President Roosevelt refused to allow Japanese Americans to serve in the U.S. military during the war.
B.
U.S. courts convicted dozens of Japanese Americans of spying for Japan during the war.
C.
The U.S. government denied Japanese Americans their basic constitutional rights by sending them to internment camps.
D.
The secretary of war decided that Japanese Americans posed no threat to national security.
The statement about the treatment of Japanese Americans during World War II that is correct is option C. The U.S. government denied Japanese Americans their basic constitutional rights by sending them to internment camps. In 1942 the government forced Japanese-Americans into internment camps. They had done nothing but lost their homes, and their jobs. The internment camps were overcrowded and provided poor living conditions. The barracks constructed for internees met the minimum standards for military housing.
A. tenenment resident
B. steel magnate
C. stor owner
D. immigrant
Answer:
My journey would be by car, but there were no cars back in 1803. I guess the explorers rode horses, used boats, or just walked. I would be able to use interstate and state highways, but these highways didn’t exist back then. I could also use Internet maps, which the explorers did not have. One common thing about our journeys would be learning about new places and meeting new people.
Explanation:
Sample answer from Edmentum.