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Senator Huey Long from Louisiana became a major political threat to Roosevelt when he called for


A) more government funding to provide jobs for the unemployed.
B) a national Share Our Wealth movement to redistribute income fairly.
C) Roosevelt's impeachment on the basis that the New Deal was communistic.
D) a revival of the Populist Party and its demands.

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B

Which of these protests caused Hoover's popularity to plunge dramatically in 1932?


A) Farm holiday protests
B) Rent riots
C) Hunger marches
D) Bonus Army

Correct Answer

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Answer the following questions : -Glass-Steagall Act


A) A high tariff enacted in 1930 during the Great Depression.By taxing imported goods,Congress hoped to stimulate American manufacturing,but the tariff triggered retaliatory tariffs in other countries,which further hindered global trade and led to greater economic contraction.
B) A group of 15,000 unemployed World War I veterans who set up camps near the Capitol building in 1932 to demand immediate payment of pension awards due to be paid in 1945.
C) A series of informal radio addresses Franklin Roosevelt made to the nation in which he explained New Deal initiatives.
D) A legendary session during the first few months of Franklin Roosevelt's administration in which Congress enacted fifteen major bills that focused primarily on four problems: banking failures,agricultural overproduction,the business slump,and soaring unemployment.
E) A 1933 law that created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) ,which insured deposits up to $2,500 (and now up to $250,000) .The act also prohibited banks from making risky,unsecured investments with customers' deposits.
F) New Deal legislation passed in May 1933 that aimed at cutting agricultural production to raise crop prices and thus farmers' income.
G) Federal agency established in June,1933 to promote industrial recovery during the Great Depression.It encouraged industrialists to voluntarily adopt codes that defined fair working conditions,set prices,and minimized competition.
H) A New Deal construction program established by Congress in 1933.Designed to put people back to work,the PWA built the Boulder Dam (renamed Hoover Dam) and Grand Coulee Dam,among other large public works projects.
I) Federal relief program that provided jobs to millions of unemployed young men who built thousands of bridges,roads,trails,and other structures in state and national parks,bolstering the national infrastructure.
J) An agency established by the Federal Housing Act of 1934 that refinanced home mortgages for mortgage holders facing possible foreclosure.
K) A commission established by Congress in 1934 to regulate the stock market.The commission had broad powers to determine how stocks and bonds were sold to the public,to set rules for margin (credit) transactions,and to prevent stock sales by those with inside information about corporate plans.
L) A group of Republican business leaders and conservative Democrats who banded together to fight what they called the "reckless spending" and "socialist" reforms of the New Deal.
M) An association of industrialists and business leaders opposed to government regulation.In the era of the New Deal,the group promoted free enterprise and capitalism through a publicity campaign of radio programs,motion pictures,billboards,and direct mail.
N) A plan proposed by Francis Townsend in 1933 that would give $200 a month (about $3,300 today) to citizens over the age of sixty.Townsend Clubs sprang up across the country in support of the plan,mobilizing mass support for old-age pensions.
O) A term applied to industrial democracies that adopt various government-guaranteed social programs.The creation of Social Security and other measures of the Second New Deal fundamentally changed American society and established a national system for these governmental social programs for the first time.
P) A 1935 act that upheld the right of industrial workers to join unions and established the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) ,a federal agency with the authority to protect workers from employer coercion and to guarantee collective bargaining.
Q) A 1935 act with three main provisions: old-age pensions for workers;a joint federal-state system of compensation for unemployed workers;and a program of payments to widowed mothers and the blind,deaf,and disabled.
R) The political ideology of individual liberty,private property,a competitive market economy,free trade,and limited government.The ideal is a laissez faire or "let alone" policy,in which government does the least possible,particularly in reference to economic policies such as tariffs and incentives for industrial development.Attacking corruption and defending private property,late-nineteenth-century liberals generally called for elite governance and questioned the advisability of full democratic participation.
S) Federal New Deal program established in 1935 that provided government-funded public works jobs to millions of unemployed Americans during the Great Depression in areas ranging from construction to the arts.
T) A recession from 1937 to 1938 that occurred after President Roosevelt cut the federal budget.
U) The theory,developed by British economist John Maynard Keynes in the 1930s,that purposeful government intervention in the economy (through lowering or raising taxes,interest rates,and government spending) can affect the level of overall economic activity and thereby prevent severe depressions and runaway inflation.
V) One of the final major laws of the New Deal,it outlawed child labor,made the 40-hour workweek standard (and mandated overtime pay) ,and established a national minimum wage.
W) A 1934 law that reversed the Dawes Act of 1887.Through the law,Indians won a greater degree of religious freedom,and tribal governments regained their status as semisovereign dependent nations.
X) A 1934 law that provided for the independence of the Philippines,after a ten-year transition period.Though it granted Philippine independence,its origins were nativist,because the law's proponents wished to classify Filipinos as "alien" and reduce their immigration to the United States.
Y) A series of dust storms from 1930 to 1941 during which a severe drought afflicted the semiarid states of Oklahoma,Texas,New Mexico,Colorado,Arkansas,and Kansas.
Z) An agency funded by Congress in 1933 that integrated flood control,reforestation,electricity generation,and agricultural and industrial development in the Tennessee Valley area.
AA) An agency established in 1935 to promote nonprofit farm cooperatives that offered loans to farmers to install power lines.
BB) A program under the Works Progress Administration (WPA) from 1935 to 1939 in which historians,teachers,editors,novelists,poets,and playrights were employed by the federal government to produce a variety of materials-this included,for example,interviews with hundreds of former slaves;a major survey of American foodways;and state-by-state guidebooks to history,geography,and culture.

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Which of the following social movements grew tremendously as a result of the New Deal?


A) Feminism
B) Industrial unionism
C) The civil rights movement
D) The movement for immigration reform

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By the time Congress recessed in June 1933,it had


A) halted the downward spiral of the economy.
B) founded agencies that were models of efficiency.
C) established policies that were supported by all.
D) broke the grip of the Depression.

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Answer the following questions : -Indian Reorganization Act


A) A high tariff enacted in 1930 during the Great Depression.By taxing imported goods,Congress hoped to stimulate American manufacturing,but the tariff triggered retaliatory tariffs in other countries,which further hindered global trade and led to greater economic contraction.
B) A group of 15,000 unemployed World War I veterans who set up camps near the Capitol building in 1932 to demand immediate payment of pension awards due to be paid in 1945.
C) A series of informal radio addresses Franklin Roosevelt made to the nation in which he explained New Deal initiatives.
D) A legendary session during the first few months of Franklin Roosevelt's administration in which Congress enacted fifteen major bills that focused primarily on four problems: banking failures,agricultural overproduction,the business slump,and soaring unemployment.
E) A 1933 law that created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) ,which insured deposits up to $2,500 (and now up to $250,000) .The act also prohibited banks from making risky,unsecured investments with customers' deposits.
F) New Deal legislation passed in May 1933 that aimed at cutting agricultural production to raise crop prices and thus farmers' income.
G) Federal agency established in June,1933 to promote industrial recovery during the Great Depression.It encouraged industrialists to voluntarily adopt codes that defined fair working conditions,set prices,and minimized competition.
H) A New Deal construction program established by Congress in 1933.Designed to put people back to work,the PWA built the Boulder Dam (renamed Hoover Dam) and Grand Coulee Dam,among other large public works projects.
I) Federal relief program that provided jobs to millions of unemployed young men who built thousands of bridges,roads,trails,and other structures in state and national parks,bolstering the national infrastructure.
J) An agency established by the Federal Housing Act of 1934 that refinanced home mortgages for mortgage holders facing possible foreclosure.
K) A commission established by Congress in 1934 to regulate the stock market.The commission had broad powers to determine how stocks and bonds were sold to the public,to set rules for margin (credit) transactions,and to prevent stock sales by those with inside information about corporate plans.
L) A group of Republican business leaders and conservative Democrats who banded together to fight what they called the "reckless spending" and "socialist" reforms of the New Deal.
M) An association of industrialists and business leaders opposed to government regulation.In the era of the New Deal,the group promoted free enterprise and capitalism through a publicity campaign of radio programs,motion pictures,billboards,and direct mail.
N) A plan proposed by Francis Townsend in 1933 that would give $200 a month (about $3,300 today) to citizens over the age of sixty.Townsend Clubs sprang up across the country in support of the plan,mobilizing mass support for old-age pensions.
O) A term applied to industrial democracies that adopt various government-guaranteed social programs.The creation of Social Security and other measures of the Second New Deal fundamentally changed American society and established a national system for these governmental social programs for the first time.
P) A 1935 act that upheld the right of industrial workers to join unions and established the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) ,a federal agency with the authority to protect workers from employer coercion and to guarantee collective bargaining.
Q) A 1935 act with three main provisions: old-age pensions for workers;a joint federal-state system of compensation for unemployed workers;and a program of payments to widowed mothers and the blind,deaf,and disabled.
R) The political ideology of individual liberty,private property,a competitive market economy,free trade,and limited government.The ideal is a laissez faire or "let alone" policy,in which government does the least possible,particularly in reference to economic policies such as tariffs and incentives for industrial development.Attacking corruption and defending private property,late-nineteenth-century liberals generally called for elite governance and questioned the advisability of full democratic participation.
S) Federal New Deal program established in 1935 that provided government-funded public works jobs to millions of unemployed Americans during the Great Depression in areas ranging from construction to the arts.
T) A recession from 1937 to 1938 that occurred after President Roosevelt cut the federal budget.
U) The theory,developed by British economist John Maynard Keynes in the 1930s,that purposeful government intervention in the economy (through lowering or raising taxes,interest rates,and government spending) can affect the level of overall economic activity and thereby prevent severe depressions and runaway inflation.
V) One of the final major laws of the New Deal,it outlawed child labor,made the 40-hour workweek standard (and mandated overtime pay) ,and established a national minimum wage.
W) A 1934 law that reversed the Dawes Act of 1887.Through the law,Indians won a greater degree of religious freedom,and tribal governments regained their status as semisovereign dependent nations.
X) A 1934 law that provided for the independence of the Philippines,after a ten-year transition period.Though it granted Philippine independence,its origins were nativist,because the law's proponents wished to classify Filipinos as "alien" and reduce their immigration to the United States.
Y) A series of dust storms from 1930 to 1941 during which a severe drought afflicted the semiarid states of Oklahoma,Texas,New Mexico,Colorado,Arkansas,and Kansas.
Z) An agency funded by Congress in 1933 that integrated flood control,reforestation,electricity generation,and agricultural and industrial development in the Tennessee Valley area.
AA) An agency established in 1935 to promote nonprofit farm cooperatives that offered loans to farmers to install power lines.
BB) A program under the Works Progress Administration (WPA) from 1935 to 1939 in which historians,teachers,editors,novelists,poets,and playrights were employed by the federal government to produce a variety of materials-this included,for example,interviews with hundreds of former slaves;a major survey of American foodways;and state-by-state guidebooks to history,geography,and culture.

Correct Answer

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W

Answer the following questions : -Federal Housing Administration


A) A high tariff enacted in 1930 during the Great Depression.By taxing imported goods,Congress hoped to stimulate American manufacturing,but the tariff triggered retaliatory tariffs in other countries,which further hindered global trade and led to greater economic contraction.
B) A group of 15,000 unemployed World War I veterans who set up camps near the Capitol building in 1932 to demand immediate payment of pension awards due to be paid in 1945.
C) A series of informal radio addresses Franklin Roosevelt made to the nation in which he explained New Deal initiatives.
D) A legendary session during the first few months of Franklin Roosevelt's administration in which Congress enacted fifteen major bills that focused primarily on four problems: banking failures,agricultural overproduction,the business slump,and soaring unemployment.
E) A 1933 law that created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) ,which insured deposits up to $2,500 (and now up to $250,000) .The act also prohibited banks from making risky,unsecured investments with customers' deposits.
F) New Deal legislation passed in May 1933 that aimed at cutting agricultural production to raise crop prices and thus farmers' income.
G) Federal agency established in June,1933 to promote industrial recovery during the Great Depression.It encouraged industrialists to voluntarily adopt codes that defined fair working conditions,set prices,and minimized competition.
H) A New Deal construction program established by Congress in 1933.Designed to put people back to work,the PWA built the Boulder Dam (renamed Hoover Dam) and Grand Coulee Dam,among other large public works projects.
I) Federal relief program that provided jobs to millions of unemployed young men who built thousands of bridges,roads,trails,and other structures in state and national parks,bolstering the national infrastructure.
J) An agency established by the Federal Housing Act of 1934 that refinanced home mortgages for mortgage holders facing possible foreclosure.
K) A commission established by Congress in 1934 to regulate the stock market.The commission had broad powers to determine how stocks and bonds were sold to the public,to set rules for margin (credit) transactions,and to prevent stock sales by those with inside information about corporate plans.
L) A group of Republican business leaders and conservative Democrats who banded together to fight what they called the "reckless spending" and "socialist" reforms of the New Deal.
M) An association of industrialists and business leaders opposed to government regulation.In the era of the New Deal,the group promoted free enterprise and capitalism through a publicity campaign of radio programs,motion pictures,billboards,and direct mail.
N) A plan proposed by Francis Townsend in 1933 that would give $200 a month (about $3,300 today) to citizens over the age of sixty.Townsend Clubs sprang up across the country in support of the plan,mobilizing mass support for old-age pensions.
O) A term applied to industrial democracies that adopt various government-guaranteed social programs.The creation of Social Security and other measures of the Second New Deal fundamentally changed American society and established a national system for these governmental social programs for the first time.
P) A 1935 act that upheld the right of industrial workers to join unions and established the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) ,a federal agency with the authority to protect workers from employer coercion and to guarantee collective bargaining.
Q) A 1935 act with three main provisions: old-age pensions for workers;a joint federal-state system of compensation for unemployed workers;and a program of payments to widowed mothers and the blind,deaf,and disabled.
R) The political ideology of individual liberty,private property,a competitive market economy,free trade,and limited government.The ideal is a laissez faire or "let alone" policy,in which government does the least possible,particularly in reference to economic policies such as tariffs and incentives for industrial development.Attacking corruption and defending private property,late-nineteenth-century liberals generally called for elite governance and questioned the advisability of full democratic participation.
S) Federal New Deal program established in 1935 that provided government-funded public works jobs to millions of unemployed Americans during the Great Depression in areas ranging from construction to the arts.
T) A recession from 1937 to 1938 that occurred after President Roosevelt cut the federal budget.
U) The theory,developed by British economist John Maynard Keynes in the 1930s,that purposeful government intervention in the economy (through lowering or raising taxes,interest rates,and government spending) can affect the level of overall economic activity and thereby prevent severe depressions and runaway inflation.
V) One of the final major laws of the New Deal,it outlawed child labor,made the 40-hour workweek standard (and mandated overtime pay) ,and established a national minimum wage.
W) A 1934 law that reversed the Dawes Act of 1887.Through the law,Indians won a greater degree of religious freedom,and tribal governments regained their status as semisovereign dependent nations.
X) A 1934 law that provided for the independence of the Philippines,after a ten-year transition period.Though it granted Philippine independence,its origins were nativist,because the law's proponents wished to classify Filipinos as "alien" and reduce their immigration to the United States.
Y) A series of dust storms from 1930 to 1941 during which a severe drought afflicted the semiarid states of Oklahoma,Texas,New Mexico,Colorado,Arkansas,and Kansas.
Z) An agency funded by Congress in 1933 that integrated flood control,reforestation,electricity generation,and agricultural and industrial development in the Tennessee Valley area.
AA) An agency established in 1935 to promote nonprofit farm cooperatives that offered loans to farmers to install power lines.
BB) A program under the Works Progress Administration (WPA) from 1935 to 1939 in which historians,teachers,editors,novelists,poets,and playrights were employed by the federal government to produce a variety of materials-this included,for example,interviews with hundreds of former slaves;a major survey of American foodways;and state-by-state guidebooks to history,geography,and culture.

Correct Answer

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In the 1936 presidential election,Franklin D.Roosevelt


A) lost.
B) won by a landslide.
C) won by a small margin.
D) was unopposed.

Correct Answer

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Answer the following questions : -fireside chats


A) A high tariff enacted in 1930 during the Great Depression.By taxing imported goods,Congress hoped to stimulate American manufacturing,but the tariff triggered retaliatory tariffs in other countries,which further hindered global trade and led to greater economic contraction.
B) A group of 15,000 unemployed World War I veterans who set up camps near the Capitol building in 1932 to demand immediate payment of pension awards due to be paid in 1945.
C) A series of informal radio addresses Franklin Roosevelt made to the nation in which he explained New Deal initiatives.
D) A legendary session during the first few months of Franklin Roosevelt's administration in which Congress enacted fifteen major bills that focused primarily on four problems: banking failures,agricultural overproduction,the business slump,and soaring unemployment.
E) A 1933 law that created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) ,which insured deposits up to $2,500 (and now up to $250,000) .The act also prohibited banks from making risky,unsecured investments with customers' deposits.
F) New Deal legislation passed in May 1933 that aimed at cutting agricultural production to raise crop prices and thus farmers' income.
G) Federal agency established in June,1933 to promote industrial recovery during the Great Depression.It encouraged industrialists to voluntarily adopt codes that defined fair working conditions,set prices,and minimized competition.
H) A New Deal construction program established by Congress in 1933.Designed to put people back to work,the PWA built the Boulder Dam (renamed Hoover Dam) and Grand Coulee Dam,among other large public works projects.
I) Federal relief program that provided jobs to millions of unemployed young men who built thousands of bridges,roads,trails,and other structures in state and national parks,bolstering the national infrastructure.
J) An agency established by the Federal Housing Act of 1934 that refinanced home mortgages for mortgage holders facing possible foreclosure.
K) A commission established by Congress in 1934 to regulate the stock market.The commission had broad powers to determine how stocks and bonds were sold to the public,to set rules for margin (credit) transactions,and to prevent stock sales by those with inside information about corporate plans.
L) A group of Republican business leaders and conservative Democrats who banded together to fight what they called the "reckless spending" and "socialist" reforms of the New Deal.
M) An association of industrialists and business leaders opposed to government regulation.In the era of the New Deal,the group promoted free enterprise and capitalism through a publicity campaign of radio programs,motion pictures,billboards,and direct mail.
N) A plan proposed by Francis Townsend in 1933 that would give $200 a month (about $3,300 today) to citizens over the age of sixty.Townsend Clubs sprang up across the country in support of the plan,mobilizing mass support for old-age pensions.
O) A term applied to industrial democracies that adopt various government-guaranteed social programs.The creation of Social Security and other measures of the Second New Deal fundamentally changed American society and established a national system for these governmental social programs for the first time.
P) A 1935 act that upheld the right of industrial workers to join unions and established the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) ,a federal agency with the authority to protect workers from employer coercion and to guarantee collective bargaining.
Q) A 1935 act with three main provisions: old-age pensions for workers;a joint federal-state system of compensation for unemployed workers;and a program of payments to widowed mothers and the blind,deaf,and disabled.
R) The political ideology of individual liberty,private property,a competitive market economy,free trade,and limited government.The ideal is a laissez faire or "let alone" policy,in which government does the least possible,particularly in reference to economic policies such as tariffs and incentives for industrial development.Attacking corruption and defending private property,late-nineteenth-century liberals generally called for elite governance and questioned the advisability of full democratic participation.
S) Federal New Deal program established in 1935 that provided government-funded public works jobs to millions of unemployed Americans during the Great Depression in areas ranging from construction to the arts.
T) A recession from 1937 to 1938 that occurred after President Roosevelt cut the federal budget.
U) The theory,developed by British economist John Maynard Keynes in the 1930s,that purposeful government intervention in the economy (through lowering or raising taxes,interest rates,and government spending) can affect the level of overall economic activity and thereby prevent severe depressions and runaway inflation.
V) One of the final major laws of the New Deal,it outlawed child labor,made the 40-hour workweek standard (and mandated overtime pay) ,and established a national minimum wage.
W) A 1934 law that reversed the Dawes Act of 1887.Through the law,Indians won a greater degree of religious freedom,and tribal governments regained their status as semisovereign dependent nations.
X) A 1934 law that provided for the independence of the Philippines,after a ten-year transition period.Though it granted Philippine independence,its origins were nativist,because the law's proponents wished to classify Filipinos as "alien" and reduce their immigration to the United States.
Y) A series of dust storms from 1930 to 1941 during which a severe drought afflicted the semiarid states of Oklahoma,Texas,New Mexico,Colorado,Arkansas,and Kansas.
Z) An agency funded by Congress in 1933 that integrated flood control,reforestation,electricity generation,and agricultural and industrial development in the Tennessee Valley area.
AA) An agency established in 1935 to promote nonprofit farm cooperatives that offered loans to farmers to install power lines.
BB) A program under the Works Progress Administration (WPA) from 1935 to 1939 in which historians,teachers,editors,novelists,poets,and playrights were employed by the federal government to produce a variety of materials-this included,for example,interviews with hundreds of former slaves;a major survey of American foodways;and state-by-state guidebooks to history,geography,and culture.

Correct Answer

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Which of the following countries was the first to fall into a depression at the end of the 1920s?


A) Germany
B) The Soviet Union
C) Norway
D) Sweden

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What was the New Deal's long-term legacy in the United States?

Correct Answer

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Answer should ideally include:
- Summary...

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For the following question,refer to the following photograph of a United Auto Workers strike in Flint,Michigan,on January 9,1937. For the following question,refer to the following photograph of a United Auto Workers strike in Flint,Michigan,on January 9,1937.   The activities depicted in the photograph above reflect most directly A)  new technologies contributing to improved standards of living. B)  the transformation of the United States into a limited welfare state. C)  political and cultural conflicts between management and labor. D)  the persistence of poverty as a national problem. The activities depicted in the photograph above reflect most directly


A) new technologies contributing to improved standards of living.
B) the transformation of the United States into a limited welfare state.
C) political and cultural conflicts between management and labor.
D) the persistence of poverty as a national problem.

Correct Answer

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Why did Roosevelt drop a provision for national health insurance from the Social Security Act in 1935?


A) The bill's compulsory pension and unemployment were already controversial.
B) He did not support national health care.
C) He proposed an additional bill to expand health care to all people.
D) He did not want to give satisfaction to his opponents,who supported national health insurance.

Correct Answer

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What was the purpose of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) ,which the Roosevelt Congress empowered in 1934?


A) To oversee the process of taking the United States off the gold standard
B) To provide oversight for the Federal Reserve System
C) To regulate and rationalize the U.S.stock market
D) To protect radicals and immigrants from unfair investigation and deportation

Correct Answer

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As a result of Roosevelt's embrace of the economic policies of John Maynard Keynes and the need for social welfare legislation,the term liberalism came to be associated with


A) weak government and an unregulated free market.
B) strong government and state ownership of industry.
C) government intervention to guarantee citizens' basic welfare.
D) strong businesses that provide services to ensure workers' welfare.

Correct Answer

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What was the first action Roosevelt took to address the nation's economic crisis?


A) End Prohibition
B) Closed all banks in a banking holiday
C) Put people to work in the WPA
D) Gave states money for relief

Correct Answer

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Answer the following questions : -Public Works Administration


A) A high tariff enacted in 1930 during the Great Depression.By taxing imported goods,Congress hoped to stimulate American manufacturing,but the tariff triggered retaliatory tariffs in other countries,which further hindered global trade and led to greater economic contraction.
B) A group of 15,000 unemployed World War I veterans who set up camps near the Capitol building in 1932 to demand immediate payment of pension awards due to be paid in 1945.
C) A series of informal radio addresses Franklin Roosevelt made to the nation in which he explained New Deal initiatives.
D) A legendary session during the first few months of Franklin Roosevelt's administration in which Congress enacted fifteen major bills that focused primarily on four problems: banking failures,agricultural overproduction,the business slump,and soaring unemployment.
E) A 1933 law that created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) ,which insured deposits up to $2,500 (and now up to $250,000) .The act also prohibited banks from making risky,unsecured investments with customers' deposits.
F) New Deal legislation passed in May 1933 that aimed at cutting agricultural production to raise crop prices and thus farmers' income.
G) Federal agency established in June,1933 to promote industrial recovery during the Great Depression.It encouraged industrialists to voluntarily adopt codes that defined fair working conditions,set prices,and minimized competition.
H) A New Deal construction program established by Congress in 1933.Designed to put people back to work,the PWA built the Boulder Dam (renamed Hoover Dam) and Grand Coulee Dam,among other large public works projects.
I) Federal relief program that provided jobs to millions of unemployed young men who built thousands of bridges,roads,trails,and other structures in state and national parks,bolstering the national infrastructure.
J) An agency established by the Federal Housing Act of 1934 that refinanced home mortgages for mortgage holders facing possible foreclosure.
K) A commission established by Congress in 1934 to regulate the stock market.The commission had broad powers to determine how stocks and bonds were sold to the public,to set rules for margin (credit) transactions,and to prevent stock sales by those with inside information about corporate plans.
L) A group of Republican business leaders and conservative Democrats who banded together to fight what they called the "reckless spending" and "socialist" reforms of the New Deal.
M) An association of industrialists and business leaders opposed to government regulation.In the era of the New Deal,the group promoted free enterprise and capitalism through a publicity campaign of radio programs,motion pictures,billboards,and direct mail.
N) A plan proposed by Francis Townsend in 1933 that would give $200 a month (about $3,300 today) to citizens over the age of sixty.Townsend Clubs sprang up across the country in support of the plan,mobilizing mass support for old-age pensions.
O) A term applied to industrial democracies that adopt various government-guaranteed social programs.The creation of Social Security and other measures of the Second New Deal fundamentally changed American society and established a national system for these governmental social programs for the first time.
P) A 1935 act that upheld the right of industrial workers to join unions and established the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) ,a federal agency with the authority to protect workers from employer coercion and to guarantee collective bargaining.
Q) A 1935 act with three main provisions: old-age pensions for workers;a joint federal-state system of compensation for unemployed workers;and a program of payments to widowed mothers and the blind,deaf,and disabled.
R) The political ideology of individual liberty,private property,a competitive market economy,free trade,and limited government.The ideal is a laissez faire or "let alone" policy,in which government does the least possible,particularly in reference to economic policies such as tariffs and incentives for industrial development.Attacking corruption and defending private property,late-nineteenth-century liberals generally called for elite governance and questioned the advisability of full democratic participation.
S) Federal New Deal program established in 1935 that provided government-funded public works jobs to millions of unemployed Americans during the Great Depression in areas ranging from construction to the arts.
T) A recession from 1937 to 1938 that occurred after President Roosevelt cut the federal budget.
U) The theory,developed by British economist John Maynard Keynes in the 1930s,that purposeful government intervention in the economy (through lowering or raising taxes,interest rates,and government spending) can affect the level of overall economic activity and thereby prevent severe depressions and runaway inflation.
V) One of the final major laws of the New Deal,it outlawed child labor,made the 40-hour workweek standard (and mandated overtime pay) ,and established a national minimum wage.
W) A 1934 law that reversed the Dawes Act of 1887.Through the law,Indians won a greater degree of religious freedom,and tribal governments regained their status as semisovereign dependent nations.
X) A 1934 law that provided for the independence of the Philippines,after a ten-year transition period.Though it granted Philippine independence,its origins were nativist,because the law's proponents wished to classify Filipinos as "alien" and reduce their immigration to the United States.
Y) A series of dust storms from 1930 to 1941 during which a severe drought afflicted the semiarid states of Oklahoma,Texas,New Mexico,Colorado,Arkansas,and Kansas.
Z) An agency funded by Congress in 1933 that integrated flood control,reforestation,electricity generation,and agricultural and industrial development in the Tennessee Valley area.
AA) An agency established in 1935 to promote nonprofit farm cooperatives that offered loans to farmers to install power lines.
BB) A program under the Works Progress Administration (WPA) from 1935 to 1939 in which historians,teachers,editors,novelists,poets,and playrights were employed by the federal government to produce a variety of materials-this included,for example,interviews with hundreds of former slaves;a major survey of American foodways;and state-by-state guidebooks to history,geography,and culture.

Correct Answer

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On what basis did the U.S.Supreme Court strike down the National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA) in the Schechter v.United States decision?


A) The NIRA illegally regulated commerce within individual states.
B) The program acted as a trust administered and funded by the federal government.
C) It violated the age-old moral and legal codes set for businesses.
D) It used taxpayer money to benefit one interest group over others.

Correct Answer

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Answer the following questions : -Agricultural Adjustment Act


A) A high tariff enacted in 1930 during the Great Depression.By taxing imported goods,Congress hoped to stimulate American manufacturing,but the tariff triggered retaliatory tariffs in other countries,which further hindered global trade and led to greater economic contraction.
B) A group of 15,000 unemployed World War I veterans who set up camps near the Capitol building in 1932 to demand immediate payment of pension awards due to be paid in 1945.
C) A series of informal radio addresses Franklin Roosevelt made to the nation in which he explained New Deal initiatives.
D) A legendary session during the first few months of Franklin Roosevelt's administration in which Congress enacted fifteen major bills that focused primarily on four problems: banking failures,agricultural overproduction,the business slump,and soaring unemployment.
E) A 1933 law that created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) ,which insured deposits up to $2,500 (and now up to $250,000) .The act also prohibited banks from making risky,unsecured investments with customers' deposits.
F) New Deal legislation passed in May 1933 that aimed at cutting agricultural production to raise crop prices and thus farmers' income.
G) Federal agency established in June,1933 to promote industrial recovery during the Great Depression.It encouraged industrialists to voluntarily adopt codes that defined fair working conditions,set prices,and minimized competition.
H) A New Deal construction program established by Congress in 1933.Designed to put people back to work,the PWA built the Boulder Dam (renamed Hoover Dam) and Grand Coulee Dam,among other large public works projects.
I) Federal relief program that provided jobs to millions of unemployed young men who built thousands of bridges,roads,trails,and other structures in state and national parks,bolstering the national infrastructure.
J) An agency established by the Federal Housing Act of 1934 that refinanced home mortgages for mortgage holders facing possible foreclosure.
K) A commission established by Congress in 1934 to regulate the stock market.The commission had broad powers to determine how stocks and bonds were sold to the public,to set rules for margin (credit) transactions,and to prevent stock sales by those with inside information about corporate plans.
L) A group of Republican business leaders and conservative Democrats who banded together to fight what they called the "reckless spending" and "socialist" reforms of the New Deal.
M) An association of industrialists and business leaders opposed to government regulation.In the era of the New Deal,the group promoted free enterprise and capitalism through a publicity campaign of radio programs,motion pictures,billboards,and direct mail.
N) A plan proposed by Francis Townsend in 1933 that would give $200 a month (about $3,300 today) to citizens over the age of sixty.Townsend Clubs sprang up across the country in support of the plan,mobilizing mass support for old-age pensions.
O) A term applied to industrial democracies that adopt various government-guaranteed social programs.The creation of Social Security and other measures of the Second New Deal fundamentally changed American society and established a national system for these governmental social programs for the first time.
P) A 1935 act that upheld the right of industrial workers to join unions and established the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) ,a federal agency with the authority to protect workers from employer coercion and to guarantee collective bargaining.
Q) A 1935 act with three main provisions: old-age pensions for workers;a joint federal-state system of compensation for unemployed workers;and a program of payments to widowed mothers and the blind,deaf,and disabled.
R) The political ideology of individual liberty,private property,a competitive market economy,free trade,and limited government.The ideal is a laissez faire or "let alone" policy,in which government does the least possible,particularly in reference to economic policies such as tariffs and incentives for industrial development.Attacking corruption and defending private property,late-nineteenth-century liberals generally called for elite governance and questioned the advisability of full democratic participation.
S) Federal New Deal program established in 1935 that provided government-funded public works jobs to millions of unemployed Americans during the Great Depression in areas ranging from construction to the arts.
T) A recession from 1937 to 1938 that occurred after President Roosevelt cut the federal budget.
U) The theory,developed by British economist John Maynard Keynes in the 1930s,that purposeful government intervention in the economy (through lowering or raising taxes,interest rates,and government spending) can affect the level of overall economic activity and thereby prevent severe depressions and runaway inflation.
V) One of the final major laws of the New Deal,it outlawed child labor,made the 40-hour workweek standard (and mandated overtime pay) ,and established a national minimum wage.
W) A 1934 law that reversed the Dawes Act of 1887.Through the law,Indians won a greater degree of religious freedom,and tribal governments regained their status as semisovereign dependent nations.
X) A 1934 law that provided for the independence of the Philippines,after a ten-year transition period.Though it granted Philippine independence,its origins were nativist,because the law's proponents wished to classify Filipinos as "alien" and reduce their immigration to the United States.
Y) A series of dust storms from 1930 to 1941 during which a severe drought afflicted the semiarid states of Oklahoma,Texas,New Mexico,Colorado,Arkansas,and Kansas.
Z) An agency funded by Congress in 1933 that integrated flood control,reforestation,electricity generation,and agricultural and industrial development in the Tennessee Valley area.
AA) An agency established in 1935 to promote nonprofit farm cooperatives that offered loans to farmers to install power lines.
BB) A program under the Works Progress Administration (WPA) from 1935 to 1939 in which historians,teachers,editors,novelists,poets,and playrights were employed by the federal government to produce a variety of materials-this included,for example,interviews with hundreds of former slaves;a major survey of American foodways;and state-by-state guidebooks to history,geography,and culture.

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People often view the New Deal as a set of government programs and policies enacted by President Roosevelt and Congress,but ordinary Americans also played a role in inspiring and bringing to fruition various aspects of the New Deal.Who were some of the individuals and/or groups who influenced the New Deal? How important do you think their efforts were in contributing to the impact of its programs?

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Answer:Incredibly popular,he increased taxes on corporations;lowered consumers' utility bills;and built new highways,hospitals,and schools.He established a national movement known as the Share Our Wealth Society that criticized inequalities in the distribution of wealth in the United States.Long advocated a tax of 100 percent on all income over $1 million per year and on all inheritances over $5 million.His ideas,his popularity,and his ability to organize a large movement made him a substantial political threat to Roosevelt and pushed the president to incorporate some of his ideas into the Second New Deal. - Workers: Industrial workers persisted in organized efforts to resist corporations and management throughout the early years of the Great Depression.They organized strikes in the auto,mining,and steel industries in an effort to protect their wages and autonomy and to win their right to organize and bargain collectively.The Wagner Act was a response to their efforts,and it aided in their continuing efforts to create industrial unions.Labor's new vitality translated into further political action that would continue to push the Democratic Party toward policies that improved the lives of the working class. - Eleanor Roosevelt: As the first lady,Eleanor Roosevelt emerged as an independent public figure who served as an advocate for women's rights,labor unions,education,and civil rights for African Americans.She became the conscience of the New Deal by pushing her husband to do more for the disadvantaged.She said,"I sometimes acted as a spur,even though the spurring was not always wanted or welcome." She and other prominent women made New Dealers pay attention to women's issues in policies such as the Works Progress Administration. -

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