Which of the following splits did not affect the Democratic party in 1924?
A) Fundamentalists versus Modernists
B) northern liberals versus southern conservatives
C) immigrants versus old-stock Americans
D) urbanites versus suburbanites
E) "wets" versus "drys"
Answer: D
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APUSH Chapter 31
- America's major foreign-policy problem in the 1920s was addressed by the Dawes Plan, which
- America's European allies argued that they should not have to repay loans that the United States made to them during World War I because
- In the early 1920s, one glaring exception to America's general indifference to the outside world was its
- Senator Robert La Follette's Progressive party advocated all of the following except
- The intended beneficiaries of the McNary-Haugen Bill were __________; the intended beneficiaries of the Norris-LaGuardia Act were __________.
- After the initial shock of the Harding scandals, many Americans reacted by
- Which of the following was not a consequence of the American policy of raising tariffs sky-high in the 1920s?
- One exception to President Warren G. Harding's policy of isolationism involved in the Middle East, where the United States sought to
- The 1932 Stimson doctrine
- In response to the League of Nations' investigation into Japan's invasion and occupation of Manchuria,
- President Hoover's public image was severely damaged by his
- The Bonus Expeditionary Force marched on Washington, D.C., in 1932 to demand
- The Reconstruction Finance Corporation was established to
- The _____ was an 'alphabetical agency' set up under Hoover's administration to bring the government into the anti-depression effort.
- President Hoover's approach to the Great Depression was to
- President Herbert Hoover believed that the Great Depression could be ended b doing all of the following except
- In America, the Great Depression caused
- As a result of the Hawley Smoot Tariff of 1930,
- The Federal Farm Board, created by the Agricultural Marketing Act, lent money to farmers primarily to help them to
- When elected to the presidency in 1828, Herbert Hoover
- One of Herbert Hoover's chief strengths as a presidential candidate was his
- All of the following were political liabilities for Alfred E. Smith except his
- The most colorful presidential candidate of the 1920s was
- America's major foreign-policy problem in the 1920s was addressed by the Dawes Plan, which