Relacionar Columnas U.S. History Matching GameVersión en línea Test your knowledge of key U.S. history terms with this fun matching pairs game! por Kennedy 1 Ghetto 2 Allies 3 Concentration Camp 4 Fascism 5 Neutrality Acts 6 Kamikaze 7 Axis Powers 8 Atlantic Charter 9 Holocaust 10 Manhattan Project 11 Hiroshima 12 Island Hopping 13 GI Bill of Rights 14 Blitzkrieg 15 United Nations 16 Internment 17 Selective Training and Service Act 18 Japanese American Citizens Leauge 19 Nonaggression Pact 20 Appeasement 21 Lend-Lease-Act 22 Bataan Death March 23 Totalitarian 24 Congress of Racial Equality 25 Office of Price 26 Nazism 27 Nuremberg Trials 28 Genocide a forced march of American Filipino soldiers captured by the Japanese along the Bataan Peninsula during WWII. from the German word meaning "lightning war", a sudden, massive attack w/combined air and ground forces, intended to achieve a quick victory. a prison camp operated by Nazi Germany in which Jews were murdered. a 1941 declaration of principles in which the U.S. and Great Britain set forth their goals in opposing the Axis Power. a law, passed in 1941, that allowed the U.S. to ship arms and other supplies, w/o immediate payment to nations fighting the Axis Powers. confinement or a restriction in movement, especially under wartime conditions. the court proceedings held in Nuremberg, Germany, after WWII, in which Nazi leaders were tried for war crimes. favoring the interests of native-born people over foreign-born people. a city neighborhood in which a certain minority group is pressured or forced to live. a name given to the Servicemen's Readjustment Act, a 1944 law that provided financial and educational benefits for WWII veterans. an agreement in which two nations promise not to go to war with each other. a Japanese city and important military center that was destroyed by the first atomic bomb used in WWII. a U.S. law passed in 1940 that enacted the nation's first peacetime military draft. the granting of concessions to a hostile power in order to keep the peace. the U.S. program to develop an atomic bomb for the use in WWII. an organization that pushed the U.S. government to compensate Japanese Americans for property they had lost when they where interned during WWII. involving or engaging in the deliberate crashing of a bomb-filled airplane into a military target. a series of laws enacted in 1935 and 1936 to prevent U.S. arms sales and loans to nations at war. an interracial group founded in 1942 by James Farmer to work against segregation in northern cities. the group of nations-including Germany, Italy, and Japan-that opposed the Allies in WWII. the deliberate and systematic extermination of a particular racial, national, or religious group. In WWII, the group of nations including Great Britain, the Soviet Union, and the U.S. that opposed the Axis Powers. the systematic murder- or genocide of Jews and other groups in Europe by the Nazis before and after WWII. characteristic of a political system in which the government exercises complete control over its citizens lives. an international peacekeeping organization founded in 1945 to promote world peace, security, and economic development. a political philosophy that advocates a strong, centralized, nationalistic government headed by a powerful dictator. the Allied strategy in the Pacific theater during WWII of capturing and securing selected Islands and using them as bases to advance closer to Japan an agency established by congress to control inflation during WWII.