front 1 1. After Franklin Roosevelt's failed attempt to pack the Supreme
Court | back 1 e |
front 2 2. The Glass-Steagall Act | back 2 e |
front 3 3. In 1935, President Roosevelt set up the Resettlement
Administration to | back 3 e |
front 4 4. The Wagner Act of 1935 proved to be a trailblazing law
that | back 4 a |
front 5 5. Match each New Deal critic below with the cause or slogan that he
promoted. | back 5 a |
front 6 6. ______ proved to be immensely popular among those Americans it
served by putting thousands of people | back 6 e |
front 7 7. While Franklin Roosevelt waited to assume the presidency in early
1933, Herbert Hoover unsuccessfully tried to | back 7 c |
front 8 8. One striking new feature of the 1932 presidential election results
was that | back 8 e |
front 9 9. The National Labor Relations Act proved most beneficial to | back 9 e |
front 10 10. As a result of the 1937 Roosevelt recession | back 10 d |
front 11 11. The most immediate emergency facing Franklin Roosevelt when he
became president in March 1933 was | back 11 a |
front 12 12. The Federal Securities Act and the Securities Exchange Commission
aimed to | back 12 d |
front 13 13. Senator Huey P. Long of Louisiana gained a large national
following by promising to | back 13 e |
front 14 14. The Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) proposed to solve the farm
problem by | back 14 a |
front 15 15. The American Social Security System, established by the New Deal,
differed from most European social | back 15 e |
front 16 16. The Indian Reorganization Act of 1934 attempted to a. reverse the forced assimilation of Native Americans into white
society by establishing tribal self- b. encourage Native Americans to give up their land claims. | back 16 a |
front 17 17. When Franklin Roosevelt assumed the presidency in March
1933 | back 17 c |
front 18 18. The New Deal program of the following agency represented the most
economically complex, managerially | back 18 b |
front 19 19. By 1938, the New Deal | back 19 a |
front 20 20. Prominent female social scientists of the 1930s, like Ruth
Benedict and Margaret Mead, brought widespread | back 20 e |
front 21 21. The federally-owned Tennessee Valley Authority was seen as a
particular threat to | back 21 d |
front 22 22. The Social Security Act of 1935 provided all of the following
EXCEPT | back 22 e |
front 23 23. Roosevelt supported the repeal of Prohibition because | back 23 c |
front 24 24. Eleanor Roosevelt had honed her own skills and developed a
personal network of reform activists through | back 24 b |
front 25 25. The Democratic party platform on which Franklin Roosevelt
campaigned for the presidency in 1932 called for | back 25 a |
front 26 26. Most Dust Bowl migrants headed to | back 26 e |
front 27 27. All of the following contributed to the Dust Bowl of the 1930s
EXCEPT | back 27 c |
front 28 28. President Roosevelt's chief "administrator of relief"
and one of his closest advisors was | back 28 d |
front 29 29. In 1932, Franklin Roosevelt campaigned on the promise that as
President he would attack the Great Depression | back 29 e |
front 30 30. Both ratified in the 1930s, the Twentieth Amendment ____ and the
Twenty-first Amendment ____. | back 30 a |
front 31 31. ____ contributed the most to Franklin Roosevelt's development of
compassion and strength of will. | back 31 d |
front 32 32. The phrase Hundred Days refers to the | back 32 c |
front 33 33. President Roosevelt's Court-packing scheme in 1937 reflected his
desire to ensure that the Supreme Court | back 33 c |
front 34 34. The fate of most of the Okies and other Dust Bowl migrants who
headed west to California was that they | back 34 c |
front 35 35. Immediately after taking office, President Roosevelt responded to
the banking crisis by | back 35 e |
front 36 36. Franklin Roosevelt took America off the gold standard and adopted
a managed currency policy designed to | back 36 a |
front 37 37. The first Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) raised the money that
it paid to farmers not to grow crops by | back 37 e |
front 38 38. Recently, some historians have argued that the New Deal had a
more radical effect on men than women for all | back 38 e |
front 39 39. The early New Deal experiments borrowed rather freely and
randomly from | back 39 d |
front 40 40. The primary interest of the Congress of Industrial Organization
was | back 40 d |
front 41 41. All of the following are true statements about the men who joined
the CCC (Civilian Conservation Corps) | back 41 c |
front 42 42. Match each New Dealer below with the federal agency or program
with which he or she was closely identified. | back 42 b |
front 43 43. The most controversial aspect of the Tennessee Valley Authority
was its effort to | back 43 a |
front 44 44. The group that had experienced the worst suffering as a result of
the Great Depression was | back 44 c |
front 45 45. The National Recovery Administration (NRA) failed largely
because | back 45 b |
front 46 46. Some Native Americans denounced the Indian Reorganization Act of
1934 because its provisions | back 46 d |
front 47 47. Probably the most radically economic New Deal program that
provoked widespread charges of creeping | back 47 e |
front 48 48. The Works Progress Administration was a major ____ program of the
New Deal; the Public Works | back 48 a |