Title: Final Review Part II Intellectual/Social/Cultural Movements-Truman
1Final Review Part IIIntellectual/Social/Cultura
l Movements-Truman
2In his book, Looking Backward, 2000-1887, this
author described a socialist utopian future
Intellectual/Social/Cultural Movements 1870-1914
3This famous architect believed that architecture
should blend with its environment and
surroundings and should not imitate Greek and
Roman styles, as was the trend of the time. He
was known for his "prairie house" architectural
style
Intellectual/Social/Cultural Movements 1870-1914
4Another name for those people who had recently
become wealthy, rather than inheriting a
long-established family fortune
Intellectual/Social/Cultural Movements 1870-1914
5This Jamaican business entrepreneur brought his
"Back-To-Africa" movement and United Negro
Improvement Association to the United States
Intellectual/Social/Cultural Movements 1870-1914
6This philosophy applied evolution to social
studies by stating that the law of the survival
of the fittest also applied to the human race
Intellectual/Social/Cultural Movements 1870-1914
7This author of popular literature wrote about
rags-to-riches stories in which the characters
obtained material possessions and wealth as a way
of achieving happiness
Intellectual/Social/Cultural Movements 1870-1914
8One of the best-known sculptors of the period, he
was known for his large and robust compositions
Intellectual/Social/Cultural Movements 1870-1914
9 In his book, Progress and Poverty, he criticized
unequal land distribution which he believed led
to extreme differences between the social classes
Intellectual/Social/Cultural Movements 1870-1914
10This ex-slave, who established Tuskegee Institute
in Alabama, believed that African Americans
should work to achieve economic improvement
before striving for social and political equality
with whites
Intellectual/Social/Cultural Movements 1870-1914
11The talented and creative director who produced
the nation's first movie spectacular, The Birth
of a Nation, which had a very racist and
pro-Southern view of the Civil War and
Reconstruction
Intellectual/Social/Cultural Movements 1870-1914
12This first American impressionist was considered
to be the best artist of the period and was
primarily known for his seascapes in which lone
men struggling against the forces of nature
13This African American civil rights leader and
author supported aggressive action to gain full
civil, economic, and political equality for black
Americans. He was a co-founder of the N. A. A. C.
P.
Intellectual/Social/Cultural Movements 1870-1914
14A political scandal of the Grant era in which U.
S. Congressmen were bribed not to investigate the
illegal practices of a railroad construction
company
Gilded Age
15State and local laws that discriminated against
African Americans by denying them access to
"white-only" railroad cars, restaurants, and
other public facilities
Gilded Age
16These progressive Republicans did not like the
dishonest policy of the conservative Republicans
and, therefore, supported Democratic candidate,
Grove Cleveland, for president in the 1884
election.
Gilded Age
17This law gave three civil service commissioners
the power to conduct competitive exams for
prospective government workers in an effort to
replace incompetent bureaucrats
The Gilded Age
18This group of distillers bribed federal agents to
avoid paying the Treasury Department millions of
dollars in excise taxes
Gilded Age
19The regular and conservative branches of the
Republican party in the 1880s
Gilded Age
20This Supreme Court case approved of the practice
of segregating public facilities provided that
they were separate but equal
Gilded Age
21He was the Republican leader who managed
President McKinley's 1896 campaign.
Gilded Age
22In a famous speech, he advocated free silver and
part of the Omaha Platform
Gilded Age
23This 1890 law was devised to cut surplus revenue
and continue protection for American industries.
The average duty rate of over 50 angered Latin
Americans and Europeans.
Gilded Age
24This group demanded the circulation of paper
money and other reforms
Gilded Age
25The more liberal faction of the Republican Party
in the 1880s.
26This wealthy newspaper and magazine publisher was
known for his many examples of "yellow" journalism
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
27A supplement to the Monroe Doctrine, it claimed
the right of the U. S. to exercise international
police power in the Western Hemisphere and
intervene in the affairs of Latin American nations
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
28An informal treaty between the United States and
the Japanese government to stop Japanese
immigration to the U. S
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
29The U. S. policy of promoting and safeguarding
American business investments and bank loans in
Latin America by using U. S. troops, if necessary
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
30A 1901 law that limited Cuba's power to conduct
its own foreign policy
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
31The view that Asian immigrants in the late 1800s
threatened U. S. society because of their
cultural differences from the white majority
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
32U. S. support of China's political independence
and insistence on equal trading rights with China
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
33A region or zone in a weak country that is
largely under the control of a stronger,
imperialist nation
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
34This was an understanding between Japan and the
United States in which both nations pledged to
respect the Open Door Policy and each other's
island possessions
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
35This Mexican was angry after the U. S. government
recognized Carranza as the leader of Mexico
instead of him. He led a bank of outlaws and
invaded New Mexico, killing 17 Americans
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
36This secret society organized a rebellion and
attacked foreign embassies in Peking as an act of
opposition to foreign dominance in China
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
37This legislation established a civil government
in Puerto Rico, organizing the island as a U. S.
territory in 1900
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
38This army doctor successfully conducted
experiments in 1900 that showed yellow fever came
from the bite of a species of mosquito
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
39This Congregationalist minister argued in his
book, Our Country, that Americans were members of
a God-favored race destined to lead the world
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
40This document granted American control over the
Panama Canal Zone in return for a U. S. guarantee
of Panamanian independence
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
41Extreme nationalism, often to the point of
belligerency.
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
42This Secretary of State concluded a treaty with
Russia in 1867 for the U. S. purchase of Alaska
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
43On May 1, 1898, he easily crushed the Spanish
fleet in Manila Bay
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
44This view of the Spanish minister in Washington
and his negative assessment of President McKinley
was leaked to the U. S. press and made many
Americans feel that their national honor had been
insulted
45He was the leader of the Filipino insurrection
against American rule
46In his book, The Influence of Sea Power on
History 1660-1783, he demonstrated that all
great empires of modern times had possessed a
large merchant marine and strong naval forces
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
47President Theodore Roosevelt sent them around the
world to show all nations (especially Japan)
America's extensive naval power
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
48This document pledged that the United States had
no intention of annexing Cuba
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
49A technique of newspapers featuring
sensationalism as a way to stir attention and
increase sales
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
50This privilege enabled certain foreigners to have
the right to remain subject to their own
country's laws. The U. S. had this privilege in
China
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
51 This treaty, which ended the Russo-Japanese War,
was arbitrated by Theodore Roosevelt, for which
he received the Nobel Peace Prize. He was the
first American to be so honored
Imperial Republic 1865-1914
52This muckraker's book, History of Standard Oil
Company, chronicled the abuses of the company and
led to a court case that caused the breakup of
that monopoly
Progressivism
53This was established by Congress in 1887 to
regulate railroad rates and prevent abuses by the
railroads.
Progressivism
54A proposal submitted to a popular vote before
putting it into effect
Progressivism
55Nickname for the Progressive Party in the 1912
election that supported the third party candidacy
of Theodore Roosevelt
Progressivism
56This outspoken social reformer began the modern
birth control movement
Progressivism
57Founded by W. E. B. Du Bois to promote the civil
rights of African Americans
Progressivism
58This outspoken social reformer began the modern
birth control movement
Progressivism
59By gathering enough signatures on a petition, a
group can force a legislature to consider a
proposal or require it to be placed on the ballot
for public vote
Progressivism
60This conservative tariff law discredited
President Taft and split the Republican party in
1912
Progressivism
61In his book, The School and Society, he said that
we learn through experience and he wanted
teachers to show pupils that learning was
interesting
Progressivism
62This progressive judge was the first Jewish
Supreme Court Justice and was appointed by
President Wilson.
Progressivism
63This new group of realistic artists painted
scenes of American slums and tenements
Progressivism
64This militant labor union attracted the support
of immigrant factory workers, migrant farm
laborers, loggers, and miners
Progressivism
65This writer exposed hideous conditions and
practices within the meatpacking industry
Progressivism
66Established in 1913 so that the U. S. government
could regulate the interest rates of private
banks and influence the nation's money supply
Progressivism
67Reform writers who investigated alarming
conditions in factories, city slums, politics,
and other areas of American life
Progressivism
68This reform governor of Wisconsin campaigned for
federal control of the railroads.
Progressivism
69She broke away from the NAWSA in 1916 to form the
National Woman's party. By using more militant
tactics, she took to the streets with mass
pickets, parades, and hunger strikes to pressure
Congress and the President for a constitutional
amendment granting women the vote
Progressivism
70This law placed telephone and telegraph companies
under I. C. C. supervision
Progressivism
71The most famous member of the Anti-Saloon League
who would attack people at bars and cut up bar
tables with a hatchet
Progressivism
72This legislation was the first to set up
large-scale irrigation projects in semi-arid
states
Progressivism
73This 1908 Supreme Court decision accepted
environmental data rather than strictly legal
precedent in upholding a state law limiting
working hours for women
Progressivism
74This law outlawed discriminatory rebates to big
corporations
Progressivism
75A 1911 fire in this company, where over 140 women
workers died, led to new laws regulating work
hours, working conditions, and fire codes
- Triangle Shirtwaist Company
Progressivism
76In his 1911 book, Principles of Scientific
Management, he explained his ideas for increasing
efficiency by standardizing job routines and
rewarding factory workers
Progressivism
77Proposed by a leading progressive governor of the
times, it stated that a government had the
responsibility for its citizens' welfare.
Wisconsin Idea
78This energetic reformer from Iowa became the new
president of the national American Woman Suffrage
Association in 1900. She argued for the vote as a
broadening of democracy which would empower
women, to more actively care for their families
in an industrial society
Age of Jackson
79This conservative Speaker of the House tried to
block many Progressive Republican efforts for
reforming government and society
Progressivism
80This standard was established by the Supreme
Court for determining when the right of free
speech may be limited or denied
WWI
81Germany's declaration that its submarines would
not attack passenger or merchant ships without
giving fair warning
WWI
82This group controlled American propaganda and
strengthened popular support for the war
WWI
83He headed the War Industries Board which placed
the control of industries into the hands of the
federal government. It was a prime example of War
Socialism
WWI
84This law limited immigration mainly to people
from northwestern Europe
WWI
85The immediate post-World War I period when many
Americans feared that communists were plotting to
take over the U. S. government
WWI
86This 1919 law created the Prohibition Bureau of
the Treasury Department which attempted to
enforce prohibition
WWI
87The practice of rewarding the Allies with control
over conquered territories by which the Allied
nation would administer the territory until it
believed that the people were ready to govern
themselves
WWI
88This was the "war-guilt clause" in the Treaty of
Versailles that placed total responsibility for
World War I on Germany
WWI
89This 1918 legislation provided penalties for
those who discouraged recruiting, obstructed bond
sales, or who spoke out against the U. S. and its
involvement in World War I.
WWI
90The major Allied leaders who made all of the
important decisions at the Peace Conference at
Versailles
WWI
91This Senate "reservationist" had qualms about U.
S. membership in the League of Nations, but
otherwise supported the Treaty of Versailles
WWI
92The attempt by numerous nations to prevent the
possibility of one nation becoming too powerful
and upsetting the political balance of power
WWI
93 This part of the Versailles Treaty morally bound
the U. S. to aid any member of the League of
Nations that experienced any external aggression
WWI
94This government agency was headed by Herbert
Hoover and was established to increase the
production of food and ration food for the
military
WWI
95This policy, suggested by Woodrow Wilson, stated
that people could have any form of government
they wanted.
WWI
96This 1917 law provided penalties for obstructing
the recruitment of soldiers or for selling
government war securities
WWI
97This Attorney General led an attack on suspected
anarchists and Communists in 1919
WWI
98This faction in the U. S. Senate would not accept
the League of Nations or the notion of collective
security in any form
WWI
99This proposal was made by the Germans to form an
alliance with Japan and Mexico if the U. S.
entered World War I against Germany. The British
intercepted the cable and it enraged Americans
after it was published in the American press
WWI
100A meeting of major powers that took place between
1921 and 1922 which resulted in an agreement to
set limits on the size of each nation's navy
- Washington Naval Conference
Roaring 20s
101This Harlem Renaissance poet and short story
writer expressed the despair of blacks and
demanded social justice
Roaring 20s
102This 1924 law attempted to facilitate German
reparations payments. By loaning 200 million in
gold bullion to Germany, the U. S. and its Allies
hoped to stabilize the Germany economy
Roaring 20s
103This 1925 case involved a Tennessee law against
the teach of Charles Darwin's theory of evolution
in public schools
Roaring 20s
104This political scandal involved a cabinet member
in President Harding's administration
Roaring 20s
105A steady downward trend in the prices of
corporate stocks
Roaring 20s
106This implemented prohibition and defined an
illegal beverage as any one over 1 alcohol by
volume
Roaring 20s
107Young women of the 1920s who adopted an original
style of dress and challenged traditional
societal values
Roaring 20s
108This 1928 treaty, signed by 63 nations (including
the U. S.), was an agreement never to use war as
a means of international conflict resolution
Roaring 20s
109These slums were inhabited by homeless families
during the Depression
Roaring 20s
110A steady upward trend in the prices of corporate
stocks
Roaring 20s
111The name given to a group of American writers who
gathered in Paris after World War I and who wrote
about rebellious people, criticized society, and
attacked materialism
Roaring 20s
112This 1927 movie was was the first "talkie" motion
picture, ending the era of silent films.
Roaring 20s
113This federal agency, established in 1935,
enforced laws against unfair labor practices
New Deal
114As FDR's Secretary of Labor, she was the first
woman ever appointed to a presidential Cabinet
position.
New Deal
115Sometimes known as the "Magna Carta of Labor,"
this law guaranteed unions the right of collect
bargaining
New Deal
116This New Deal agency, created in 1933,
established a set of rules, or codes, for doing
business in different industries. It was later
declared unconstitutional in 1935
New Deal
117This New Deal agency helped end speculation by
the banking industry and guaranteed all bank
deposits up to a certain amount, even if the bank
failed
New Deal
118This colorful Louisiana Senator started the
"share the wealth" movement
New Deal
119This law established the minimum wage and maximum
work hours for many workers
New Deal
120This New Deal program provided cheap electrical
power for U. S. farmers
New Deal
121This federal agency, established in 1934,
regulates the stock market and prevents the
abuses practiced during the 1920s that led to the
Great Crash in 1929
The Growing National Crisis The 1850s
122He wrote the book, The Grapes of Wrath, in 1939
which portrayed the plight of an "Okie" family
during the Dust Bowl
New Deal
123This Catholic priest made radio broadcasts
denouncing the New Deal even though he was an
earlier supporter of FDR
New Deal
124The New Deal government agency that paid
subsidies to farmers to reduce the acreage of
basic crops which would increase prices and,
hopefully, increase farm incomes
New Deal
125This law stated that no federal officials could
campaign and that no government funds could be
used for political purposes
New Deal
126A critic of FDR's, this doctor proposed that
everyone 60 years of age or older should get 200
a month as long as they spent it within 30 days
New Deal
127Headed by Harry Hopkins, FDR's personal friend
and political advisor, this New Deal agency had
3 billion to give to states that needed money
for welfare payments or for work projects
New Deal
128It was during this period that many New Deal
programs were forced through an overwhelmingly
Democratically-controlled Congress
New Deal
129This was created to build schools, libraries, and
cultural centers. It also employed musicians,
writers, and painters as part of the Federal Arts
Project
New Deal
130This 1933 law eased the tight credit situation by
permitting the Federal Reserve Bank to accept a
wide variety of commercial paper as collateral
for loans
New Deal
131This economist was a proponent of deficit
spending by the U. S. government in times of
acute economic difficulties. His ideas influenced
many New Dealers
New Deal
132Headed by Harold Ickes, Sr., this New Deal
government agency carried out many heavy
construction projects by working through private
construction firms. It helped relieve
unemployment during the Depression
New Deal
133This note, delivered in 1932 by President
Hoover's Secretary of State, censured the
Japanese invasion of Manchuria and its
threatening overtures to China
Diplomacy in the Inter-War Years
134In 1937 FDR suggested that democratic governments
act together to apply pressure on nations that
commit acts of aggression
Diplomacy in the Inter-War Years
135This program was first announced by FDR to
promote friendly relations with Latin American
nations
Diplomacy in the Inter-War Years
136In this 1941 law, Congress authorized the
shipping of U. S. war supplies to Great Britain
on credit. It was later extended to the Soviet
Union after it was attacked by Germany
Diplomacy in the Inter-War Years
137He was FDR's Secretary of State who conducted a
series of fruitless negotiations with the
Japanese from 1939 to 1941
Diplomacy in the Inter-War Years
138The alleged mistaken bombing of an American
gunboat on the Yangtze River in China by a
Japanese plane in 1937
Diplomacy in the Inter-War Years
139This legislation gave up all U. S. claims to
military bases in the Philippines
Diplomacy in the Inter-War Years
140This group was formed by isolationists who
contended that America should concentrate her
strength to defend her own shores and should not
get involved in foreign ventures
Diplomacy in the Inter-War Years
141Attempts to conciliate an aggressor by making
concessions to him
Diplomacy in the Inter-War Years
142These laws were enacted by Congress in the 1930s
to prevent the U. S. from becoming involved in
the growing conflicts in Europe and Asia
Diplomacy in the Inter-War Years
143A series of laws designed to protect black
suffrage by authorizing the use of the army
against the Ku Klux Klan
Diplomacy in the Inter-War Years
144FDR's view of the U. S. role in World War II as a
supplier of war materials to countries fighting
the Nazis and the Japanese
WW2
145In this proclamation, FDR announced that all
Japanese-Americans were to be put in detention
camps for the security of the nation
WW2
146This African-American labor leader demanded equal
employment opportunities for blacks during World
War II
WW2
147At this meeting of the "Big Three" Allied leaders
in 1945, the Soviet Union agreed to wage war
against Japan and the U. S. agreed to permit the
Soviet occupation of Polish territories
WW2
148It repudiated the Roosevelt Corollary to the
Monroe Doctrine
WW2
149FDR and Churchill issued this 1941 statement that
declared that both nations would support
self-determination, freedom of the seas, joint
disarmament, and territorial integrity for all
after World War II ended
WW2
150This upheld the authority of the U. S. government
to confine Japanese Americans in relocation camps
as a matter of national security in wartime
WW2
151He was the scientific director of the secret
Manhattan Project that created the first atomic
bomb
WW2
152At this meeting, plans were drawn up for an
International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development to help stabilize the world's
currencies after the war.
WW2
153Better known as the "G. I. Bill of Rights," this
law aided veterans in setting themselves up in
business and providing loans for home mortgages,
pensions, and educational opportunities
- Servicemans Adjustment Act
WW2
154The U. S. military strategy during World War II
in the Pacific in order to reach within striking
distance of Japan
WW2
155A developing split between the Soviet Union and
the U. S. became apparent at this July 1945
wartime meeting
WW2
156The U. S. policy, proposed by George Kennan, that
attempted to prevent Soviet power and Communism
from expanding into non-Communist nations
Truman and the Beginning of the Cold War
157The State Department official who was convicted
of perjury in the celebrated "pumpkin papers"
trial during the Second Red Scare
Truman and the Beginning of the Cold War
158He was the unsuccessful Republican presidential
candidate in 1948 who was surprisingly upset at
the last minute by President Truman
Truman and the Beginning of the Cold War
159The southern, conservative wing of the Democratic
party who were bitterly opposed to Truman's civil
rights agenda
Truman and the Beginning of the Cold War
160This policy, began by President Truman,
investigated federal employees to determine
whether they had ever supported the Communist
party or other radical groups
Truman and the Beginning of the Cold War
161He was executed along with his wife for
transferring atomic secrets to a Soviet spy
Truman and the Beginning of the Cold War
162This federal law greatly reduced the power of
labor unions, forcing unions to wait 60 days
before striking and also forbade them to
contribute to political campaigns
Truman and the Beginning of the Cold War
163The practice of recklessly accusing someone of
supporting or belonging to the Communist Party
Truman and the Beginning of the Cold War
164He broke the color barrier in Major League
Baseball in 1947.
Truman and the Beginning of the Cold War
165It found that a speaker may be penalized if his
or her speech encourages people to revolt against
the U. S. government
Truman and the Beginning of the Cold War
166A special House committee that investigated
those whom the committee suspected of being
Communists or disloyal Americans
Truman and the Beginning of the Cold War
167This legislation empowered the I. C. C. to fix
reasonable maximum railroad rates
Truman and the Beginning of the Cold War
168President Truman relieved him of his command
because this general failed to implement the
President's policies in Korea
Truman and the Beginning of the Cold War
169He attacked the power of the big corporation in
his book, The Octopus
Truman and the Beginning of the Cold War
170The policy of giving U. S. economic aid to the
nations of Europe to help them rebuild their
war-torn economies
Truman and the Beginning of the Cold War