<p>The 14 points called for freedom of the seas, reductions in arms, freedom of international trade, A League of Nations and more.</p>
<p>What did the Treaty of Versailles at the end of WWI say?</p>
<p>The 14 points called for freedom of the seas, reductions in arms, freedom of international trade, A League of Nations and more.</p>
<p>What did the Treaty of Versailles at the end of WWI say?</p>
<p>Some of Wilson’s 14 points:
-Freedom of the seas
-Self-determination in many nascent countries
-League of Nations</p>
<p>What piece of legislation empowered the ICC to give cease and desist orders to companies and corporations?</p>
<p>“What piece of legislation empowered the ICC to give cease and desist orders to companies and corporations?”</p>
<p>The Federal Trade Comission</p>
<p>Someone tell me what the Treaty of Versailles did.</p>
<p>Treaty of Versailles
ended WWI for Europe, but because the senate rejected it, US had to sign a different treaty with Germany (i think)
established boundaries for certain nations…partial self-determination because many people fell under the control of other nationalities
established the League of Nations
made it a moral obligation for those who signed to help/intervene when another member of the league was at war</p>
<p>umm…don’t rememberr…omg…I am so screwed for this exam…</p>
<p>What was the Dred Scott deicison?</p>
<p>The Dred Scott decision:</p>
<p>Because slaves are not citizens, they cannot sue. This case could not legally free Dred Scott from slavery. Furthermore, this trial reinforced the concept that slaves were property.</p>
<p>Dred Scott decision said that slaves weren’t actually citizens of the US and couldn’t be considered free, even in free states (they were considered to be property). It also said that the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional b/c the govt. couldn’t abolish slavery anywhere.</p>
<p>what was that tribute to the United States during the 1920s that was controversial cuz it invovled teh Ku Klux Klan???</p>
<p>Birth of A Nation. Crazy thing is Wilson liked it.</p>
<p>who made it? and like…what exactly did it have to do with ku klux klan?</p>
<h2>W.D Griffith: It was stereotypical–Whites were pictured as supreme with faithful “darkies” (african americans) by their side; it promoted the klan persona, deemin them as heroes in a sense.</h2>
<p>1.What occurred at the Potsdam Conference?
2.Who was Michael Harrington?</p>
<p>Potsdam: the first major global conference of the Allies after the death of FDR. Truman attends as the chief American delegate, and during this conference, is told that the atomic bomb is ready for deployment. Other important stuff happens too (probably an agreement on something regarding postwar reconstruction), but I can’t remember, someone else can fill that part in.</p>
<p>List any and all of the Treaty of Parises that America signed, and which war/conflict each one ended.</p>
<p>Come on guys! APUSH exam is in about 12 hours! Let’s get movin</p>
<p>I’m getting so sick of history</p>
<p>dont know much about history…
dont know much trigonometry…</p>
<p>what was teh treaty of grenville</p>
<p>treaty of paris of 1763- ended the french and indian war
treaty of paris of 1783- ended the revolutionary war </p>
<p>What was the wade-davis bill?</p>
<p>reconstruction of the south was a legistlative matter</p>
<p>who was jacob coxey?</p>
<p>Ron: The Treaty Of Grenville, involved lord Grenville who was England’s Premier governor/minister of the colonies (doesn’t seem like it wheen reading, and now I’m talking about Andros in the Dominion of England). I think it involved various treates with Indian tribes that would grant the United States more land (toward the Appalachains, not passed–Treaty of Paris 1763). Also, back during the revolutionary period–Grenville also advocated the passage of the stamp and coercive acts to be passed to fund the exorbitant amount of soldiers in the colonies; particulary for the cause.</p>
<p>wade-davis bill - aggressive republican reconstruction plan that Lincoln vetoed, caused a lot of bad blood, Lincoln later put into effect a softer version of the bill (10 percent of citizens instead of 50)</p>
<p>jacob coxey - wait no, wrong thing, this guy just led unemployed people on marches to washington to argue that the government should print paper money</p>
<p>wait what was lincolns version of the bill called?</p>
<p>I didn’t think it had a name? Enlighten me. :)</p>