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ch 12&13

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
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Question
Answer
nativism   prejudice against foreign-born people  
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isolationism   a policy of pulling away from involvement in world affairs  
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communism   an economic and political system based on a single-party government ruled by a dictatorship  
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anarchists   people who opposed any form of government  
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Sacco and Vanzetti   arrested and charged with the robbery and murder of a factory paymaster and his guard  
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quota system   This system established the maximum number of people who could enter the US from each foreign country  
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John L. Lewis   The new leader of the United Mine Workers of America  
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Warren G Harding   good-natured man who "looked like a president ought to look". Ohio senator that became president in 1921  
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Charles Evans Hughes   Secretary of State urged that no more warships be built fro ten years  
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Fordney-McCumber Tariff   raised taxes on US imports to 60 percent  
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Ohio gang   the presidents poker playing cronies  
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Teapot Dome scandal   The government had set aside oil-rich public lands at Teapot Dome  
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Albert B. Fall   Secretary of the interior  
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Calvin Coolidge   New president after Harding dies  
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urban sprawl   cities spread in all directions  
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Installment plant   enabled people to buy goods over an extended period, without having to put much money down at the time of purchase  
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Prohibition   sale and transportation of alcoholic beverages were legally prohibited  
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speakeasy   nightclubs where people spoke "easily" to avoid detection  
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bootlegger   smugglers practice of carrying liquor in the legs of boots  
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fundamentalism   literal, or non symbolic, interpretation of the Bible  
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Clarence Darrow   the most famous trial lawyer of the day, to defend scopes  
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Scopes trial   a fight over evolution and the role of science and religion in public schools and in American society  
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flapper   an emancipated young women who embraced the new fashions and urban attitudes of the day  
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double standard   a set of principles granting greater sexual freedom to men than to women  
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Charles A Lindbergh   made the first nonstop solo flight across the Atlantic  
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George Gershwin   concert music composer, merged traditional elements with American Jazz  
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Georgia O'Keeffe   produced intensely colored canvases that captured the grandeur of New York  
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Sinclair Lewis   the first American to win a Nobel Prize in literature, was among the era's most outspoken critics  
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F. Scott Fitzgerald   coined the term "Jazz Age" to describe the 1920's  
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Edna St. Vincent Millay   wrote poems celebrating youth and a life of independence and freedom from traditional constraints  
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Ernest Hemingway   wounded in WWI, became the best-known expatriate author  
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Zora Neale Hurston   was a girl from Eatonville, Florida, in the early 1900s she loved to read adventure stories and myths  
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James Weldon Johnson   poet, lawyer,and NAACP executive secretary  
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Marcus Garvey   an immigrant from Jamaica, believed that African Americans should build a separate society  
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Harlem Renaissance   a literary and artistic movement celebrating African American culture  
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Claude McKay   a novelist, poet, and Jamaican immigrant, was a major figure whose militant verses urged African Americans to resist prejudice and discrimination  
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Langston Hughes   was the movements best-known poet  
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Paul Robeson   the son of a one-time slave, became a major dramatic actor  
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Louis Armstrong   joined Oliver's group, which became known as the Creole Jazz Band  
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Duke Ellington   a jazz pianist and composer, led his ten-piece orchestra at the Cotton Club  
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Bessie Smith   a female blues singer, was perhaps the outstanding vocalist of the decade  
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