What impact did wartime service have on American GIs?
a. Most felt that their war years were wasted, and they returned home angry and disillusioned.
b. Most did not want to return to their civilian lives and made a career out of the service.
c. Many became disillusioned with the American political system.
d. Many became less prejudiced after having served with people from backgrounds and cultures different fromtheir own.
d
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Henry Cabot Lodge
a. joined President Wilson's campaign for treaty ratification. b. strongly supported Article 10 of the League Covenant. c. led a Senate faction that sought amendments to Article 10 of the League Covenant. d. opposed any American involvement in European affairs.
When George III assumed the throne of England, he
A. mandated official recognition of the Church of England in all colonies. B. faced a full rebellion in the colonies. C. was considered to have a brilliant mind for politics. D. feared using the authority of his monarchy. E. was very psychologically and intellectually limited.
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, medical practitioners
A. grew to understand the link between bacteria and infection. B. became increasingly professionalized. C. rejected purging and bleeding as medical techniques. D. had little or no knowledge of sterilization. E. were nearly all males.
In the 1850s, the U.S. policy of "concentration" for Indians
A. assigned all tribes to their own defined reservations. B. had many benefits for both whites and Indians. C. set the basis for Indian policy for the rest of the century. D. reduced conflicts between whites and Indians. E. affirmed and continued the previous federal treatment of Indians.