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12345 [234]
3 years ago
15

The line that separated Communist countries from free countries in Europe was called “the Iron Curtain.”

History
2 answers:
Aliun [14]3 years ago
7 0
The Iron Curtain<span> was the name for the boundary dividing Europe into two separate areas from the end of World War II in 1945 until the end of the Cold War in 1991. The term symbolizes the efforts by the Soviet Union to block itself and its satellite states from open contact with the West and its allied states.</span>
lesya692 [45]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:    True

Explanation:  " The Iron Curtain" is a line that ranged from the Baltic in the north to Trieste in the South, marking the border between the communist countries of the so-called Eastern Bloc and the democratic countries in the West of Europe. It is a coin issued by Churchill in his speech, stating that the line between Communism and Democracy has been withdrawn, from Stettin in the Baltic, which is the westernmost point of the then USSR in the north, and Trieste in the Adriatic, the border between Italy and Yugoslavia in the south.

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3 years ago
How do the events that effected people of Mexican ancestry in the 1930s compare to current time?
Citrus2011 [14]

Answer:

he Great Depression of the 1930s hit Mexican immigrants especially hard. Along with the job crisis and food shortages that affected all U.S. workers, Mexicans and Mexican Americans had to face an additional threat: deportation. As unemployment swept the U.S., hostility to immigrant workers grew, and the government began a program of repatriating immigrants to Mexico. Immigrants were offered free train rides to Mexico, and some went voluntarily, but many were either tricked or coerced into repatriation, and some U.S. citizens were deported simply on suspicion of being Mexican. All in all, hundreds of thousands of Mexican immigrants, especially farmworkers, were sent out of the country during the 1930s--many of them the same workers who had been eagerly recruited a decade before.

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Explanation:

Many found temporary stability in the migrant work camps established by the U.S. Farm Security Administration, or FSA. The FSA camps provided housing, food, and medicine for migrant farm families, as well as protection from criminal elements that often took advantage of vulnerable migrants. The FSA set up several camps specifically for Mexican Americans in an attempt to create safe havens from violent attacks.

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In order to create structure within the executive branch of the federal government​
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