United States entry into World War II made women enter the industrial workforce in large numbers for the first time.
The skilled labor of women was symbolized in the United States by the concept of Rosie the Riveter, a hardworking woman who performed work that was once considered 'men's work'.
With this expanded horizon of opportunities and confidence, and with the extended knowledge base, many women could now have paid and voluntary employment, the roles of women in World War II were much broader than in World War I.
In 1945, more than 2.2 million women worked in the war industries, in the construction of ships, aircraft, vehicles and weapons. The women also worked in factories, ammunition plants and farms, and also drove trucks, provided logistical support for the soldiers and entered professional work areas that were previously the exclusive domain of men.
working it out
containment
Vietnamization
3)Did the Cold War have to continue into the late 1980s or could it have ended. EXPLAIN!!
one of the anti-war protest groups
a hip group of white-collar workers
a college campus fraternity
The Yippies were one of the anti-war protest groups.
The Youth International Party, whose supporters were known as "yippies", was an anti-authoritarian, pro-expression and antimilitarist political party established in the United States of America in 1967. Faced with the passive attitude and self-exclusion adopted by the "hippies", retiring to rural areas to adopt their communal model of life, the "yippies" were eminently urban. The Youth International Party, as a youth party, was aware that young people were the first major US electoral majority, and that there existed a great opportunity for social change for the ultraconservative American society of that time.
B.slave states.
C.territories.
D.free republics.
*The answer must have a legit reason