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14.2 valles
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| scientific management | practice of manufacturing products that are designed to go out of style |
| assembly line | young women of the 1920's who challenged social traditions with their dress and behavior |
| installment plan | successfully flew fom New York to Paris solo, popular celebrity of the 1920"s |
| planned obsolescence | theory promoted by Frederick W. Taylor, that held every kind of work could be broken into a series of smaller tasks with set rates of production |
| Henry Ford | Chicago gangster, known for bootlegging, example of how prohibition led to the rise of organized crime |
| Model T | period of great African-American artistic accomplishment, began in New zYork during the 1920's |
| flappers | popular jazz/blues muscian, "Ambassador of Jazz" |
| Volstead Act | popular low cost automobile, developed by Henry Ford |
| Al Capone | production system created by Henry Ford to make goods faster by moving parts on a conveyor belt past workers |
| Eliot Ness | constitutional amendment that ended prohibition, repealed the Eighteenth Amendment |
| Twenty First Amendment | a way of purchasing goods in which consumers pay for goods in small increments over time |
| Charles Lindberg | federal law that enforced the Eighteenth Amendment |
| Scopes Trial | music combining a variety of musical styles; originated with African-Americans in New Orleans and gained poularity in the 1920's |
| Jazz | used the assembly line |
| Blues | |
| Louis Armstrong | |
| Langston Hughes | |
| Harlem Renaissance | |
| Lost Generation | |
| F. Scott Fitzgerald |