AP United States Educational Game!!!

<p>uhhh, Munn v. Illinois said that intrastate railroads had to submit to regulation by the state, and Wabash v. Illinois said that states cannot regulate RR lines that crossed state borders, as only Congress has the power to regulate interstate commerce.</p>

<p>I have no idea if this question’s been used already, but:</p>

<p>What civil rights organization organized the Freedom Rides, and in which Alabama city was their bus firebombed? (Hint: It’s not Birmingham)</p>

<p>I think it was the SNCC and the CORE.</p>

<p>Selma? Montgomery?</p>

<p>There was a civil rights march from Selma to Montgomery, is that what your asking for?</p>

<p>What was the Wagner Act?</p>

<p>It was the replacement for the failed NIRA under Roosevelt-basically gave more recognition to labor unions, guaranteed a worker’s right to join a union, and formed the national relations board</p>

<ol>
<li>describe the differences between the first and second new deal, and characterize the critics</li>
</ol>

<p>The critics of Roosevelt included the American Liberty League, led by Al Smith, who criticized Roosevelt for going socialist, Roosevelt’s rival, Huey Long, who promoted the “Share our wealth” program, Charles E. Coughlin who created the National Union of Social Injustice, Coughlin’s supporters being the lower-middle class.</p>

<p>What was the HIGHEST tariff in US History? Also, does anyone know a site that has a list of Supreme Ct. cases, and their results??</p>

<p>can someone clarify the difference between Munn vs. Illinois and Wabash vs. Illinois?</p>

<p>Q: What was the “Bear Flag Republic”?</p>

<p>Q: What was the “Bear Flag Republic”?</p>

<p>A: During the Mexican-American War, someone – I want to say John C. Fremont, but I’m not certain – captured Sacramento (in California), declared it independent, and called it the “Bear Flag Republic.”</p>

<p>Which act, in effect, instituted the first draft?</p>

<p>Supreme Court gave the government the power to regulate private industries in Munn v. Illinois. In Wabash v. Illinois, the Supreme Court reversed its decision in the first case and decided that Illinois’ attempt at regulating railroad rates interfered with Congress’ ability to authorize the Interstate Commerce Act.</p>

<p>Was the first draft instituted by the Selective Service Act during WWII?</p>

<p>no I think Civil War. Both the Union and the Confederate drafted units.</p>

<p>What did Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston have in common?</p>

<p>Ok this isn’t a question</p>

<p>Can someone compile a list of all the presidents who died during their presidencies and then write next to them a BRIEF summary of how they died
ie. pneumonia or shot by john wilkes booth at ford theatre</p>

<p>THANKS! =) good luck everyone</p>

<p>What did the Treaty of Aix la Chapelle do ?
And why was Richard Hakluyt significant?
</p>

<p>“Was the first draft instituted by the Selective Service Act during WWII?”</p>

<p>that was the first peacetime military draft</p>

<p>Was the first draft instituted by the Selective Service Act during WWII?</p>

<p>The first draft was instituted by the Selective Service Act, but it was during WWII (1917, to be exact).</p>

<p>acacia:</p>

<p>William Henry Harrison (9th President): Died of pneumonia (1841)
Zachary Taylor (12th President): Died of some sickness (1850)
Abraham Lincoln (16th President): Assassinated by John Wilkes Booth at Ford’s Theater (1865)
James Garfield (20th President): Shot by office-seeking Stalwart – died 11 weeks later, as a result (1881)
William McKinley (25th President): Assassinated by anarchist (1901)
Warren G. Harding (29th President): Died suddenly… (1923)
Franklin D. Roosevelt (32nd President): Died of cerebral hemorrhage (1945)
John F. Kennedy (35th President): Assassinated by Lee Harvey Oswald in Dallas, Texas (1963)</p>

<p>what about the draft during the civil war?</p>

<p>yea the draft during the civil war…was that only in the north?</p>

<p>no the CSA drafted people from the age 17 i think excluding those that own a lot of slaves or paid a certain sum of money.</p>