy.
- dollar diplomacy.
- sphere-of-influence
diplomacy.
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front 58 ~The Supreme Court's "rule of reason" in antitrust law was
handed down in a case involving
- Northern
Securities.
- United States Steel.
- General
Electric.
- Amour Meat-Packing.
- Standard Oil.
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