U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War
U.S. History Final Exam 2012 Review Name: Date: Hour: The following is a list of important terms, people, places, and events that will be included on your final exam. Be sure you can identify and explain the significance of each of these items. Know Constitutional Amendments 16-22! Chapter 6 (World War I) armistice barrios conscientious objector conscription convoy espionage imperialism migrant militarism nationalism propaganda reparations self-determination causes of World War I trigger of World War I Allies Central Powers Western Front Role of geography in WWI years of WWI years of U.S. involvement in WWI u-boats reasons for U.S. involvement in WWI Selective Service Act new warfare in WWI civil liberties during WWI propaganda in WWI African Americans in the military Great Migration women in World War I Woodrow Wilson Treaty of Versailles: problems; reasons for U.S. failure to ratify League of Nations
Chapter 7 (1920s) anarchist capitalism communism socialism laissez-faire graft buying on margin bull market bear market fundamentalism modernism installment buying inflation Prohibition flapper 1918 Influenza pandemic Red Scare of the 1920s A. Mitchell Palmer Sacco-Vanzetti trial 1920s presidents: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover: attitude toward business; scandals (Harding) Henry Ford: assembly line automobile: mass production and impact installment plan and advertising/consumer spending women in the 1920s: social changes Butler Act/ Scopes Trial nativism immigration quotas Ku Klux Klan media and a common American culture Charles Lindbergh Lost Generation: definition, key writers Harlem Renaissance: definition, key people Chapters 8&9(Great Depression & the New Deal) recession depression foreclosure collective bargaining gross domestic product buying on margin trickle-down economics rugged individualism deficit spending causes of the Great Depression Black Tuesday/effects
Dow Jones Industrial Average banking crisis unemployment Dust Bowl Herbert Hoover Bonus Army Franklin D. Roosevelt New Deal public works relief, recovery, reform Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Agricultural Adjustment Act Tennessee Valley Authority criticism of New Deal court packing Social Security Act labor unions in the New Deal legacies/ impact of the New Deal Eleanor Roosevelt end of the Great Depression Chapters 10 & 11 (World War II) Dates: overall and years U.S. involved Allies, Axis totalitarianism fascism Nazism/ Nazi Party anti-semitism appeasement blitzkrieg amphibious RAF Lend-Lease Act Stalin Mussolini Hitler: rise to power Hitler s aggression: purpose & territories Role of Neville Chamberlain Invasion of Poland: methods; start of WWII Invasion of France Dunkirk Battle of Britain Churchill American isolationism Japanese aggression: purpose & territories; role of Hideki Tojo U.S. response: embargo
Pearl Harbor: Japanese goal, events, result Women in military Minorities in military War production Philippines/ Bataan Japanese success in Pacific after Pearl Harbor unconditional surrender strategic/ saturation bombing Nisei rationing black market kamikaze ghetto Big Three Eastern Front/ invasion of U.S.S.R. Allied war plans Territories taken by the Allies in Europe/ order and reasoning Casablanca conference Tuskegee Airmen Midway - significance Women in defense industries African Americans in defense industries (Randolph) Japanese internment wartime economy Normandy invasion Eisenhower Battle of the Bulge island hopping MacArthur, Nimitz Navajo code talkers Manhattan Project bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Truman Holocaust: number killed (Jews and others) concentration camps death camps genocide legacies of WWII Cold War