1940 Hitler armistice with France
... 1943 Our Enemy -- the Japanese (1 of 2) .mpg 1943 Our Enemy -- the Japanese (2 of 2) .mpg 1943 Reds rout Nazis .mpg 1943 Women at work WWII .mpg 1944 FDR FALA speech .mpg 1945 Anti-Japanese Propaganda Video .mpg Aid Britain says Hull, More taxes for defense .mpg Air corps tries out its new volunteer ...
... 1943 Our Enemy -- the Japanese (1 of 2) .mpg 1943 Our Enemy -- the Japanese (2 of 2) .mpg 1943 Reds rout Nazis .mpg 1943 Women at work WWII .mpg 1944 FDR FALA speech .mpg 1945 Anti-Japanese Propaganda Video .mpg Aid Britain says Hull, More taxes for defense .mpg Air corps tries out its new volunteer ...
Ch. 25 The immigration quota system did not apply to CORRECT
... Which of the following countries remained neutral in 1942? CORRECT: Turkey In the 1930s, Germany became a totalitarian state under the control of the dictator CORRECT: Adolph Hitler. How did Japan try to improve their economic conditions after the Great Depression? CORRECT: They expanded their terri ...
... Which of the following countries remained neutral in 1942? CORRECT: Turkey In the 1930s, Germany became a totalitarian state under the control of the dictator CORRECT: Adolph Hitler. How did Japan try to improve their economic conditions after the Great Depression? CORRECT: They expanded their terri ...
Chapter 35—America in World War II, 1941
... 48. Despite the demands of the wartime economy, inflation was kept well in check during the war by a. directing production to whatever goods were in most demand. b. prosecuting war profiteers and black marketers who tried to earn windfall profits. c. permitting large numbers of illegal migrants to e ...
... 48. Despite the demands of the wartime economy, inflation was kept well in check during the war by a. directing production to whatever goods were in most demand. b. prosecuting war profiteers and black marketers who tried to earn windfall profits. c. permitting large numbers of illegal migrants to e ...
Chapter 35—America in World War II, 1941
... 48. Despite the demands of the wartime economy, inflation was kept well in check during the war by a. directing production to whatever goods were in most demand. b. prosecuting war profiteers and black marketers who tried to earn windfall profits. c. permitting large numbers of illegal migrants to e ...
... 48. Despite the demands of the wartime economy, inflation was kept well in check during the war by a. directing production to whatever goods were in most demand. b. prosecuting war profiteers and black marketers who tried to earn windfall profits. c. permitting large numbers of illegal migrants to e ...
World War II Webquest
... 4. What was inscribed on the flags Japanese soldiers were given by loved ones? (3 things) Click on Nazi Germany 5. What did Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party rebuild in 1933? (3 things) 6. What did Adolf Hitler do that sparked World War II? Click on Germany “Nazi” Swastika Flag 7. How did Hitler descr ...
... 4. What was inscribed on the flags Japanese soldiers were given by loved ones? (3 things) Click on Nazi Germany 5. What did Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party rebuild in 1933? (3 things) 6. What did Adolf Hitler do that sparked World War II? Click on Germany “Nazi” Swastika Flag 7. How did Hitler descr ...
) – 148 (up to workers seek better conditions)
... theories as to why average German soldiers could participate in such atrocities, and how people who saw and experienced such things could possibly find a way to move on with their lives after the war: Thursday 2/2: pages 702-707 Terms: 1. Neutrality Act 2. Election of 1940 3. Lend-Lease Act 4. Atlan ...
... theories as to why average German soldiers could participate in such atrocities, and how people who saw and experienced such things could possibly find a way to move on with their lives after the war: Thursday 2/2: pages 702-707 Terms: 1. Neutrality Act 2. Election of 1940 3. Lend-Lease Act 4. Atlan ...
perang dunia ii
... in Asia and the Pacific War in Asia and the Pacific Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, Japanese forces compiled an impressive list of conquests in a remarkably short time. By May 1942 the Japanese stood with open avenues of attack to both India and Australia. However, three events in 1942 helped ...
... in Asia and the Pacific War in Asia and the Pacific Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, Japanese forces compiled an impressive list of conquests in a remarkably short time. By May 1942 the Japanese stood with open avenues of attack to both India and Australia. However, three events in 1942 helped ...
perang dunia ii
... in Asia and the Pacific War in Asia and the Pacific Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, Japanese forces compiled an impressive list of conquests in a remarkably short time. By May 1942 the Japanese stood with open avenues of attack to both India and Australia. However, three events in 1942 helped ...
... in Asia and the Pacific War in Asia and the Pacific Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, Japanese forces compiled an impressive list of conquests in a remarkably short time. By May 1942 the Japanese stood with open avenues of attack to both India and Australia. However, three events in 1942 helped ...
US Response to Atrocities in East Asia During World War II
... policy of the United States in regard to the apprehension and punishment of war criminals in the Far East. 1. The term ‘war crimes’ . . . includes: . . . B. Violations of the laws or customs of war. Such violations shall include but not be limited to murder, ill-treatment, or deportation of slave la ...
... policy of the United States in regard to the apprehension and punishment of war criminals in the Far East. 1. The term ‘war crimes’ . . . includes: . . . B. Violations of the laws or customs of war. Such violations shall include but not be limited to murder, ill-treatment, or deportation of slave la ...
chapter 34: reading guide-franklin d. roosevelt and the
... Define/Explain: A. Philip Randolph, Fair Employment Practices Commission, Double V, CORE, Code Talkers, Zoot ...
... Define/Explain: A. Philip Randolph, Fair Employment Practices Commission, Double V, CORE, Code Talkers, Zoot ...
American Production During WWII
... Allied Powers: the countries that were fighting against the Axis Powers during WWII. Included the United States, Great Britain, and Soviet Russia after the Germans invaded Russia in June 1941. Assembly line: an arrangement of workers, machines, and equipment in which the product being made passes fr ...
... Allied Powers: the countries that were fighting against the Axis Powers during WWII. Included the United States, Great Britain, and Soviet Russia after the Germans invaded Russia in June 1941. Assembly line: an arrangement of workers, machines, and equipment in which the product being made passes fr ...
answers - Cengage Learning
... 4a. No. Truman knew that victory over Japan was virtually assured and did not totally depend on use of the atomic bomb. See page 477. 4b. No. Germany surrendered on May 8, 1945, three months before the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima on August 6. See page 477. 4c. No. The decision to use ...
... 4a. No. Truman knew that victory over Japan was virtually assured and did not totally depend on use of the atomic bomb. See page 477. 4b. No. Germany surrendered on May 8, 1945, three months before the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima on August 6. See page 477. 4c. No. The decision to use ...
Chapter 27 - Cengage Learning
... 4a. No. Truman knew that victory over Japan was virtually assured and did not totally depend on use of the atomic bomb. See page 477. 4b. No. Germany surrendered on May 8, 1945, three months before the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima on August 6. See page 477. 4c. No. The decision to use ...
... 4a. No. Truman knew that victory over Japan was virtually assured and did not totally depend on use of the atomic bomb. See page 477. 4b. No. Germany surrendered on May 8, 1945, three months before the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima on August 6. See page 477. 4c. No. The decision to use ...
FOREIGN POLICY: THE FICTION OF ISOLATION (pg. 483
... ○ US ind boomed, stimulated by wartime demand/govt contracts ■ Ended depression and unemployment, high prod and profits ■ War-related ind output was huge, double that of all Axis powers combined ○ Office of Price Admin regulated civilians’ lives ■ Froze prices, wages, rents, rationing meat/sugar ...
... ○ US ind boomed, stimulated by wartime demand/govt contracts ■ Ended depression and unemployment, high prod and profits ■ War-related ind output was huge, double that of all Axis powers combined ○ Office of Price Admin regulated civilians’ lives ■ Froze prices, wages, rents, rationing meat/sugar ...
World War Two: Question 1 of 73
... simply by demonstrating the power of the bomb on a deserted island.” Speaker C: “The use of the bomb was justified because of the Japanese attack on PearlHarbor.” Speaker D: “In Hiroshima, the bomb instantly incinerated more than 60,000 people. Most were civilians.” ...
... simply by demonstrating the power of the bomb on a deserted island.” Speaker C: “The use of the bomb was justified because of the Japanese attack on PearlHarbor.” Speaker D: “In Hiroshima, the bomb instantly incinerated more than 60,000 people. Most were civilians.” ...
World War Two: Question 1 of 70 World War Two: Question 2 of 70
... simply by demonstrating the power of the bomb on a deserted island.” Speaker C: “The use of the bomb was justified because of the Japanese attack on PearlHarbor.” Speaker D: “In Hiroshima, the bomb instantly incinerated more than 60,000 people. Most were civilians.” ...
... simply by demonstrating the power of the bomb on a deserted island.” Speaker C: “The use of the bomb was justified because of the Japanese attack on PearlHarbor.” Speaker D: “In Hiroshima, the bomb instantly incinerated more than 60,000 people. Most were civilians.” ...
Checkpoint
... their money. A downward spiral developed. People had less money to buy goods, so factories cut jobs. The unemployed had even less money to spend. Many businesses declared bankruptcy, or financial failure caused by a company’s inability to pay its debts. Because of international loans and trade, the ...
... their money. A downward spiral developed. People had less money to buy goods, so factories cut jobs. The unemployed had even less money to spend. Many businesses declared bankruptcy, or financial failure caused by a company’s inability to pay its debts. Because of international loans and trade, the ...
Charity before Government Welfare: Women and the GSP
... like their colonial-era forebears, German-American women of the Gilded Age were expected to live by gender rules that differed from those applied to their Anglo-American counterparts. During the eighteenth century, German-speaking women on New World farms were expected to work in the fields side by ...
... like their colonial-era forebears, German-American women of the Gilded Age were expected to live by gender rules that differed from those applied to their Anglo-American counterparts. During the eighteenth century, German-speaking women on New World farms were expected to work in the fields side by ...
B-25J bombers in final assembly at the Kansas City plant, 1944.
... goal. A 200 percent increase in factory floor space and a 400 percent rise in the labor force was needed.5 Private and foreign investment accounted for a modicum of expansion. But manufacturers, uncertain of the emergency’s length, were hesitant to borrow money to cover large construction costs. To ...
... goal. A 200 percent increase in factory floor space and a 400 percent rise in the labor force was needed.5 Private and foreign investment accounted for a modicum of expansion. But manufacturers, uncertain of the emergency’s length, were hesitant to borrow money to cover large construction costs. To ...
Second Nine – Weeks Assessment - Public Schools of Robeson
... “left its monuments in the preservation and D. Government involvement purification of the land, the water, the forests, the young men of America.” What Goal 9.05 New Deal program was he describing? 56. The New Deal accomplished all of the following labor reforms except which one? A. Works Progress A ...
... “left its monuments in the preservation and D. Government involvement purification of the land, the water, the forests, the young men of America.” What Goal 9.05 New Deal program was he describing? 56. The New Deal accomplished all of the following labor reforms except which one? A. Works Progress A ...
Critical Thinking and Writing - Valley Central School District
... each country to enter the United States 6. antiforeign feeling 7. economic system in which all wealth and property is owned by the community as a whole 8. people who leave their own country to live in a foreign land B. Complete each sentence below by writing the correct term from the box above in th ...
... each country to enter the United States 6. antiforeign feeling 7. economic system in which all wealth and property is owned by the community as a whole 8. people who leave their own country to live in a foreign land B. Complete each sentence below by writing the correct term from the box above in th ...
Learning Goals
... Some examples of WWII affecting the U.S. at home were women working, rationing, scrap metal drives, and victory gardens. The U.S. suffered hundreds of thousands of casualties in WWII. The United States was drawn into WWII after the attack on Pearl Harbor. World War II was caused by Germany and Japan ...
... Some examples of WWII affecting the U.S. at home were women working, rationing, scrap metal drives, and victory gardens. The U.S. suffered hundreds of thousands of casualties in WWII. The United States was drawn into WWII after the attack on Pearl Harbor. World War II was caused by Germany and Japan ...
PERANG DUNIA II
... in Asia and the Pacific War in Asia and the Pacific Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, Japanese forces compiled an impressive list of conquests in a remarkably short time. By May 1942 the Japanese stood with open avenues of attack to both India and Australia. However, three events in 1942 helped ...
... in Asia and the Pacific War in Asia and the Pacific Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, Japanese forces compiled an impressive list of conquests in a remarkably short time. By May 1942 the Japanese stood with open avenues of attack to both India and Australia. However, three events in 1942 helped ...
Document
... Hitler's drive to dominate Europe pushed German troops deep into France and the Soviet Union. Great Britain took a beating but held on with the help of American economic and military aid before the United States itself entered the Second World War in late 1941. ...
... Hitler's drive to dominate Europe pushed German troops deep into France and the Soviet Union. Great Britain took a beating but held on with the help of American economic and military aid before the United States itself entered the Second World War in late 1941. ...
Slide 1
... forces than the national average Some young Hispanics had adopted civilian dress known as “zoot ...
... forces than the national average Some young Hispanics had adopted civilian dress known as “zoot ...
United States home front during World War II
The United States home front during World War II supported the war effort in many ways, including a wide range of volunteer efforts and submitting to government-managed rationing and price controls. Everyone agreed that the sacrifices were for the national good ""for the duration."" The labor market changed radically. Peacetime conflicts with respect to race and labor took on a special dimension because of the pressure for national unity. The Hollywood film industry was important for propaganda. Every aspect of life from politics to personal savings changed when put on a wartime footing. This was achieved by tens of millions of workers moving from low to high productivity jobs in industrial centers. Millions of students, retirees, housewives, and unemployed moved into the active labor force. Hours worked increased as leisure activities declined sharply. Most families were allocated 3 US gallons (11 l; 2.5 imp gal) of gasoline a week, which sharply curtailed driving for any purpose. Production of most durable goods, like cars, new housing, vacuum cleaners, and kitchen appliances, was banned until the war ended. Gasoline, meat, and clothing were tightly rationed. In industrial areas housing was in short supply as people doubled up and lived in cramped quarters. Prices and wages were controlled. Americans saved a high portion of their incomes, which led to renewed growth after the war.