- Works Progress Administration - Wikipedia
In 1942, the WPA played a key role in both building and staffing internment camps to incarcerate Japanese Americans At its peak in 1938, it supplied paid jobs for three million unemployed men and women, as well as youth in a separate division, the National Youth Administration
- Works Progress Administration (WPA) | Definition History - Britannica
Works Progress Administration (WPA), work program for the unemployed that was created in 1935 under U S Pres Franklin D Roosevelt’s New Deal
- Works Progress Administration: WPA New Deal - HISTORY
The WPA was designed to provide relief for the unemployed by providing jobs and income for millions of Americans At its height in late 1938, more than 3 3 million Americans worked for the WPA
- Civilian Conservation Corps and WPA in Arizona
WPA work included the construction of buildings and roads, art installations, libraries, zoos, and other public facilities The CCC helped create the National and State Park programs by building trails, buildings, and signage that are still in use today
- Understanding the Works Progress Administration (WPA . . . - Investopedia
The Works Progress Administration (WPA) was a program created by then-President Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1935 to boost employment and the purchasing power of cash-strapped Americans
- Records of the Work Projects Administration [WPA]
Functions: Provided jobs to unemployed workers on public projects sponsored by federal, state, or local agencies; and on defense and war-related projects; and to unemployed youth through National Youth Administration (NYA) projects Abolished: By Presidential letter, December 4, 1942, effective June 30, 1943
- Wifi Protected Access (WPA) - GeeksforGeeks
The WPA protocol implements almost all of the IEEE 802 11i standard WEP used a 64-bit or 128-bit encryption key that must be manually entered on wireless access points and devices which once entered can never be changed
- WEP, WPA, WPA2, and WPA3: Definitions and comparison - Norton™
Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) was introduced in 2003 as a more secure alternative to WEP WPA improved on previously existing Wi-Fi security by introducing a Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP) system to generate new network security keys for each connection
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