QUESTIONS AND SOLUTIONS GRADED A+
●● Identify the statement that best describes what is being represented in
this cartoon.
Answer: the illistration is making the point that
●● During World War II, women's roles at home and in the military were
crucial to American success. Identify changes to the U.S. workforce
resulting from women's participation in the war effort.
Answer: Correct Answer(s)
Women continued to make up a significant percentage of the U.S.
workforce even after the war was over.
Although most women still worked in clerical and service jobs, new
opportunities opened in industrial, professional, and government
positions.
Incorrect Answer(s)
Unions refused to accepted working women as members.
For the first time in history, young and single women outnumbered
married women in their thirties among female workers.
●● Identify some of the important figures involved in this landmark case
concerning the internment of Japanese Americans.
, Answer: Supreme Court Justice who issued a now-famous dissent on the
Court's decision in Korematsu v. United StatesRobert A. Jackson
Correct label:Robert A. Jackson
President of the United States who awarded Fred Korematsu the
Presidential Medal of FreedomBill Clinton
Correct label:Bill Clinton
president of the United States who issued Executive Order 9066
relocating all persons of Japanese descent from the U.S. West
CoastFranklin Roosevelt
Correct label:Franklin Roosevelt
American citizen who refused to comply with an internment orderFred
Korematsu
Correct label:Fred Korematsu
●● The government's response to World War II represented the ultimate
example of Keynesian economics in practice.
Answer: T
●● In his work "The Price of Free World Victory," Henry Wallace
rejected the ideas of The American Century as centering too much on
___________ rather than international cooperation. He felt that wealth
should be _______________ the hands of those who had made it, and
not to do so would _________ hunger, illiteracy, and poverty
Answer: In his work "The Price of Free World Victory," Henry Wallace
rejected the ideas of The American Century as centering too much on