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AP U.S. History

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Title: AP U.S. History


1
Created by Kurt Siebenthal
AP U.S. History
2
(No Transcript)
3
He Said
Monumental Events
ThatsGreat!
Youre Naughty
Presidents
A Picture is worth 1000 words
4
He Said 100
  • Americas present need is not heroics, but
    healing not nostrums, but normalcy not
    revolution, but restoration not agitation, but
    adjustment not surgery, but serenity not
    dramatic, but the dispassionate not submergence
    in internationality, but sustainment in
    triumphant nationality.
  • President Warren G. Harding

5
He Said 200
  • Dorothy Parker, seated next to him at a dinner,
    said to him, "Mr. __________, I've made a bet
    against a fellow who said it was impossible to
    get more than two words out of you." His famous
    reply "You lose."
  • Silent Cal President Calvin Coolidge

6
He Said 300
  • I put in six or seven hours of flying time each
    day My narrowest escape came at a time when I
    was fretting over the lack of action Guns began
    barking behind me, and sizzling tracers zipped by
    my head At least two planes were on my tail
  • Eddie Rickenbacker

7
He Said 400
  • The Hi De Ho Man thats me!
  • Cab Calloway

8
He Said 500
  • I believe everything in the Bible should be
    accepted as it is given there. Some of the Bible
    is given illustratively. For instance Ye are
    the salt of the earth. I would not insist that
    man was actually salt, or that he had flesh of
    salt, but it is used in the sense of salt as
    saving Gods people.
  • William Jennings Bryan (Scopes Trial)

9
Monumental Events 100
  • The depicted event
  • The Scopes Monkey Trial (1925)

10
Monumental Events 200
  • A Gibson girl would have been astonished that
    this kind of gal chopped off her hair!
  • A Flapper

11
Monumental Events 300
  • The Great Migration

12
Monumental Events 400
  • Sacco and Vanzetti, 1920-1927

13
Monumental Events 500
  • The event depicted below
  • Womens Suffrage, 19th Amendment (1920)

14
Thats Great! 100
  • The one of F. Scott Fitzgeralds greatest books.
  • The Great Gatsby

15
Thats Great! 200
  • The greatest percentage of unemployment (stats
    exclude farmers) during the Great Depression.
  • 25 (1935)

16
Thats Great! 300
  • Nicknamed Satchmo and Pops, he wasnt just a
    good trumpeter, he was great!
  • Louis Armstrong

17
Thats Great! 400
  • This great tariff established the highest
    protective tariff in United States history.
    Designed to protect American farmers and
    manufacturers from foreign competition. Yet, it
    had the opposite effect by reducing the flow of
    goods into the U.S. Thus, other countries
    couldnt earn U.S. Currency to purchase goods.
  • The Hawley-Smoot Tariff

18
Thats Great! 500
  • On October 24, 1929, the stock market took a
    plunge. But the worst was yet to come. On this
    day, the bottom fell out and the nations
    confidence went with it.
  • Black Tuesday, October 29, 1929

19
Youre Naughty 100
  • Disliked by many, he was viewed by many as a
    scapegoat and the culprit of the Great
    Depression. Hoovervilles soon popped up all over
    the country.
  • ) President Herbert Hoover

20
Youre Naughty 200
  • The fall guy in the Teapot Dome Scandal
  • Secretary of Interior Albert Fall

21
Youre Naughty 300
  • By 1924, their membership had reached 4.5 million
    (Huge population and many politicians in Denver!)
  • Ku Klux Klan

22
Youre Naughty 400
  • The founder of the American Birth Control League
    (which eventually became Planned Parenthood).
  • Margaret Sanger

23
Youre Naughty 500
  • A good place to get a glass of gin in 1927
  • Speakeasy

24
Presidents 100
  • My vice presidents
  • John N. Garner
  • Henry A. Wallace
  • Harry S. Truman
  • Franklin Delano Roosevelt

25
Presidents 200
  • Woodrow Wilson

26
Presidents 300
  • Elizabeth Ann is not my daughter. But, my middle
    name is Gamaliel.
  • Warren G. Harding

27
Presidents 400
  • In 1921, while vacationing at Campobello Island,
    New Brunswick, he contracted an illness, at the
    time believed to be polio, which resulted in
    total and permanent paralysis from the waist
    down. After he became President, he helped to
    found the National Foundation for Infantile
    Paralysis (now known as the March of Dimes).
  • President Franklin Delano Roosevelt

28
Daily Double
29
Presidents 500
Daily Double
  • He said, Every time we find solutions outside
    of government, we have not only strengthened
    character, but we have preserved our sense of
    real government.
  • Herbert Hoover

30
A picture is worth a 1,000 words 100
  • The radio priest
  • Father Coughlin

31
A picture is worth a 1,000 words 200
  • The Dust Bowl

32
A picture is worth a 1,000 words 300
  • The Bonus March

33
A picture is worth a 1,000 words 400
  • Name that movie
  • Gone with the Wind, (1939)

34
A picture is worth a 1,000 words 500
  • Her most famous photograph
  • Dorothea Lange, Migrant Mother

35
Double Jeopardy
  • Double jeopardy

36
He Said
ABCs
More ABCs
Hey stupid, this is on the test!
Vocab
Multiple Choice
37
He Said 200
  • Shortly after being shot, this expiring man
    reportedly said, "I wonder why he shot me. He
    died two days later of internal bleeding, this
    leaving posterity to only wonder at what could
    have been during the Presidential election of
    1936.
  • Huey Long

38
He Said 400
  • More like raisins, this angry author stated
    that he was completely partisan. Every effort I
    can bring to bear is.. At the call of the common
    working people.
  • John Steinbeck

39
He Said 600
  • End Poverty in California (Epic)
  • Upton Sinclair

40
He Said 800
  • The final part of the theory is that the Talented
    Tenth or the "exceptional men" of the black race
    would be the ones to lead the race and save it
    from its criminal problems
  • W.E.B. Du Bois

41
He Said 1000
  • Deficit Spending would be like priming the pump
  • British Economist John Maynard Keynes

42
ABCs 200
  • In 1933, it protected bank deposits up to 5,000.
    Today, accounts are protected up to 100,000.
  • Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)

43
ABCs 400
  • Oh those 6 million poor little piggies. This
    agency aided farmers and regulated crop
    production.
  • Agricultural Adjustment Administration

44
Daily Double
45
ABCs 600
Daily Double
  • The right to collectively bargain, join unions,
    and fair labor practices. One of the first
    reforms of the Second New Deal was the passage of
    the National Labor Relations Act. But it is
    usually referred to by this more common name.
  • The Wagner Act

46
ABCs 800
  • It regulated the stock market
  • Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)

47
ABCs 1000
  • These young men, ages 18-25, built roads,
    developed parks, planted trees, and helped stop
    soil erosion. 25 of their monthly wage was
    automatically sent home to the workers family.
  • Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)

48
More ABCs 200
  • Electricity anyone?
  • Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)

49
More ABCs 400
  • The initials HOLC? Your home could sure use some
    help.
  • Home Owners Loan Corporation (HOLC)

50
More ABCs 600
  • Created public works jobs on government projects.
  • Public Works Administration (PWA)

51
More ABCs 800
  • Provided job training for unemployed young people
    and part-time jobs for needy students.
  • National Youth Administration (NYA)

52
More ABCs 1000
  • He headed the Federal Relief Administration
    (FERA) and gave 500 million to be dispensed
    through state relief organizations. He insisted
    that unemployed needed jobs, not direct handouts,
    thus persuading FDR to creat the Civil Works
    Administration (CWA) that would employ 4 million
    people.
  • Harry Hopkins

53
Vocab 200
  • Spending more money than youve got.
  • Deficit Spending

54
Vocab 400
  • Fiery extremist critics with plans of action. The
    early 20th century American social critic and
    humorist H. L. Mencken, known for his
    "definitions" of terms, defined a this term as
    "one who will preach doctrines he knows to be
    untrue to men he knows to be idiots."
  • Demagogues

55
Vocab 600
  • Placing a small proportion down when paying for
    and item or making financial investments.
  • Buying on the margin

56
Vocab 800
  • The place where nobody wants to be during WWI.
  • No Mans Land

57
Daily Double
58
Vocab 1000
Daily Double
  • The nickname was derived from the location where
    the smuggler kept his stash.
  • Bootleggers

59
Hey Stupid, this is on the test! 200
  • Provided a pension for retired workers and their
    spouses and aided people with disabilities. This
    alphabet agency sure helped out grandpa.
  • Social Security Administration (SSA)

60
Hey Stupid, this is on the test! 400
  • The United States disclaimed any intention of
    annexing Cuban territory in the
  • Gentlemen's Agreement
  • Foraker Act.
  • Platt Amendment
  • Clayton-Bulwer Treaty
  • Teller Amendment
  • Teller Amendment

61
Hey Stupid, this is on the test! 600
  • The Big Fellow as he liked to be called headed
    a criminal empire and was worth and estimated
    100,000,000.
  • Al Capone

62
Hey Stupid, this is on the test! 800
  • In addition to playing college football and
    professional baseball, he was the winner of the
    pentathlon and decathlon in the 1912 Olympics.
  • Jim Thorpe

63
Hey Stupid, this is on the test! 1000
  • Why didnt the Senate approve the Treaty of
    Versailles and enter the League of Nations?
  • It committed League members to defend the
  • independence and territory of all other members

64
Multiple Choice 200
  • Why did Colombia reject the American offer to
    lease a zone in Panama to build a canal?
  • Germany submitted a better financial arrangement
  • Columbia felt they could build and operate the
    canal themselves
  • Colombia felt that the 10 million offer was too
    small.
  • Colombia rejected American policy regarding canal
    tolls
  • America decided instead to pursue a Nicaraguan
    route
  • c) Colombia felt that the 10 million offer was
  • too small.

65
Multiple Choice 400
  • Dollar diplomacy" refers to
  • European investment in American finance
  • construction of an inter-oceanic canal to assist
    world trade
  • paying local rebel armies to overthrow
    governments that disagreed with the U.S
  • encouragement of American trade and investments
    in such areas as Latin America and the Far East
  • maintaining the right of transit across Panama
  • D) encouragement of American trade and
    investments
  • in such areas as Latin America and the Far East

66
Multiple Choice 600
  • This army doctor successfully conducted
    experiments in 1900 that showed yellow fever came
    from the bite of a species of mosquito
  • Josiah Strong
  • Michael Funk
  • Walter Reed
  • William Dearborne
  • Isaiah Quiad
  • C) Walter Reed

67
Multiple Choice 800
  • Historians credit the Democratic victory in the
    1916 presidential election to
  • the Republicans losing their status as majority
    party
  • Wilson's supporters' skillful use of the theme
    "He Kept Us Out of War.
  • Wilson insisting on congressional support for war
    preparations.
  • the Republicans failing to take advantage of
    Wilson's Mexican policy
  • the unpopularity of the Sussex pledge.

B) Wilson's supporters' skillful use of the theme
"He Kept Us Out of War."
68
Multiple Choice 1000
  • Which of the following statements is most
    consistent with the Supreme Court's ruling in
    Schenck v. U. S.?
  • the government's seizure and operation of the
    railroad industry is a constitutional use of its
    wartime powers.
  • the government can restrict the First Amendment
    right to free speech in time of war
  • the government's prohibition of the manufacture
    and sale of distilled liquor is a constitutional
    use of its wartime powers.
  • the government does have the power to compel
    young men to serve in the armed forces during
    time of war.
  • Communists have rights too
  • B) the government can restrict the First
    Amendment
  • right to free speech in time of war

69
Final Jeopardy
70
The Harlem Renaissance
71
  • Give one example of a place
  • where Black entertainers
  • might perform, and list four
  • Black celebrity figures or
  • leaders from the 1920s.

72
  • Give one example of a place
  • where Black entertainers
  • might perform, and list four
  • Black celebrity figures or
  • leaders from the 1920s.
  • Places The Apollo Theater, The Cotton Club
  • Zora Neale Hurston (theater)
  • James Weldon Johnson (Lawyer, Lift every voice
    and sing)
  • Marcus Garvey (Universal Negro Improvement
    Association)
  • Claude McKay (novelist, poet, Jamaican
    immigrant)
  • Langston Hughes (poet)
  • Paul Robeson (actor)
  • Louis Armstrong (Trumpeter, singer, musician)
  • Edward Kennedy Duke Ellington (jazz pianist
    and composer)
  • Bessie Smith (female blues singer)
  • W.E.B. Du Bois (politician)
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