AP U.S. Govt. & Politics Exam ch

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AP U.S. Govt. & Politics Exam ch 4.1-8 2013 1) Civil liberties are that the government cannot take away. a) recognitions of equality b) religious freedoms c) property rights d) business rights e) protections 2) The Bill of Rights is made up of the first amendments to the U.S. Constitution. a) ten b) twelve c) five d) three 3) Which clause prevents the national government from sanctioning an official religion? a) free exercise b) establishment c) full faith and credit d) equal protection e) due process 4) The incorporation doctrine makes the protections from the Bill of Rights applicable to the states through which of the following amendments? a) Fifth b) Fourth c) Fourteenth d) Tenth e) Sixth 5) Gitlow v. New York, in which the Supreme Court held that freedom of speech and of the press are fundamental liberties protected by the Fourteenth Amendment from impairment by the states, began the development of the doctrine of. a) eminent domain b) establishment c) free exercise d) full faith and credit e) incorporation 6) What did Abington School District v. Schempp find to be unconstitutional? a) state-mandated Bible reading b) discrimination against homosexuals c) forced sterilization d) imprisonment without a trial e) segregated education 7) The free exercise clause guarantees that the national government will not interfere with which of the following? a) business b) speech c) religion d) education e) finance

8) Freedom of assembly is guaranteed by which constitutional amendment? a) First b) Fifth c) Third d) Second e) Fourth 9) Which of the following generally is unconstitutional in school? a) a weapon b) fighting c) free speech d) prayer e) punishment 10) Which test examines the constitutionality of aid to church-related schools? a) Due Process test b) Lemon test c) Free Exercise test d) Prior Restraint test e) Orange test 11) The Supreme Court has aroused the wrath of many Americans with rulings like that in Engel v. Vitale regarding which controversial religious issue? a) use of public funds in religious organizations b) displays of religious symbols on government buildings c) recitation of prayer and Bible passages in school d) displays of religious symbols during holidays e) teaching of evolution in school 12) The Supreme Court has used incorporation to the rights of states. a) expand b) limit c) protect d) enforce e) define 13) In matters of religion, the free exercise clause protects individuals from which of the following? a) segregation b) discrimination c) persecution d) governmental intrusion e) dissenting opinions 14) Which clause states that Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion? a) establishment b) free exercise c) due process d) equal protection e) full faith and credit

15) In Zelman v. Simmons-Harris, in upholding a state program providing families with vouchers that could be used to pay tuition at religious schools, the Supreme Court of its earlier decisions. a) contradicted the reasoning b) loosened the constraints c) enforced the rationale d) defined the limits e) narrowed the scope 16) In Barron v. Baltimore, the Supreme Court held that the Bill of Rights limits, not, action. a) federal; local b) federal; state and local c) state; local d) state; federal e) local; state 17) The Fourth Amendment protects citizens from which of the following? a) fines b) double jeopardy c) self-incrimination d) trials without a jury e) search and seizure 18) Which of the following best represents the reasoning used by the Supreme Court in Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. City of Hialeah, in which the Court overturned a city ordinance prohibiting the ritual killing of animals? a) Any law banning a religious practice must be passed at the state, not the local, level. b) The establishment clause would prevent the city from having such an ordinance. c) People must be free to practice their religion, no matter what it involves. d) A government that permits other forms of killing animals may not ban sacrifices. e) Local laws that interfere with religion, even if not aimed at religion, are unconstitutional. 19) In Engel v. Vitale, the Supreme Court found it unconstitutional to require school children to do which of the following? a) desegregate b) pay for books c) take standardized tests d) be bussed e) pray 20) The relationship between the state and religion is addressed in a) the clear and present danger clause. b) the establishment clause. c) the free exercise clause. d) (b and C) 21) The establishment clause does all of the following except... a) prohibits the establishment of a state religion. b) provides a wall of separation between church and state. c) was furthered by the Lemon v. Kurtzman decision. d) allows student led prayer at football games

22) The Supreme Court maintains that the establishment clause prevents all of the following evils EXCEPT... a) sponsorship. b) financial support. c) active involvement of government in religious activity. d) accommodating to religious needs. 23) Prayer in public schools... a) is strictly unconstitutional. b) may not be endorsed by school authorities. c) may not be audible. d) is constitutional if it is a nondenominational. 24) The principle behind provisions of federal aid to some parochial school activities is... a) when the student s abilities and needs are more important than religious issues. b) whether the parochial school is certified. c) whether aid has a secular purpose and does not confer state endorsement of religion.. d) related to the age of the students. Older students (university) are less likely to be influenced by religious teachings. 25) All are true about the free exercise clause EXCEPT that... a) The right to practice a religion is less protected than the right to hold beliefs. b) Employment Division v Smith held that a generally applicable law can hurt religious practice. c) Congress passed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act in order to create a more restrictive standard than in Supreme Court s ruling in Employment Division v Smith. d) Most recently, the Supreme Court has held that the use of hallucinogenic tea in religious practices is not constitutionally protected. 26) In Roth v. U.S., the U.S. Supreme Court held that material must be utterly without social importance in order to be considered. a) illegal b) a prior restraint c) obscene d) fighting words e) hate speech 27) A false written statement is ; the same statement spoken aloud is. a) libel; defamation b) libel; slander c) slander; defamation d) slander; libel e) defamation; slander 28) Which amendment protects the right to bear arms? a) Second b) Fifth c) Fourth d) First e) Third

29) New York Times Co. v. Sullivan held that there must be proof of which of the following in order to find libel against a public figure? a) a written record b) an audience c) actual malice d) property loss e) actual harm 30) Near v. Minnesota was a landmark Supreme Court case involving which of the following? a) prior restraint b) exclusionary rule c) due process clause d) selective incorporation doctrine e) free exercise clause 31) In recent years, the Supreme Court has struggled to address on the Internet in a First Amendment context. a) libel b) obscenity c) slander d) fighting words e) hate speech 32) Which of the following Supreme Court cases demonstrates how reluctant the courts are to exercise prior restraint even when national security issues are involved? a) Near v. Minnesota b) New York Times v. United States c) Roe v. Wade d) Barron v. Baltimore e) Miranda v. Arizona 33) Prohibiting a newspaper from publishing a story critical of the government is example of what kind of law? a) prior restraint b) criminal c) civil d) content-based e) viewpoint-based 34) During World War I, the Supreme Court upheld the conviction of Charles T. Schenck, ruling that government can limit speech that. a) is a prior restraint b) creates a clear and present danger c) is critical of the government d) qualifies as hate speech e) is symbolic but obscene 35) Which Supreme Court case upheld an individual s right to have a gun in his or her home? a) Gideon v. Wainwright b) Griswold v. Connecticut c) Mapp v. Ohio d) Miranda v. Arizona e) McDonald v. Chicago

36) Commercial speech is constitutionally protected a) and applies to any speech intended to make a profit. b) and is more heavily regulated than other speech. c) and includes false and misleading political advertising. d) even to the extent that it protects advertising the sale of illegal goods. 37) A general definition of obscenity includes all of the following EXCEPT that it... a) offends women. b) appeals to prurient interests. c) lacks serious literary or artistic value. d) lacks political or scientific value. 38) The case that tests for obscenity is a) Reno v ACLU b) Miller v California c) Roth v IRA d) Pink Poodle v Smith 39) In the Tinker case, the Supreme Court held that high school students could a) wear armbands that protested the Vietnam War b) be prosecuted for using drugs off-campus c) did not have a right to symbolic speech d) be denied a diploma if they weren t cool. 40) The Supreme Court said that a march by the American Nazi Party in a Jewish neighborhood of Chicago was a) a constitutional right of free assembly b) not protected by the Constitution because a march is not the same as an assembly c) a constitutional right of free speech d) not protected by the Constitution because it infringed on the rights of Holocaust survivors. 41) In Griswold v. Connecticut (1965), the Supreme Court relied on... a) principles relating to procedural due process. b) the right to privacy as implied in the First, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Ninth and Fourteenth Amendments. c) the moral suasion of the general public. d) the right to life as implied in the First, Fourth, Fifth, Ninth and Fourteenth Amendments. e) the 10th Amendment. 42) The purpose of a grand jury is to... a) find out whether there is enough evidence to hold a trial. b) report to the judge as to the possible outcome of a trial. c) render judgment in federal cases. d) review the decisions of petite juries as part of the appeal process e) (all of the above) 43) Procedural due process refers to the... a) appropriate procedures for writing laws. b) methods by which a law is applied. c) rights in the 14th amendment which were at the foundation of Brown v. Board of Education. d) idea that unreasonable laws are unconstitutional. e) idea that laws must be grounded in a legislative review.

CB 1994 44) The author of the cartoon above would most likely agree with which of the following? a) Only the exclusionary rule can protect the rights of those accused of violating the law. b) The exclusionary rule has been detrimental to the maintenance of law and order. c) Plea bargaining is an effective means of reducing court backlogs. d) The Warren Court advocated social order at the expense of civil liberties. e) The Rehnquist Court has been too lenient toward criminals. 45) The power of national and state governments to take private property for public use is termed... a) regulatory takings. b) the right of eminent domain. c) the taking clause. d) expropriation. e) nationalization 46) Substantive due process refers to the... a) appropriate procedures for writing laws. b) methods by which a law is applied. c) rights in the 14th amendment which were at the foundation of Brown v. Board of Education. d) idea that unreasonable laws are unconstitutional. e) idea that the substance of prosecutorial efforts must conform to criminal statutes.

47) The following are true about search and seizure EXCEPT: a) Warrantless searchers in public places are unconstitutional. b) A Terry search allows for a stop and frisk exception to searches of individuals. c) The Plain-view exception allows for officers to seize evidence without a warrant if it is in plain view. d) Mapp v Ohio applied the exclusionary rule to the states. e) The search and seizure rules apply to the federal government. 48) The rule that evidence which is obtained unconstitutionally cannot be used in a criminal trial as part of the government s main case is called the... a) due process clause. b) rule of evidence. c) exclusionary rule. d) ex post facto rule. e) bill of attainder 49) Which is included as part of the free exercise clause of the First Amendment? a) The government may not become involved with religious teaching. b) The government may not embrace some religions at the expense of others. c) The government may not designate an official religion. d) The government may not favor religion over non-religion. e) The government may not interfere with the individual practice of religious beliefs. 50) Since 1925, the Supreme Court has relied on the due process clause of the to uphold the Bill of Rights on the state level. a) First Amendment b) Fifth Amendment c) Fourteenth Amendment d) Eighteenth Amendment e) Twenty-sixth Amendment 51) Probable cause was established to. a) allow the police to arrest any previously-convicted person for any reason b) protect a felo ss right to freedom of assembly c) prevent a person from being convicted if the jury is not convinced of guilt d) prevent police from obtaining evidence in a random or haphazard manner e) protect a person from having their property seized by the government for no reason 52) Before engaging in wiretaps of phone and electronic communications, the police must. a) set legal parameters and a timeframe for the wiretap b) gather evidence against the person who is subject of the wiretap c) know a crime has been committed d) clearly identify the target of the investigation e) obtain a warrant 53) In the 1780s, why did state ratifying conventions insist on the inclusion of a Bill of Rights? a) They wanted to give the president more power relative to the Congress. b) They remembered the abuses of civil liberties levied on colonists by the British Empire. c) They believed that the national government did not have enough power. d) They were pressured to do so by their local governments. e) They distrusted states with the power given to them by the Constitution.

54) The two clauses in the Constitution that concern religion are the. a) free exercise clause and the due process clause b) establishment clause and the clear and present danger clause c) due process clause and the clear and present danger clause d) establishment clause and the free exercise clause e) clear and present danger clause and the free exercise clause 55) The principle established by the Supreme Court, holding that evidence gathered illegally cannot be introduced into trial, is known as. a) the Miranda rule b) the rule against prior restraints c) the Patriot Act d) the exclusionary rule e) due process 56) The landmark decision of Roe v. Wade forced states to. a) balance habeas corpus with a woman s right to privacy b) make abortions illegal in cases of rape, incest, and the health of the mother c) grant paid maternity leave to women who decided not to have abortions d) make abortions legal throughout all three trimesters of pregnancy e) find a balance to a woman s Fourteenth Amendment right with the state s interest in the life of the child and health of the mother 57) The Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, and Eighth Amendments can be incongruent with majority rule because. a) they limit the scope of civil liberties b) they prevent dissent against the government c) they ensure minority rule in certain cases d) they limit the power of Congress in declaring war e) they protect the rights of criminals 58) The safeguard protecting citizens from testifying against themselves in a trial is found in the. a) self-incrimination clause of the Fifth Amendment b) equal protection of the laws clause of the Fourteenth Amendment c) double jeopardy clause of the Fifth Amendment d) cruel and unusual punishment clause of the Eighth Amendment e) unreasonable searches and seizures clause of the Fourth Amendment 59) In order to be legal, a search warrant must specify. a) the approximate time of day that the search will occur b) the officers who will be searching a location c) the means by which the search will be carried out d) the people who police believe committed a crime e) the area to be searched and what police are searching for

60) The free exercise clause. a) requires community colleges to install filtering software b) requires age-verification systems for websites c) prohibits making offensive content available to minors online d) prohibits Congress from impeding religious beliefs e) required websites to abide by community standards for obscene materials 61) The assertion that no person accused of a crime should be imprisoned without evidence is the. a) search warrant b) bill of attainder c) ex post facto law d) common law marriage e) writ of Habeas Corpus 62) Near v. Minnesota was a landmark First Amendment decision affirming. a) freedom of speech b) freedom of expression c) clear-and-present-danger doctrine d) unconstitutionality of prior restraint e) freedom of assembly 63) Legal opinion about the establishment clause of the First Amendment is split between strict separation of church and state and accommodation of all religions. The tension between the two camps results in Supreme Court rulings that: a) seem to provide support for both sides at the same time b) try to find common ground for all religions c) are ignored at the state level d) have been remarkably consistent over the years e) vary depending on the case and the justices on the Court 64) Constitutional and legal protections of individuals against government actions are. a) civil liberties b) civil rights c) due process rights d) procedural rights e) constitutional rights 65) The Fifth Amendment prevents the government from seizing private property without just compensation because a) otherwise, the government could deprive citizens of the fundamental right to property b) it prevents the government from gathering property transaction taxes from citizens c) bamks are legally required to officiate the transfer of property from one entity to another d) it violates a person s Fifth Amendment right against illegal search and seizure e) the government would then be able to build public projects through private lands 66) Which of the following is true about the Eighth Amendment? a) Five states have laws that require a mandatory death penalty for felony murder convictions. b) It forbids cruel and unusual punishment, which does not include the death penalty. c) There are some exceptions for legal representation in murder cases. d) Judges do not have discretion when dealing with minors.