A) Ernest Hemingway B) John Scopes C) Al Capone D) Babe Ruth E) Calvin Coolidge
A) John Scopes B) Marcus Garvey C) Babe Ruth D) Warren Harding
A) Marcus Garvey B) Warren Harding C) Al Capone D) Calvin Coolidge
A) John Scopes B) Ernest Hemingway C) Charles Lindbergh D) Calvin Coolidge
A) Ernest Hemingway B) Charles Lindbergh C) Al Capone D) Calvin Coolidge
A) 13th & 18th Amendments B) 14th &18th Amendments C) 18th &19th Amendments D) 18th & 21st Amendments
A) Warren Harding died in office B) he won the election of 2004 C) Warren Harding was assassinated D) he defeated Robert La Follette in the 1920 election
A) movies and television B) radios and computers C) movies and radio D) television and computers
A) Al Capone B) Marcus Garvey C) Charles Lindbergh D) Ernest Hemingway
A) Warren Harding B) Babe Ruth C) Ernest Hemingway D) Calvin Coolidge
A) John Scopes B) Warren Harding C) Charles Linbergh D) Marcus Garvey
A) Henry Ford- flappers and Jazz music B) Henry Cabot Lodge- Bohemian lifetyle C) Langston Hughes- Harlem Renaissance D) Nativism- Hollywood
A) Louis Armstrong B) Andrew Mellon C) Duke Ellington D) Joe "King" Oliver
A) Scopes Trial B) Sacco and Vanzetti Trial C) Trial involving the murder of Charles Lindbergh's baby
A) flappers B) 18th Amendment C) 19th Amendment D) bootleggers
A) it was the best car ever produced B) it was the best automobile produced in America C) it made railroads obsolete D) it was inexpensive enough for ordinary Americans to buy.
A) The assembly line made the production of automobiles to be more efficient causing cars to be cheaper for people to buy. B) Few Americans used credit to purchase automobiles during the 1920’s. C) Automobiles were much to expensive for ordinary people to purchase during the 1920s.
A) Al Capone attempted to enforce Prohibition and prevent people from drinking alcoholic beverages. B) The ‘Ohio Gang’ was a group of President Harding’s friends who used their positions for personal gain. C) During the 1920’s black Americans migrated from Northern cities to the South to find jobs on the farms in the “Great Migration. D) Many Americans believed in ‘eugenics’ - the belief that abortion was immoral.
A) there was never a law which prohibited the selling of alcohol. B) many people chose to break the law and drink anyway. C) of a few gangsters who sold liquor to criminals. D) law enforcement agencies never tried to enforce Prohibition.
A) Fundamentalist B) Normalcy C) Bohemian D) the Harlem Renaissance
A) isolationism B) moratorium C) cooperative individualism D) normalcy
A) automobiles B) music and entertainment C) railroads D) airplane manufacturing
A) not interfere with business B) strictly control (regulate) the activities of business C) push for social reform to help the poor D) take a strong lead in international affairs- becoming the world leader
A) was a decade of rapid change and clashing values. B) was a decade of economic misery and economic depression for the United States. C) saw the elimination of racial discrimination in the Southern U.S. D) revealed the reluctance of black Americans to attempt high achievement in the arts.
A) enjoyed economic prosperity like other Americans. B) were unable to keep up with the increased demand for farm products like grains. C) were facing the problem of low income. D) found that hard work always paid off with higher income.
A) German immigrants and socialists B) Italian immigrants and socialists C) Italian immigrants and anarchists D) German immigrants and anarchists
A) literacy test scores B) wealth C) ethnic identity and national origin D) job skills
A) work B) personal freedom C) promiscuity D) wealth
A) a Hollywood nightwood nightspot frequent by the stars of the silver screen B) a fictitious Chicago nightclub featured in the famous picture "The Jazz Singer" C) a Harlem nightspot where many African American entertainers got their start D) a Chicago speakeasy where gangsters congregated
A) apprentice system B) mass production C) assembly line D) Flivver
A) television B) advertising C) mass production
A) delivery industry B) farmers C) middle class D) city dwellers
A) Teapot Dome Scandal B) Fall Scandal C) Daugherty Scandal D) Forbes Scandal
A) prohibition B) bootlegging C) flappers D) evolution
A) prohibition B) bootlegging C) flappers D) eugenics
A) Evolution B) Creationism C) Eugenics D) The Great Migration
A) Flappers B) The Great Migration C) Evolution D) Bootlegging
A) flappers B) eugenics C) creationism D) evolution
A) eugenics B) prohibition C) creationism D) evolution
A) bootlegging B) flappers C) evolution D) prohibition |