Deck 25: Americans and a World in Crisis

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Pearl Harbor
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America First Committee
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War Production Board and the Office of Price Administration
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T he "Good Neighbor" policy
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Wendell Willkie
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C ash-and-carry
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Office of War Information
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"Destroyers-for-bases" swap
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War Powers Act
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Rosie the Riveter
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Manhattan Project
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Smith-Connally Labor Disputes Act
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Jewish Refugees, the vessel St. Louis
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"Double V" campaign
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A. Philip Randolph, Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters
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Neutrality Acts
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Nuremberg Laws
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L end-lease
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Atlantic Charter
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Navajo "code talkers"
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Fulgencio Batista
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Battles of Iwo Jima and Okinawa
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Holocaust
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General Douglas MacArthur, Admiral Chester Nimitz
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The Grand Alliance
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Harry S Truman
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Leo Szilard, Enrico Fermi, Albert Einstein
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B raceros
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Potsdam Declaration
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Dwight Eisenhower
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WACS, WAVES, WASPS
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Hiroshima and Nagasaki
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Operation Overlord, D-Day
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Battle of the Midway
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Gerald Nye
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Battle of the Bulge
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Selective Service and Training Act
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Executive Order 8802
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A ppeasement
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Yalta Conference
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War Production Board
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Winston Churchill
Question
In an effort to bolster American security and help England during the Battle of Britain, President Roosevelt concluded an agreement with Prime Minister Churchill that

A) sold American tanks and cruisers to Great Britain on a deferred payment schedule.
B) allowed Britain to use American air bases in exchange for a guarantee of safe Atlantic passage for American merchant vessels.
C) transferred fifty vintage American destroyers to Britain in exchange for leases on British air and naval bases in the Western Hemisphere.
D) drew up a timetable for eventual American participation in the war against Hitler.
E) provided $5.2 billion in direct military assistance.
Question
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Adolf Hitler
Question
In 1940 and 1941 President Roosevelt wished to prolong negotiations with the Japanese rather than go to war. Why?

A) The negotiations had been making substantial progress and most of the points of disagreement were being resolved.
B) Roosevelt knew that he did not have a large enough navy to fight both Japan and Germany.
C) The American people were virulently anti-Japanese and therefore the anti-interventionist sentiment regarding Asian affairs was very strong.
D) The Japanese had ended their expansion and were looking forward to a century of coprosperity.
E) All he was concerned about was war in Europe; the situation in the Pacific was unimportant to him.
Question
Which of these does not represent the Native American experience during World War II?

A) They served as code talkers, relaying secret messages for the U.S. military in a complex language that the Japanese couldn't understand.
B) Many Native Americans left reservations for good-paying jobs in West Coast defense industries.
C) Anti-Indian discrimination forced many Native Americans back onto reservations.
D) Many Native American reservations saw their budgets nearly triple, thanks to money sent back by Indian defense workers.
E) Native Americans once again faced the risk of their land being taken, and organized the National Congress of American Indians to fight this trend.
Question
What role did the American scientific community have in World War II?

A) The government insisted that scientific inquiry should not be interrupted by the war.
B) Most of the nation's scientists opposed the war and refused to have anything to do with it.
C) Scientists participated actively in developing new weapons, chemicals, medicines, and medical techniques that would advance the fight against the Axis powers.
D) There was a constant conflict between scientists and the military because the military refused to allow scientists a role in the weapons race.
E) Scientists left the government for better-paying jobs in private industry.
Question
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Joseph Stalin
Question
Which statement best represents the United States' response to reports of the German persecution of Jews?

A) The United States expressed sympathy for the plight of the Jews and liberalized its restrictive immigration laws.
B) The United States refused to liberalize its restrictive immigration laws or seriously consider rescue schemes.
C) Americans overwhelmingly supported legislation to admit twenty thousand German refugee children.
D) The President and Congress were unaware of the reports.
E) The United States sponsored the ship St. Louis to rescue 900 Jews for resettlement in America.
Question
Why didn't America take action in 1938 when German tanks rolled into Vienna and Czechoslovakia, in direct violation of the Versailles Treaty?

A) The American public thought U.S. participation in World War I was a mistake.
B) The U.S. had a long tradition of isolationism and did not want to get involved in foreign struggles.
C) Americans wanted the government to focus on the economic turmoil at home caused by the Great Depression.
D) All of these choices
E) None of these choices
Question
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Arsenal of Democracy
Question
The Smith-Connally Labor Disputes Act

A) empowered the president to take over any facility where strikes interrupted war production.
B) guaranteed labor the right of union membership.
C) prohibited government employees from joining unions or engaging in political activity.
D) mandated wage increases at twice the cost of living, so that war production would not be interrupted by strikes.
E) eliminated all federal restrictions on the right to strike.
Question
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Office of Price Administration
Question
The various federal agencies created during World War II to coordinate the war effort did all the following except

A) limit or stop the production of civilian goods.
B) impose strict ceilings on corporate profits.
C) mediate disputes between management and labor.
D) impose strict price controls.
E) allocate materials.
Question
Japan demonstrated its expansionist policies in 1931-1932 by invading

A) the Philippines.
B) Pearl Harbor.
C) Mongolia.
D) Manchuria.
E) Korea.
Question
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Benito Mussolini
Question
The America First Committee argued that

A) the United States was endangered by internal subversion, not possible German invasion.
B) the United States had to defend itself by launching a preemptive war against Germany.
C) the United States would assist the British but stay out of the war.
D) the United States had the strength to stand alone and did not need to form relationships or pacts with any European country.
E) the United States had to defend itself by going to war against Japan before Japan attacked the United States.
Question
What impact did the wartime economy have on the distribution of American incomes?

A) The proportion of wealth controlled by the richest 5 percent of the population soared to nearly one-third.
B) The proportion of wealth controlled by the poorest 20 percent of the population dropped to about 10 percent.
C) The earnings of the middle class doubled.
D) The middle class stagnated as it found itself caught between wage freezes and soaring inflation.
E) The poor sank deeper into poverty because the focus was on foreign affairs rather than their plight.
Question
Franklin Roosevelt's Good Neighbor policy

A) proclaimed, "Speak softly, and carry a big stick."
B) renounced any nation's right to intervene in the affair of another.
C) led to a nonaggression pact with the Soviet Union.
D) helped to shape the Yalta agreements at the end of World War II.
E) led to a scrupulous "hands-off" policy in Latin America, even in instances where American interests were threatened.
Question
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
I nternment of Japanese-Americans
Question
Congress created the Office of Price Administration to

A) control inflation during the war.
B) preserve uranium production.
C) raise money to pay for the war.
D) lower prices to help American families survive the economic hardships of the war.
E) decrease the national debt.
Question
At the Yalta Conference, Stalin agreed on all the following except

A) entry into the war against Japan.
B) recognition of Mao Zedong as the ruler of China.
C) establishment of "broadly representative" governments in Eastern Europe.
D) created a postwar commission to address reparations.
E) a founding conference for the new United Nations.
Question
The condition of African-Americans improved during World War II through all the following means except

A) jobs were more plentiful because of war production needs.
B) a federal executive order prohibited discriminatory employment practices.
C) they were recruited by colleges and job training programs.
D) the average wage for African-Americans increased dramatically.
E) the military ended exclusionary policies that kept them from the marines and coast guard or limited them to noncombat units.
Question
How did Germany's persecution of Jews during the 1930s benefit the allies during World War II?

A) It did not really help at all.
B) It strengthened the allies' militaries by providing more soldiers.
C) It helped the Americans and British learn how to deal more effectively with minority groups.
D) It angered Americans and gave them more motivation to fight.
E) Many leading European scientists and intellectuals fled German control and aided the allies during the war.
Question
After what event did the Japanese government finally begin to discuss acceptance of surrender terms?

A) the Battle of Iwo Jima
B) the dropping of unconditional surrender as a prerequisite
C) the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
D) the threatened invasion of Japan by the China
E) the collapse of Fascist Italy
Question
The World War II War Production Board was created to

A) regulate production of military equipment.
B) insure that the military branches were producing military equipment efficiently.
C) regulate the railroad system and airplane industries.
D) ration vital materials like rubber and gasoline.
E) allocate materials, limit the production of civilian goods, and distribute contracts among workers.
Question
A. Philip Randolph's call for a massive march on Washington led to

A) an executive order permitting the military to evacuate and intern Japanese living on the West Coast.
B) an executive order prohibiting employment discrimination and creating a Fair Employment Practices Committee.
C) passage of the Smith-Connally Act restricting union strikes and protests.
D) prosecution of the sailors involved in the "zoot suit" riot against the Chicanos.
E) integration of the armed forces.
Question
Although Japan's sea and air power was totally shattered by the end of 1944, why didn't the imperial government surrender to the United States?

A) President Roosevelt refused to allow a surrender until a full-scale invasion of Japan could be accomplished.
B) Japanese military leaders insisted on fighting until the bitter end.
C) The tripartite pact required that Japan continue fighting until Germany had been victorious in Europe.
D) Every Japanese election demonstrated that the Japanese people wanted to continue the war.
E) The Emperor had developed Alzheimer's disease and did not understand what was happening.
Question
How many American men and women ultimately served in the armed forces?

A) Approximately 1 million
B) Approximately 5 million
C) Approximately 10 million
D) Approximately 15 million
E) Approximately 25 million
Question
The United States government interned over 100,000 Japanese-Americans during World War II for all the following reasons except

A) longstanding racial prejudice and economic rivalry.
B) some politicians and farmers hoped to be able to take over Japanese-American landholdings.
C) after Pearl Harbor, white Californians were worked up into a frenzy about possible Japanese sabotage.
D) FBI and military intelligence had uncovered a Japanese-American espionage network in California.
E) some patriotic organizations and media outlets called for it.
Question
Which of the following is not true regarding the government's management of public opinion during World War II?

A) Publishers and broadcasters were allowed to report whatever they thought would be in the best interest of the public and the war effort.
B) Government propaganda played up the barbarism of the Axis nations.
C) The Office of Censorship attempted to suppress information that might hinder the war effort.
D) The government initially restricted pictures of dead soldiers on battlefields.
E) Hollywood released films designed to highlight the heroism and unity of the American forces, while inciting hatred of the enemy.
Question
The experiences of E.B. Sledge illustrate

A) the importance of the secretary of war.
B) the complexity of naval operations in the Pacific theatre.
C) the extreme hardships of fighting in the Pacific theatre
D) why U.S. technological superiority was so important.
E) the horrors of fighting in Europe.
Question
Which country suffered the greatest number of casualties in World War II?

A) United States
B) France
C) Poland
D) Great Britain
E) Soviet Union
Question
Which of the following was not one of the changes in the American "social topography" that occurred during World War II?

A) Millions of Americans moved to the West Coast states.
B) Many Americans moved far from their hometowns.
C) Some Americans who moved left their traditional values for new attitudes.
D) The family unit was strengthened, and divorce rates dropped, as Americans united in the effort to defend the nation.
E) Some 6 million Americans left farms and moved to cities.
Question
Which of these statements does not describe women's experience as workers in defense plants?

A) They were nicknamed "Rosie the Riveter."
B) Women were told by the government that it was their "patriotic duty" to work in war industries.
C) Most of the war workers were single and under age thirty.
D) Their jobs included traditional men's work of tending blast furnaces, operating cranes, welding and shipbuilding.
E) Many women were forced into women-only jobs, and those in manufacturing earned 65% of what men earned.
Question
What did the "Double V" campaign represent?

A) the American campaign to defeat both Germany and Japan.
B) the Allied campaign to defeat Germany on land as well as at sea.
C) the Allied campaign to defeat Nazism and Fascism.
D) the African-Americans' campaign to defeat racism at home and enemies abroad.
E) the Mexican-American campaign of to defeat the Axis powers and to loosen immigration restrictions at home.
Question
Which of the following leaders is not matched correctly with the right country?

A) Benito Mussolini, Italy
B) Winston Churchill, France
C) Joseph Stalin, Soviet Union
D) Franklin Roosevelt, United States
E) Hideki Tojo, Japan
Question
The U.S. quest for an atomic bomb dubbed the "Manhattan Project" was started because

A) The U.S. wanted a weapon that would end the war quickly.
B) Albert Einstein warned Roosevelt that Nazi scientists were already working on developing an atomic weapon.
C) Word of a successful nuclear chain reaction experiment reached Roosevelt, and he wanted to make sure the U.S. developed the bomb first.
D) Several universities agreed to underwrite the research and supply their best scientists for the project.
E) Wealthy Americans agreed to secretly provide the $2 billion necessary to develop the ultimate weapon.
Question
How did World War II affect millions of American women?

A) The federal government adopted a policy of gender equality in all federal hiring and in all companies doing business with the government.
B) The proportion of women in the labor force rose from one-quarter to more than one-third, as 19 million women were employed.
C) Because of the importance of their war work, women for the first time achieved equal pay for equal work.
D) The public attitude toward women's employment underwent a transformation, as the majority of Americans began to admit that they approved of married women working outside the home.
E) In order to show the strength of traditional American values, women stayed at home to nurture their children.
Question
What was Roosevelt referring to when he called on the United States to become the "Arsenal of Democracy"?

A) The nation had produced 300,000 airplanes, 2.6 million machine guns, 6 million tons of bombs, and numerous other materials needed by allies to conduct the war.
B) The U.S. symbolized how democratic nations should fight a war.
C) The U.S. should manufacture 1,000 ships, 500,000 rifles, and 10,000 airplanes during the war to aid European allies.
D) He wanted the U.S. to provide all the war materials that the allies needed.
E) He urged the U.S. to support supplying the allies with all necessary natural resources.
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Deck 25: Americans and a World in Crisis
1
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Pearl Harbor
Answer not provided.
2
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
America First Committee
Answer not provided.
3
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
War Production Board and the Office of Price Administration
Answer not provided.
4
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
T he "Good Neighbor" policy
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5
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Wendell Willkie
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6
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
C ash-and-carry
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7
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Office of War Information
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8
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
"Destroyers-for-bases" swap
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9
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
War Powers Act
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10
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Rosie the Riveter
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11
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Manhattan Project
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12
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Smith-Connally Labor Disputes Act
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13
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Jewish Refugees, the vessel St. Louis
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14
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
"Double V" campaign
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15
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
A. Philip Randolph, Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters
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16
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Neutrality Acts
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17
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Nuremberg Laws
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18
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
L end-lease
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19
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Atlantic Charter
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20
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Navajo "code talkers"
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21
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Fulgencio Batista
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22
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Battles of Iwo Jima and Okinawa
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23
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Holocaust
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24
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
General Douglas MacArthur, Admiral Chester Nimitz
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25
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
The Grand Alliance
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26
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Harry S Truman
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27
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Leo Szilard, Enrico Fermi, Albert Einstein
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28
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
B raceros
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29
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Potsdam Declaration
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30
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Dwight Eisenhower
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31
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
WACS, WAVES, WASPS
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32
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Hiroshima and Nagasaki
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33
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Operation Overlord, D-Day
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34
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Battle of the Midway
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35
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Gerald Nye
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36
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Battle of the Bulge
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37
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Selective Service and Training Act
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38
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Executive Order 8802
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39
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
A ppeasement
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40
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Yalta Conference
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41
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
War Production Board
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42
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Winston Churchill
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43
In an effort to bolster American security and help England during the Battle of Britain, President Roosevelt concluded an agreement with Prime Minister Churchill that

A) sold American tanks and cruisers to Great Britain on a deferred payment schedule.
B) allowed Britain to use American air bases in exchange for a guarantee of safe Atlantic passage for American merchant vessels.
C) transferred fifty vintage American destroyers to Britain in exchange for leases on British air and naval bases in the Western Hemisphere.
D) drew up a timetable for eventual American participation in the war against Hitler.
E) provided $5.2 billion in direct military assistance.
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44
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Adolf Hitler
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45
In 1940 and 1941 President Roosevelt wished to prolong negotiations with the Japanese rather than go to war. Why?

A) The negotiations had been making substantial progress and most of the points of disagreement were being resolved.
B) Roosevelt knew that he did not have a large enough navy to fight both Japan and Germany.
C) The American people were virulently anti-Japanese and therefore the anti-interventionist sentiment regarding Asian affairs was very strong.
D) The Japanese had ended their expansion and were looking forward to a century of coprosperity.
E) All he was concerned about was war in Europe; the situation in the Pacific was unimportant to him.
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46
Which of these does not represent the Native American experience during World War II?

A) They served as code talkers, relaying secret messages for the U.S. military in a complex language that the Japanese couldn't understand.
B) Many Native Americans left reservations for good-paying jobs in West Coast defense industries.
C) Anti-Indian discrimination forced many Native Americans back onto reservations.
D) Many Native American reservations saw their budgets nearly triple, thanks to money sent back by Indian defense workers.
E) Native Americans once again faced the risk of their land being taken, and organized the National Congress of American Indians to fight this trend.
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47
What role did the American scientific community have in World War II?

A) The government insisted that scientific inquiry should not be interrupted by the war.
B) Most of the nation's scientists opposed the war and refused to have anything to do with it.
C) Scientists participated actively in developing new weapons, chemicals, medicines, and medical techniques that would advance the fight against the Axis powers.
D) There was a constant conflict between scientists and the military because the military refused to allow scientists a role in the weapons race.
E) Scientists left the government for better-paying jobs in private industry.
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48
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Joseph Stalin
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49
Which statement best represents the United States' response to reports of the German persecution of Jews?

A) The United States expressed sympathy for the plight of the Jews and liberalized its restrictive immigration laws.
B) The United States refused to liberalize its restrictive immigration laws or seriously consider rescue schemes.
C) Americans overwhelmingly supported legislation to admit twenty thousand German refugee children.
D) The President and Congress were unaware of the reports.
E) The United States sponsored the ship St. Louis to rescue 900 Jews for resettlement in America.
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50
Why didn't America take action in 1938 when German tanks rolled into Vienna and Czechoslovakia, in direct violation of the Versailles Treaty?

A) The American public thought U.S. participation in World War I was a mistake.
B) The U.S. had a long tradition of isolationism and did not want to get involved in foreign struggles.
C) Americans wanted the government to focus on the economic turmoil at home caused by the Great Depression.
D) All of these choices
E) None of these choices
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51
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Arsenal of Democracy
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52
The Smith-Connally Labor Disputes Act

A) empowered the president to take over any facility where strikes interrupted war production.
B) guaranteed labor the right of union membership.
C) prohibited government employees from joining unions or engaging in political activity.
D) mandated wage increases at twice the cost of living, so that war production would not be interrupted by strikes.
E) eliminated all federal restrictions on the right to strike.
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53
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Office of Price Administration
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54
The various federal agencies created during World War II to coordinate the war effort did all the following except

A) limit or stop the production of civilian goods.
B) impose strict ceilings on corporate profits.
C) mediate disputes between management and labor.
D) impose strict price controls.
E) allocate materials.
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55
Japan demonstrated its expansionist policies in 1931-1932 by invading

A) the Philippines.
B) Pearl Harbor.
C) Mongolia.
D) Manchuria.
E) Korea.
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56
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
Benito Mussolini
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57
The America First Committee argued that

A) the United States was endangered by internal subversion, not possible German invasion.
B) the United States had to defend itself by launching a preemptive war against Germany.
C) the United States would assist the British but stay out of the war.
D) the United States had the strength to stand alone and did not need to form relationships or pacts with any European country.
E) the United States had to defend itself by going to war against Japan before Japan attacked the United States.
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58
What impact did the wartime economy have on the distribution of American incomes?

A) The proportion of wealth controlled by the richest 5 percent of the population soared to nearly one-third.
B) The proportion of wealth controlled by the poorest 20 percent of the population dropped to about 10 percent.
C) The earnings of the middle class doubled.
D) The middle class stagnated as it found itself caught between wage freezes and soaring inflation.
E) The poor sank deeper into poverty because the focus was on foreign affairs rather than their plight.
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59
Franklin Roosevelt's Good Neighbor policy

A) proclaimed, "Speak softly, and carry a big stick."
B) renounced any nation's right to intervene in the affair of another.
C) led to a nonaggression pact with the Soviet Union.
D) helped to shape the Yalta agreements at the end of World War II.
E) led to a scrupulous "hands-off" policy in Latin America, even in instances where American interests were threatened.
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60
Instructions: Identify the following. Be as specific as possible, and include names, dates, and relevant facts as appropriate. Be sure to explain the significance of the person or term.
I nternment of Japanese-Americans
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61
Congress created the Office of Price Administration to

A) control inflation during the war.
B) preserve uranium production.
C) raise money to pay for the war.
D) lower prices to help American families survive the economic hardships of the war.
E) decrease the national debt.
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62
At the Yalta Conference, Stalin agreed on all the following except

A) entry into the war against Japan.
B) recognition of Mao Zedong as the ruler of China.
C) establishment of "broadly representative" governments in Eastern Europe.
D) created a postwar commission to address reparations.
E) a founding conference for the new United Nations.
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63
The condition of African-Americans improved during World War II through all the following means except

A) jobs were more plentiful because of war production needs.
B) a federal executive order prohibited discriminatory employment practices.
C) they were recruited by colleges and job training programs.
D) the average wage for African-Americans increased dramatically.
E) the military ended exclusionary policies that kept them from the marines and coast guard or limited them to noncombat units.
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64
How did Germany's persecution of Jews during the 1930s benefit the allies during World War II?

A) It did not really help at all.
B) It strengthened the allies' militaries by providing more soldiers.
C) It helped the Americans and British learn how to deal more effectively with minority groups.
D) It angered Americans and gave them more motivation to fight.
E) Many leading European scientists and intellectuals fled German control and aided the allies during the war.
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65
After what event did the Japanese government finally begin to discuss acceptance of surrender terms?

A) the Battle of Iwo Jima
B) the dropping of unconditional surrender as a prerequisite
C) the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
D) the threatened invasion of Japan by the China
E) the collapse of Fascist Italy
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66
The World War II War Production Board was created to

A) regulate production of military equipment.
B) insure that the military branches were producing military equipment efficiently.
C) regulate the railroad system and airplane industries.
D) ration vital materials like rubber and gasoline.
E) allocate materials, limit the production of civilian goods, and distribute contracts among workers.
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67
A. Philip Randolph's call for a massive march on Washington led to

A) an executive order permitting the military to evacuate and intern Japanese living on the West Coast.
B) an executive order prohibiting employment discrimination and creating a Fair Employment Practices Committee.
C) passage of the Smith-Connally Act restricting union strikes and protests.
D) prosecution of the sailors involved in the "zoot suit" riot against the Chicanos.
E) integration of the armed forces.
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68
Although Japan's sea and air power was totally shattered by the end of 1944, why didn't the imperial government surrender to the United States?

A) President Roosevelt refused to allow a surrender until a full-scale invasion of Japan could be accomplished.
B) Japanese military leaders insisted on fighting until the bitter end.
C) The tripartite pact required that Japan continue fighting until Germany had been victorious in Europe.
D) Every Japanese election demonstrated that the Japanese people wanted to continue the war.
E) The Emperor had developed Alzheimer's disease and did not understand what was happening.
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69
How many American men and women ultimately served in the armed forces?

A) Approximately 1 million
B) Approximately 5 million
C) Approximately 10 million
D) Approximately 15 million
E) Approximately 25 million
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70
The United States government interned over 100,000 Japanese-Americans during World War II for all the following reasons except

A) longstanding racial prejudice and economic rivalry.
B) some politicians and farmers hoped to be able to take over Japanese-American landholdings.
C) after Pearl Harbor, white Californians were worked up into a frenzy about possible Japanese sabotage.
D) FBI and military intelligence had uncovered a Japanese-American espionage network in California.
E) some patriotic organizations and media outlets called for it.
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71
Which of the following is not true regarding the government's management of public opinion during World War II?

A) Publishers and broadcasters were allowed to report whatever they thought would be in the best interest of the public and the war effort.
B) Government propaganda played up the barbarism of the Axis nations.
C) The Office of Censorship attempted to suppress information that might hinder the war effort.
D) The government initially restricted pictures of dead soldiers on battlefields.
E) Hollywood released films designed to highlight the heroism and unity of the American forces, while inciting hatred of the enemy.
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72
The experiences of E.B. Sledge illustrate

A) the importance of the secretary of war.
B) the complexity of naval operations in the Pacific theatre.
C) the extreme hardships of fighting in the Pacific theatre
D) why U.S. technological superiority was so important.
E) the horrors of fighting in Europe.
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73
Which country suffered the greatest number of casualties in World War II?

A) United States
B) France
C) Poland
D) Great Britain
E) Soviet Union
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74
Which of the following was not one of the changes in the American "social topography" that occurred during World War II?

A) Millions of Americans moved to the West Coast states.
B) Many Americans moved far from their hometowns.
C) Some Americans who moved left their traditional values for new attitudes.
D) The family unit was strengthened, and divorce rates dropped, as Americans united in the effort to defend the nation.
E) Some 6 million Americans left farms and moved to cities.
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75
Which of these statements does not describe women's experience as workers in defense plants?

A) They were nicknamed "Rosie the Riveter."
B) Women were told by the government that it was their "patriotic duty" to work in war industries.
C) Most of the war workers were single and under age thirty.
D) Their jobs included traditional men's work of tending blast furnaces, operating cranes, welding and shipbuilding.
E) Many women were forced into women-only jobs, and those in manufacturing earned 65% of what men earned.
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76
What did the "Double V" campaign represent?

A) the American campaign to defeat both Germany and Japan.
B) the Allied campaign to defeat Germany on land as well as at sea.
C) the Allied campaign to defeat Nazism and Fascism.
D) the African-Americans' campaign to defeat racism at home and enemies abroad.
E) the Mexican-American campaign of to defeat the Axis powers and to loosen immigration restrictions at home.
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77
Which of the following leaders is not matched correctly with the right country?

A) Benito Mussolini, Italy
B) Winston Churchill, France
C) Joseph Stalin, Soviet Union
D) Franklin Roosevelt, United States
E) Hideki Tojo, Japan
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78
The U.S. quest for an atomic bomb dubbed the "Manhattan Project" was started because

A) The U.S. wanted a weapon that would end the war quickly.
B) Albert Einstein warned Roosevelt that Nazi scientists were already working on developing an atomic weapon.
C) Word of a successful nuclear chain reaction experiment reached Roosevelt, and he wanted to make sure the U.S. developed the bomb first.
D) Several universities agreed to underwrite the research and supply their best scientists for the project.
E) Wealthy Americans agreed to secretly provide the $2 billion necessary to develop the ultimate weapon.
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79
How did World War II affect millions of American women?

A) The federal government adopted a policy of gender equality in all federal hiring and in all companies doing business with the government.
B) The proportion of women in the labor force rose from one-quarter to more than one-third, as 19 million women were employed.
C) Because of the importance of their war work, women for the first time achieved equal pay for equal work.
D) The public attitude toward women's employment underwent a transformation, as the majority of Americans began to admit that they approved of married women working outside the home.
E) In order to show the strength of traditional American values, women stayed at home to nurture their children.
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80
What was Roosevelt referring to when he called on the United States to become the "Arsenal of Democracy"?

A) The nation had produced 300,000 airplanes, 2.6 million machine guns, 6 million tons of bombs, and numerous other materials needed by allies to conduct the war.
B) The U.S. symbolized how democratic nations should fight a war.
C) The U.S. should manufacture 1,000 ships, 500,000 rifles, and 10,000 airplanes during the war to aid European allies.
D) He wanted the U.S. to provide all the war materials that the allies needed.
E) He urged the U.S. to support supplying the allies with all necessary natural resources.
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