United States foreign policy during the Korean War period

a. was unable to get formal United Nations support for South Korea when invaded in June 1950.
b. reluctantly supported the modified and limited return of 30,000 Japanese troops to the Korean peninsula to help rebuff North Korean forces.
c. became more determined to block Western contact with the Chinese government.
d. provided support for the invasion of the Chinese mainland by Nationalist forces from Taiwan.
e. saw the creation of an alliance with Soviet Russia to restrain Mao Zedong's ambitions.


c

History

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Margaret Sanger attracted wide attention in 1916 when she:

a. became the first female head of a corporation. b. became the first member of the Women's Army Corps. c. announced her candidacy for Congress. d. went to jail for teaching women about birth control.

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The "Three Sisters" of Amerind culture were __________

A) gods B) priestesses C) queens D) staple crops

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In the late nineteenth century, child labor was

A) common in the coal mines and cotton mills. B) uncommon because children were not strong enough to handle the large machines and fast pace of factory production. C) uncommon because children had to stay in school until age sixteen. D) uncommon because for the first time childhood was seen as a distinct stage of life reserved for innocence, play, education, and maternal love. E) common in the economically-depressed south, but uncommon in the prosperous north.

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Those who are drawn to the "paranoid style" in American politics see the shaping of world events as the work of

A) unusual leaders of great stature. B) menacing conspiracies. C) complex international relationships. D) uncontrollable fate.

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