Eleanor Roosevelt had honed her own skills and developed a personal network of reform activists through
a. running for local offices in New York state.
b. her experience in settlement houses and women's reform organizations.
c. her long resistance to Franklin Roosevelt's personal infidelities.
d. her personal association with women's colleges and sororities.
e. sitting in on Franklin Roosevelt's cabinet meetings when he was governor of New York.
b
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Which group did not form a significant combat force during World War II?
A. women B. Native Americans C. African Americans D. Japanese Americans
Why did Maximilien Robespierre approve of the Terror, calling it “the order of the day”?
a) He saw the Terror as a means to suppress opponents and also to guide the French to purer, more moral lives. b) An amoral fanatic, he seized on the Terror as a way to punish his enemies. Consider This: Robespierre’s nickname was “The Incorruptible One.” See 6.7: Narrative: Between God and the Guillotine. c) A mild-mannered lawyer, he only reluctantly finally agreed that the Terror was appropriate for rooting out opposition. Consider This: Robespierre’s nickname was “The Incorruptible One.” See 6.7: Narrative: Between God and the Guillotine. d) He hated the way the clergy preyed upon the poor of the village he grew up in and swore revenge against them. Consider This: Robespierre’s nickname was “The Incorruptible One.” See 6.7: Narrative: Between God and the Guillotine.
Explain why the battles at Midway, El Alamein, and Stalingrad were turning points in the war.
What will be an ideal response?
Why was Johnson's War on Poverty unpopular with many people?
A. Programs imposed higher taxes on most Americans and did not appear to be helping anyone. B. It forced budget cuts to military programs when many Americans were strong supporters of the Vietnam War. C. It appeared to support politically radical and militant members of society. D. There was no visible means for supporting Medicare or Medicaid programs.