APUSH vocab chapter 31
Terms
undefined, object
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- zimmerman note
- note secretly proposing german-mexican alliance
- jeanette rankin
- first congresswoman
- 14 points
- delivered by wilson; outlined what he was dissatisfied with
- league of nations
- organization of nations wilson guaranteed political independence to and territorial integrity
- committee of public information
- created to prepare people's minds for war, promoted war
- espinage act
- persecuted people who critized government war policy. directly effected
- sedition act
- persecuted people who critzed government war policy
- wobblies
- industrial workers of the world
- war industries board
- made to assure we were producing enough at home and abroad
- national war labor board
- settled any possible labor difficulties that might hamper the war efforts.
- food administration
- He spurned ration cards in favor of voluntary meatless Tuesdays and wheatless Wednesdays, suing posters, billboards, and other media to whip up a patriotic spirit which encouraged people to voluntarily sacrifice some of their own goods for the war.
- warren g harding
- He won the 1920 election but he was unable to detect moral wrongs in his associates. He appointed "great minds" to office because he knew he lacked in intelligence, but a few of the men he appointed were morally lacking.
- national women's party
- lobbied for women's voting
- john j pershing
- led troops against pancho villa
- meuse-argonne sector
- cut German railroad lines and took 120,000 casualties.
- henry cabot lodge
- a very intelligent man who used to be the “scholar in politics†until Wilson came along and was therefore jealous and spiteful of Wilso
- article x
- which morally bound the U.S. to aid any member of the League of Nations that was victimized by aggression
- irreconcilables
- During World War I, senators William Borah of Idaho and Hiram Johnson of California, led a group of people who were against the United States joining the League of Nations. Also known as "the Battalion of Death". They were extreme isolationists and were totally against the U.S. joining the League of Nations.