What did the Soviet Union spend the winter of 1941–1942 doing?
A) building factories to produce tanks, aircraft, and munitions
B) negotiating terms of surrender with the German high command
C) creating a coalition government to collaborate with Germany
D) building a transcontinental railroad across Siberia
A) building factories to produce tanks, aircraft, and munitions
You might also like to view...
When the 11,300 members of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization went on strike in 1981, President Reagan a. refused to intervene. b. ordered the Federal Aviation Administration to cut air traffic controllers' working hours to reduce their stressand improve air safety
c. fired the strikers and barred them from ever being rehired as federal air traffic controllers. d. ordered the National Labor Relations Board to mediate the strike.
What was the role of economic factors in supporting U.S. neutrality in the early years of World War I?
a. The United States was greatly weakened financially by WWI and saw entering the war as an economic necessity. b. The United States grew rich from its neutrality during WWI and saw joining the war as a way of getting even richer. c. U-boat attacks had increased commerce for the United States by eliminating the competition, so continued neutrality benefited the nation's economy. d. U-boat attacks prevented the United States from trading freely with Europe and required U.S. involvement. e. U-boat attacks cost the German government millions of dollars, making them even more eager to draw the United States into the war.
Many social critics like C. Wright Mills believed that, like the suburbs, white-collar jobs
A) would likely fade in importance. B) should be promoted. C) were harming the environment. D) stifled individuality. E) were a drain on the economy.
Thomas Watson was in favor of __________
A) black and white political cooperation B) school integration C) mixed-race marriages D) integration of all public places