front 1 The fundamental strategic decision of World War II made by President
Roosevelt and the British at the very beginning of the war was
to | back 1 d |
front 2 Once at war, America's first great challenge was to | back 2 e |
front 3 In sharp contrast to World War I, during World War II, the United
States was | back 3 d |
front 4 Overall, most ethnic groups in the United States during World War
II | back 4 a |
front 5 After the United States entered World War II in 1941, the term
"enemy aliens" referred to | back 5 d |
front 6 All of the following are true statements about the effect of
Executive Order No. 9066 on Japanese living in the U.S. except | back 6 d |
front 7 Despite the demands of the wartime economy, inflation was kept well
in check during the war by | back 7 e |
front 8 When the United States entered World War II in December 1941 | back 8 d |
front 9 African Americans did all of the following during World War II
except | back 9 a |
front 10 The greatest consequence of World War II for American race relations
was | back 10 d |
front 11 During World War II, most Americans economically experienced | back 11 b |
front 12 During World War II, American Indians | back 12 d |
front 13 Most of the money raised to finance World War II came through | back 13 e |
front 14 The first naval battle in history in which all the fighting was done
by carrier-based aircraft was the Battle of | back 14 c |
front 15 The tide of Japanese conquest in the Pacific was turned following the
Battle of | back 15 d |
front 16 In waging war against Japan, the United States relied mainly on a
strategy of | back 16 d |
front 17 The American conquest of ____ in 1944 was especially critical,
because from there, U.S. aircraft could conduct round-trip bombing
raids on the Japanese home islands. | back 17 e |
front 18 Until spring 1943, perhaps Hitler's greatest opportunities of
defeating Britain and winning the war was | back 18 b |
front 19 Hitler's advance in the European theater of war crested in late 1942
at the Battle of ____, after which his fortunes gradually
declined. | back 19 b |
front 20 The Allies postponed opening a second front in Europe until 1944
because | back 20 e |
front 21 Roosevelt's and Churchill's insistence on the absolute and
"unconditional surrender" of Germany | back 21 a |
front 22 President Roosevelt's promise to the Soviets to open a second front
in Western Europe by the end of 1942 | back 22 d |
front 23 Arrange these wartime conferences in chronological order: (A)
Potsdam, (B) Casablanca, and (C) Teheran. | back 23 c |
front 24 Arrange these events in chronological order: (A) V-J Day, (B) V-E
Day, (C) D Day, and (D) Invasion of Italy. | back 24 a |
front 25 The major consequence of the Allied conquest of Sicily in August 1943
was | back 25 b |
front 26 After the Italian surrender in August 1943, the | back 26 e |
front 27 The real impact of the Italian front on World War II may have been
that it | back 27 a |
front 28 At the wartime Tehran Conference | back 28 d |
front 29 The cross-channel invasion of Normandy to open a second front in
Europe was commanded by General | back 29 b |
front 30 In a sense, Franklin Roosevelt was the "forgotten man" at
the Democratic Convention in 1944 because | back 30 a |
front 31 The most significant development in the Democratic convention of 1944
was that | back 31 a |
front 32 Franklin Roosevelt won the election in 1944 primarily because | back 32 e |
front 33 Hitler's last-ditch attempt to achieve a victory against the
Americans and British came in | back 33 a |
front 34 As a result of the Battle of Leyte Gulf | back 34 e |
front 35 The Potsdam conference | back 35 e |
front 36 The spending of enormous sums on the original atomic bomb project was
spurred by the belief that | back 36 b |
front 37 The unconditional surrender policy toward Japan was finally modified
by | back 37 d |