What were the names of the two Presidents listed in this section?
Calvin Coolidge, Warren G. Harding
The number of points that Wilson's peace plan had.
Fourteen.
The country who took most of the blame for WWI
Germany
The wage of loggers was $__ a day
$4
The year that the nineteenth amendment was ratified.
1920
The name of a famous Italian scammer who took funds from investors.
Charles Ponzi
Wilson's campaign slogan
The year that the US entered WWI
1917
One of the goals that unions were striking for.
Higher wages, shorter hours, a right to bargain with employers
When it came to politics, women were a driving force behind these progressive reforms (name one)
Beautification, prohibition, child labor laws
One of the co-founders of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
The term used to describe the 39 senators and Lodge, who were against Wilson's league without reservations or amendments.
Reservationists
The treaty that France, the US, and Great Britain created after WWI.
The treaty of Versailles.
Name of the associations that unions would affiliate with during strike.
The American Federation of Labor (AFL) or the International Workers of the World (IWW)
The convention known as the first women's rights convention.
Seneca Falls Convention
The two Italian immigrants charged for the murder of a security guard during an armed robbery.
Nicola Sacco, Bartolomeo Vanzetti
The year that the US became a charter member of the United Nations.
1945.
The name of the American ship that sank, killing one hundred Americans and sparking anger in the US.
The Lusitania
The man who declared "There is no right to strike against the public safety, by anybody, anywhere, anytime."
Calvin Coolidge
The woman who called the NWP's style of protest unpatriotic and unladylike.
Carrie Chapman Catt
The man who "loathed" President Wilson
Henry Cabot Lodge
The year that the 25th amendment was ratified.
1967
The number of Americans "doughboys" who fell in battle during WWI.
50,300
The number of coal miners who attended the last major labor action in 1919.
400,000
The percent of eligible women who cast a ballot in 1920.
Thirty-five percent