Washington's two most influential advisors were? Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson and
A) ?Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton.
B) ?Vice President John Adams.
C) ?Secretary of War Henry Knox.
D) ?Chief Justice John Jay.
E) ?None of these are correct.
A
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What is affirmative action?
A) policies promoting black people over white people in all instances B) policies seeking to remedy historic discrimination in employment and education for minorities C) policies to equalize voting opportunities for blacks D) policies to give blacks an annual income and free health care to equalize them with whites
What was Executive Order 8802, and what impact did it have?
a. It ordered the Japanese and Japanese Americans to leave designated regions in the Pacific Coast area, resulting in the internment of more than ninety-three thousand people. b. It banned racial discrimination by federal defense contractors with the result that many African Americans were hired in aircraft plants and shipyards, albeit in the worst jobs.. c. It stipulated that members of the armed services could not refuse to do work that their superior officers ordered them to do, even if that work was exceedingly dangerous. Its result was the death of more than three hundred African American sailors in an explosion at Port Chicago and the court-martialing of fifty who refused to load munitions after the explosion. d. It called for the military to investigate the violence by white servicemen towards Mexican Americans in cities from San Diego to Oakland.
The line, “In all things that are purely social we can be as separate as the five fingers, yet one as the hand in all things essential to mutual progress,” came from an 1895 speech which catapulted whom to national fame?
a. W. E. B. Du Bois b. Henry Morehouse c. Booker T. Washington d. George Washington Carver
Who was the special prosecutor appointed to investigate Bill Clinton for malfeasance?
a) Kenneth Starr b) Robert Dole Consider This: His 452-page report to Congress outlining 11 possible impeachment charges against Clinton provided graphic details of Clinton’s sexual encounters. See 32.3.2: Scandal in the White House. c) George J. Borjas Consider This: His 452-page report to Congress outlining 11 possible impeachment charges against Clinton provided graphic details of Clinton’s sexual encounters. See 32.3.2: Scandal in the White House. d) Ralph Nader Consider This: His 452-page report to Congress outlining 11 possible impeachment charges against Clinton provided graphic details of Clinton’s sexual encounters. See 32.3.2: Scandal in the White House.