EOC Chapters 20, 21 Word Scramble
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Term | Definition |
isolationism | a policy of pulling away from involvement in world affairs |
communism | an economic and political system based on a single-party government ruled by a dictatorship-- all property is controlled by the state |
anarchists | people who oppose any form of government |
Sacco and Vanzetti | Italian anarchists tried, convicted, and executed for killing a railroad paymaster; widely believed to have been convicted at least partially because of prejudice |
John Lewis | leader of the United Mine Workers of America |
Fordney-McCumber Tariff | raised taxes on some U.S. imports to 60 percent during the 1920s |
Ohio Gang | President Harding's poker buddies, many of whom were also corrupt government officials |
Teapot Dome Scandal | scandal in which Sec. of Interior Albert Fall got oil reserves transferred from the Navy to the Dept. of the Interior, then leased the land to two oil companies and took kickbacks |
installment plan | putting a little money down and paying on time for a given item |
Prohibition | Time during which the manufacture, sale, distribution, and consumption of alcohol were prohibited |
speakeasy | illegal bar |
bootlegger | seller of illegal alcohol |
fundamentalism | the practice of believing that the Bible should be accepted as literally true in all respects |
Clarence Darrow | famous defense attorney who defended John Scopes in the famous "monkey" trial |
Scopes Trial | a trial of a teacher arrested for teaching evolution in a Tennessee school |
flapper | an emancipated young woman who embraced the new fashions and urban attitudes of the day |
double standard | a set of principles granting greater sexual freedom to men than to women |
Charles Lindbergh | first man to fly solo nonstop across the Atlantic Ocean ` |
George Gershwin | composer who mixed elements of classical music and jazz; famous for his Rhapsody in Blue |
Georgia O'Keefe | avant-garde artist who painted subjects including New York in its splendor, as well as flowers |
Sinclair Lewis | author who wrote (in novel form) commentaries on American life in the 20s such as Babbitt and Main Street |
F. Scott Fitzgerald | twenties author probably most famous for The Great Gatsby |
Edna St. Vincent Millay | 20s poet who often wrote of youth and independent, free life |
Ernest Hemingway | 20s and 30s writer who introduced a tough, simplified writing style |
James Weldon Johnson | poet, lawyer, and NAACP lawyer in the 20s |
Marcus Garvey | immigrant from Jamaica who founded the Universal Negro Improvement Association |
Harlem Renaissance | a literary and artistic movement celebrating African-American culture centered in Harlem, New York City |
Claude Mckay | Jamaican immigrant novelist and poet who advocated resisting racism |
Langston Hughes | arguably the best-known poet of the Harlem Renaissance |
Paul Robeson | African-American actor and singer and a supporter of the Communist Party |
Louis Armstrong | arguably the best jazz trumpet player ever to live |
Duke Ellington | African-American musician and bandleader who greatly influenced jazz and performed with his band at the legendary Cotton Club |
Bessie Smith | African American blues singer who was, perhaps, the outstanding vocalist of the 20s |
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