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The event that most dramatically changed American attitudes about neutrality was
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The invasion of Poland
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Lend-Lease, Roosevelt's offer of 50 old American destroyers to England,
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Was justified as a defensive measure.
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The Neutrality Acts of 1935-1937 did all of the following except
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Make an exception for nations that were innocent victims of aggression
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In general, the National War Labor Board did all of the following except
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Promote good labor relations
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In the first few months after America entered the war: not the United States suffered serious setbacks at the hands of Germany
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After bombing Pearl Harbor, Japan's immediate military goal was to
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Establish a defensive perimeter distant enough from Japan to safeguard the homeland against bombing.
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Japan's war aims were to
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Force a negotiated settlement with the United States on favorable terms
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In his dealings with Joseph Stalin, President Roosevelt: .
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Went out of his way to allay Stalin's suspicions
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Internment of Japanese Americans in concentration camps
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reflected invasion fears on the West Coast
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World War II began in Europe with Germany's invasion of
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Poland
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The Japanese attack of Pearl Harbor
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All of the choices
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During the 1930s America's isolationist tendencies were reinforced by: NOT
the feeling that European problems had caused the Great Depression or passage of the Neutrality Acts
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The war resulted in a significant shift in population to the:
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West coast
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All of the following are true of the Atlantic Charter except that: NOT
it was drafted before America entered the war or it defied Allied war aims
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At the Yalta Conference, President Roosevelt's concessions to Premier Stalin are most reasonably described as: not traitorous
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