The status of blacks during World War II
A) strengthened somewhat after the Red Cross reversed its long-standing policy against mixing blood from whites and blacks in its blood banks.
B) changed dramatically, particularly in the South, after a federal anti-lynching law was finally passed.
C) was not affected by Roosevelt's denunciation of any race of people claiming the right to be "master" over another.
D) not always improved in northeastern cities, despite the promise of better economic opportunity through wartime jobs.
E) changed when the army placed black recruits into desegregated units around the world.
Correct Answer:
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