Policy and scandals
The “roaring” lifestyles
global affairs
Arts and culture
Science and Religion
100

This President was known as "Silent Cal" and said "the business of America is business.


Calvin Coolidge 

100

This "new woman" of the 1920s wore short skirts, bobbed her hair, and broke traditions.


The flapper 

100

This agreement was an attempt to "outlaw war" but failed because it couldn't be enforced.


Kellogg briand pac 

100

This New York City neighborhood was the center of African American intellectual and artistic life.


Harlem 

100

The Scopes Trial was a legal battle over the teaching of this subject in schools.


Evolution 

200

 Warren G. Harding promised a "Return to" this, meaning a shift back to traditional life.


Normalcy 

200

This sports icon became a legend in the world of baseball.


Babe Ruth 

200

This was the primary goal of the Washington Naval Conference.


To limit battleships 

200

This author wrote The Great Gatsby.


F. Scott Fitzgerald

200

This psychologist argued that religion was a "myth" and focused on sexual repression.


Sigmund Freud 

300

This major scandal involved Secretary Albert Fall taking bribes for leasing naval oil reserves.


Teapot dome scandal 

300

 Charles Lindbergh became a hero for flying solo across the Atlantic in this famous plane.


The spirit of St Louis 

300

Though the U.S. claimed to be isolationist, it continued to intervene in this specific region.


Latin America 

300

This term refers to the mass movement of African Americans from the South to the North.


The great migration 

300

These religious people believed in the "essentials" of faith and fought against Modernists.


Fundamentalists

400

Both Harding and Coolidge favored this specific type of tax policy to help businesses.


Lower taxes (and less government interference) 

400

This phrase refers to "buying now and paying later" through monthly payments.


Installment payments (or credit) 

400

Name three of the five countries involved in the Washington Naval Conference.


U.S., Britain, Japan, Italy, or France


400

This "Lost Generation" author wrote The Waste Land.


T.S Eliot 

400

He was the famous defense attorney in the Scopes "Monkey" Trial.


Clarence Darrow  

500

This 1924 system restricted "undesirable" immigrants and used the 1890 Census as a baseline.


The quota system 

500

Gertrude Ederle was a famous sports icon known for this specific sport.


Swimming 

500

This period of panic over Communism was triggered by mail bombs sent to officials.


The red scare 

500

Ernest Hemingway belonged to this group of writers who felt "disillusioned" after WWI.


The lost generation 

500

This three-time presidential candidate served as the prosecutor in the Scopes Trial.


William Jennings Bryan