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maxush-CultureClash
maxush-CultureClashes
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| belief that only native born people should be allowed in a country, increased during the twenties | nativism |
| convicted of a crime many believe because of their beliefs and they were immigrants | Sacco and Vanzetti |
| oppose all forms of government, believe man can govern himself | anarchists |
| false science, that some races are superior to others, inferior races should be restricted | eugenics |
| American movement that expanded its opposition to anyone "unamerican" Jews, Catholics, immigrants | Ku Klux Klan |
| established quotas on immigration 3% of ethnic group living in US in 1910 | Emergency Quota Act |
| changed quotas to 2% of group in US in 1890 | National Origins Act |
| not restricted by laws, moving to US to fill labor pool reduced by immigration quotas | Mexican immigrants |
| new way of thinking, glorified youth and freedom, challenged traditional values about work, marriage, life in general | New Morality |
| symbol of 20s woman, more revealing attire, smoked, consumed alcoholic beverages | flapper |
| new religious movement that linked new morality to social decline | fundamentalism |
| belief that humans developed from lower life forms, opposed by fundamentalists | evolution |
| belief that God created the world as described in the Bible | creationism |
| Tennessee law that outlawed the teaching of evolution | Butler Act |
| national profile case, John T. Scopes tried for violating the Butler Act, originally found guilty | Scopes trial |
| High profile lawyer hired by the ACLU to defend Scopes | Clarence Darrow |
| well known attorney and presidential candidate that served as prosecutor in Scopes case | William Jennings Bryan |
| prohibits the manufacture, sale or transportation of alcoholic beverages | 18th Amendment |
| made enforcement of prohibition the responsibility of US Treasury Department, expands power of the federal government | Volstead Act |
| power to control people and property in the public's interest, typically left to states | police powers |
| secret establishment where alcohol could be purchased illegally, ran by organized crime, profitted greatly | speakeasies |
| repealed the 18th Amendment | 21st Amendment |