The Final Exam will be administered from 1:30pm-3:30pm on Friday, December 6, 2013. The exam will consist of three parts: Part I will feature ID questions (just like those on the midterm and the quiz), Part II will feature short-answer questions (see below), and Part III will feature an essay question (again, similar to the midterm). Part I: The ID section (40% of exam) This section of the final exam will feature six ID questions in the form of "key terms" selected from the list below (these terms actually come from the terms listed at the top of each lecture outline). You will choose any FOUR (4) ID questions and answer them by writing a short paragraph (not a list!) explaining who or what this is, where and when it existed, and then explain why it is important (e.g. to which big event does it relate? What does it help explain? What is significant about it?). These four questions will be worth 10% each, with the total section worth 40% of the exam. Here are the key terms you need to study (All of these are "fair game" but only six will appear on the exam): -Frankfurt Parliament -Franco-Prussian War -Suez Canal -Battle of Omdurman -Gavrilo Princip -Race to the Sea -Burgfrieden -Article 231 -Locarno -Mensheviks -Provisional Government -April Theses -"Socialism in one country -kulaks -Enabling Law -Kristallnacht -Lebensraum -Munich Conference -Battle of Stalingrad -D-Day Part II: The short-answer section (30% of exam) This section of the final exam will feature two short-answer questions. You will choose ONE (1) question to answer with a short, 1- to 2-paragraph response. Your answer to this question does not necessarily have to be a thesis-driven essay. Instead, you may simply respond to the question by explaining what you know about the topic, giving the most relevant details, and taking a position at the end. Your answer to this question will be worth 30% of the exam. Here are three possible questions for the shor