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WWI-Ch.23 Review
S.S. Ch. 23
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| The aggressive strengthing of armed forces. | Militarism |
| Was heir to the thrownof Austria-Hungary. Him and his wife, Sophie, were shot and killed while in the streets of Srebia. | Archduke Francis Ferinand |
| prepare its military for war | mobilize |
| The alliance between Austria-Hungary and Germany. | Central Powers |
| France, Russia, and Britian. | Allied Powers |
| Defending a position by fighting from protection of deep ditches. | Trench Warfare |
| A situation in which neither side can win a decisive victory. | Stalemate |
| A.K.A. Submarines. They launched torpedos against Allied supply ships, causing heavy losses. | U-Boats |
| A 19-year-old Serb nationalist who killed Archduke Francis Ferinand and his wife Sophie. | Gavrilo Princip |
| Wilson's 1916 presidental campaign slogan | "He kept us out of war" |
| Who owned the Lusitania? | Cunard |
| How long did it take the U.S. ary to get fully combat ready? | March 1918-November 1918 |
| How many passengers were on the Lusitania? How many were Americans? | 1200 were on board. 120 of them were Americans. |
| What year did the Lusitania sink? | 1915 |
| What are the two other names for Selective Service? | Draft and Conscription |
| How was Herbert Hoover already popular before the election? | He was the food administrator of America |
| A British passenger line | Lusitania |
| This secret telegram to Mexico sent by the foreign minister Arthur Zimmerman, was decoded and then plublished by American newspapers in March 1917. | Zimmerman Note |
| 1917. The act that required men between the ages of 21-30 to register and be drafted into the army. | Selective Service Act |
| How many men were drafted because of the Selective Service Act? | About 3 million |
| Issued war bonds. Money from these sales provided billions of dollars in loans tol the Allies. | Liberty Bonds |
| April 1918. The board helped workers and management avoid strikes and reach agreements. | National War Labor Board |
| They wanted these troops to join the French and British units. | American Expeditionary Force (AEF) |
| People who favor the equal distribution of wealth and the end of all forms of private property/poverty. | Communists |
| Truce. Went into effect on the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918. | Armistice |
| Refused to go to war for religious reasons. He was from Tennessee. | Alvin York |
| medal of Freedom winner who wrote songs such as "Yankee Doodle" and "Over There." | George C. Cohen |
| The final point called for the creation of an international assembly of nations. | League of Nations |
| Payments of war damages. | Reparations |
| A peace settlement of WWI. | Treaty of Versailles |
| A Republician Sentator who declared "No peace that satisfied Germany in any degree can ever satisfy us." he wanted winners to set the terms of peace. He was from Masschuttes. | Henry Cabot Lodge |