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. 10. Illegally by encouraging a Panamanian revolutionEconomicsMaintaining stability in Latin America and maintaining the Open Door PolicyLocal revolutionary movementsJingoism15. An attachment to the Monroe Doctrine that said the U.S. would exercise international police power.16. Yellow journalist and publisher of the New York Morning journal.
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1. Imperialism Economic factors
A strong nation’s attempt to create an empire by dominating a weaker nation.
The American Fruit Company
For new markets in which to sell goods and raw materials
Americans were losing spirit/vitality so they needed a new frontier.
Jingoism, yellow journalism, destruction of American mills and sugar plantations, sinking of the U.S.S. Maine
Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines
Equal access to Chinese consumers
To ensure a shorter route between the Atlantic and the Pacific
2. 10. Illegally by encouraging a Panamanian revolution
Economics
Maintaining stability in Latin America and maintaining the Open Door Policy
Local revolutionary movements
Jingoism
15. An attachment to the Monroe Doctrine that said the U.S. would exercise international police power.
16. Yellow journalist and publisher of the New York Morning journal
3. 17. Yellow journalist and publisher of New York World
18. Chinese resentment to foreign influence
19. Taft’s policy that to maintain order abroad the U.S. must invest money in foreign economy
20. exaggerated ,sensational headlines; false stories.
21. Members of the 1st volunteer Calvary during the Spanish Am. War led by T. Roosevelt
22. War cry for the Spanish Am. War
4. 23. Naval officer who wrote The Influence of Sea Power Upon History.
24. Rebel leader in the Philippines
25. African Americans who fought superbly at San Juan Hill
26. Owner of the American Fruit Company in the Banana Republic
27. Minister who wrote Our Country
28. Historian who wrote The Significance of the American Frontier.
5. 29. Few
30. Joseph Wheeler, Richmond Pearson Hobson
31. William Crawford Gorgas
6. Progressivism Henry George, Edward Bellamy
T. Roosevelt
Gambling, prostitution, Child labor, and etc.
Initiative
Recall
18th Amendment
16th Amendment
17th Amendment
19th Amendment
Woodrow Wilson
7. Upton Sinclair
Henry George
Edward Bellamy
Socialists
Systematic change
Pure Food and Drug Act and Meat Inspection Act
Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Alice Paul, and Carrie Chapman Catt
8. Alice Paul
W. Wilson
Anti-trust suits
W. Wilson
Socialists
Horace Mann
W.E. B. Dubois
Booker T. Washington
Tuskegee State Normal School
9. WWI 51. Aggressively building up a nation’s armed forces for war.
52. When neither side can gain the advantage
53. Germany’s quick sweep method
54. Immigrants
55. Token Force
56. A group of unarmed vessels surrounded by armed destroyers
57. Battle of Chateau Thierry
58. Vladimir Lenin
10. 59. An investment that could be redeemed later for value plus interest
60. Gave short minute speeches to encourage the purchase of liberty bonds
61. Over the nations war related production
62. Settled labor disputes that may hinder production
63. group that would agree to the Versailles Treaty only if certain reservations were made to insure the Monroe Doctrine
64. Senators totally opposed to the Versailles Treaty because of the League of Nations
11. Henry Cabot Lodge
An international organization proposed by W. Wilson that would ensure peace
They quit their jobs or were fired
Eugene V. Debs
14 Points
W. E. B. Dubois
An armistice or cease fire was issued
Corporal Alvin York
Archduke Francis Ferdinand
12. Pledge created by the U.S. requiring Germany to warn ships before attacking
Strip of land between muddy rat infested trenches
“Over There”
“Hinky Dinky Parlay Voo”
Birmingham
Mobile
13. 1920s Russian Communism
1%
Rockefeller
FBI
Warren G. Harding
Anarchists, socialists, and immigrants
Victims of the Red scare
“There is no right to strike against the public safety by anyone, anywhere, anytime.”
finks
14. Workers received a 27% wage increase
Republicans
Disarmament
Nativism
Europe
Albert B. Falls gave drilling rights on public lands in Teapot Dome Wyoming to a private company in exchange for money
Calvin Coolidge
15. Governmental hands off approach to business
Kellogg Briand Pact
Installment plans
Henry Ford
Model T.
Flapper
Jeanette Rankins
Segregation not by law but by custom. Understood separation
bootleggers
16. Speakeasies
John T. Scopes
Advocated African American self-respect, economic empowerment and a return to the Motherland Africa
Pittsburg’s KDKA
Harlem Renaissance
Margaret Sanger
Zelda Sayer Fitzgerald
W.C. Handy
KKK
17. Crash and Depression Dow Jones Industrial Average
Suddenly closed
Hoover
Tenant groups
Dust Bowl
Voluntary controls
Depression Humor
Welfare capitalism
Hoovervilles
Hawley Smoot Tariff
18. Keep bids low
0.1%
Soup Kitchens
21st Amendment
Breadlines
WWI Bonus Army
Empire State Building
get rich quick attitude
FDR
19. 125. Al Capone
20. New Deal From March to June 1933 when FDR pushed his New Deal programs through Congress
Federal Deposit Insurance provided insurance for bank deposits up to $5000
Civil Works Administration gave jobs building or improving roads, parks, airports or other facilities
Securities Exchange Commission
Home Owners Loan Corporation
Mary McCleod Bethune
21. Wagner Act
Social Security System
Demagogues
Court packing scheme
Recession
CIO or Congress of Industrial Organizations
Symphony and opera
Soap operas
FDIC, TVA, Social Security, SEC
22. Post offices and federal buildings
bank holiday
Fireside chats
Demagogues
Fair Labor Standards Act
23. WWII Mussolini, Hitler, and Stalin
all but the Soviet Union
Germany
neutrality acts
Japan
Battle of Gaudalcanal
island hopping
The Manhattan Project
D-Day
Holocaust
24. Office of War Mobilization
books, popular music, movies, and baseball games
equal distribution of scarce items
Victory against the Axis abroad and Victory against racism at home.
Japanese Americans