Amsco Term Quiz Study Guide

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Amsco Term Quiz Study Guide Amsco Term Quiz Study Guide Chapter One Chapter Two Chapter Three • Asiento System • Middle Passage • John Peter Zenger • Plymouth • Triangular Trade • John Bartram • Jamestown • Sir Edmund Andros • Benjamin Franklin • Encomienda System • Navigation Acts • Poor Richard's Almanack • Samuel Champlain • James Oglethorpe • Phillis Wheatley • Francisco Pizzaro • Mercantilism • George Whitefield • Hernan Cortes • William Penn • Great Awakening • House of Burgesses • New England • Town Meetings Confederation • John Rolfe • Halfway Covenant • John Smith • Fundamental Orders of Connecticut • Joint-Stock Company • Thomas Hooker • Separatists • Anne Hutchinson • John Winthrop • Roger Williams • Massachusetts Bay Colony • Bacon’s Rebellion • Mayflower Compact • Headright System • Indentured Servants • Act of Toleration • Proprietary Colony • Royal Colony • Holy Experiment Amsco Term Quiz Study Guide Chapter Four Chapter Five Chapter Six • John Locke • Shays' Rebellion • Revolution of 1800 • The Enlightenment • Northwest Ordinance • Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions • Deism • Land Ordinance of 1785 • Alien and Sedition Acts • Tea Act • Articles of Confederation • XYZ Affair • Lord Frederick North • Treaty of Paris • John Adams • Committees of • Battle of Yorktown • Battle of Fallen Timbers Correspondence • Gaspee Incident • Battle of Saratoga • Pinckney’s Treaty • Boston Massacre • George Rogers Clark • Jay’s Treaty • Samuel Adams • Declaration of • Proclamation of Neutrality Independence • Massachusetts Circular • Thomas Jefferson • Excise Tax Letter • John Dickinson • Thomas Paine • Judiciary Act • Quartering Act • Olive Branch Petition • Checks and Balances • Declaratory Act • Paul Revere • Alexander Hamilton • Sons of Liberty • Suffolk Resolves • Bill of Rights • Patrick Henry • George Washington • Federalist Papers • Stamp Act • Abigail Adams • Federalists • Sugar Act • Anti-Federalists • Proclamation of 1763 • New Jersey Plan • Pontiac's Rebellion • Virginia Plan • Treaty of Paris • James Madison • Peace of Paris • Annapolis Convention • General Edward Braddock • Albany Plan of Union • Coercive Acts or Intolerable Acts • Writs of Assistance • Salutary Neglect Amsco Term Quiz Study Guide Chapter Seven Chapter Eight Chapter Ten • Judicial Review • Henry Clay • Indian Removal Act • Francis Scott Key • Robert Fulton • Specie Circular • War Hawks • Eli Whitney • Pet Banks • Treaty of Ghent • Samuel Slater • Nicholas Biddle • Hartford Convention • Market Revolution • Whig Party • Tecumseh • Erie Canal • Webster-Hayne Debate • Lewis and Clark • National Road • Worcester v. Georgia • Barbary Pirates • Monroe Doctrine • Cherokee Nation v. Georgia • John Marshall • Rush-Bagot Treaty • Trail of Tears • Marbury v. Madison • Missouri Compromise • Spoils System • Macon's Bill No. 2 • Tallmadge Amendment • Tariff of Abominations • Nonintercourse Act • Gibbons v. Ogden • Corrupt Bargain • Embargo Act • Dartmouth College v. Woodward • Impressment • McCulloch v. Maryland • Strict Interpretation • Fletcher v. Peck • Toussaint l'Ouverture • Panic of 1819 • Louisiana Purchase • Second National Bank • American System • Protective Tariff • Tariff of 1816 • Sectionalism • Nationalism • Era of Good Feelings Amsco Term Quiz Study Guide Chapter Eleven Chapter Twelve Chapter Thirteen • American Colonization • Wilmot Proviso • James Buchanan Society • Seneca Falls • Mexican Cession • Crittenden Compromise • Elizabeth Cady Stanton • Treaty of Guadalupe • Roger Taney Hidalgo • Lucretia Mott • Winfield Scott • Dred Scott v. Sandford • Neal Dow • John C. Fremont • John Brown • American Temperance • Zachary Taylor • Harpers Ferry Society • Horace Mann • Stephen Kearney • Lecompton Constitution • Dorothea Dix • James K. Polk • Bleeding Kansas • Shakers • Fifty-four Forty or Fight! • Republican Party • Oneida Community • John Tyler • New England Emigrant Aid Company • Brook Farm • Webster-Ashburton Treaty • Kansas-Nebraska Act • Brigham Young • Sam Houston • Harriet Tubman • Joseph Smith • Alamo • Uncle Tom's Cabin • Burned-Over District • Antonio Lopez de Santa • Harriet Beecher Stowe Anna • North Star • Stephen Austin • Underground Railroad • Frederick Douglass • Horace Greeley • Fugitive Slave Law • Sojourner Truth • Manifest Destiny • Compromise of 1850 • David Walker • Free-Soil Party • Nat Turner • Stephen A. Douglas • Sarah and Angelina • Know-Nothing Party Grimke • American Anti-Slavery • Popular Sovereignty Society • Second Great Awakening • The Liberator • William Lloyd Garrison • Henry David Thoreau • Ralph Waldo Emerson • James Fenimore Cooper • Nathaniel Hawthorne Amsco Term Quiz Study Guide Chapter Fourteen Chapter Fifteen Chapter Sixteen • Pacific Railway Act • Thomas Nast • Joseph Glidden • Morrill Land Grant Act • William "Boss" Tweed • Barbed Wire • Homestead Act • Greenbacks • Interstate Commerce Act • Copperheads • Compromise of 1877 • Munn v. Illinois • Thirteenth Amendment • Rutherford B. Hayes • Wabash v. Illinois • Ex Parte Milligan • Amnesty Act of 1872 • Booker T. Washington • Battle of Gettysburg • Force Acts • Ida B. Wells • Emancipation • Redeemers • Grandfather Clause Proclamation • Confiscation Acts • Civil Rights Act of 1875 • Jim Crow Laws • Anaconda Plan • Hiram Revels • Plessy v. Ferguson • Alexander Stephens • Sharecropping • Civil Rights Cases of 1883 • Jefferson Davis • Carpetbaggers • Dawes Severalty Act • Bull Run • Scalawags • A Century of Dishonor • Fort Sumter • Impeachment • Helen Hunt Jackson • Border States • Tenure of Office Act • Chief Joseph • Habeas Corpus • Ku Klux Klan • Little Big Horn • Reconstruction Acts • Frederick Jackson Turner • Fifteenth Amendment • Frontier Thesis • Fourteenth Amendment • Vaqueros • Andrew Johnson • Chinese Exclusion Act • Thaddeus Stevens • Comstock Lode • Black Codes • Freedmen's Bureau • Radical Republicans • Wade-Davis Bill Amsco Term Quiz Study Guide Chapter Seventeen Chapter Eighteen Chapter Nineteen • Haymarket Bombing • Frederic Law Olmsted • William Jennings Bryan • Eugene Debs • Anthony Comstock • Marcus Hanna • Pullman Strike • Carrie Nation • James B. Weaver • Homestead Strike • Women's Christian • Coxey's Army Temperance Union • Samuel Gompers • Mary Baker Eddy • Free Silver • American Federation of • Walter Rauschenbusch • Sherman Silver Purchase Labor Act • Terence V. Powderly • Political Machine • Bland-Allison Act • Knights of Labor • Progress and Poverty • Pendleton Act • Railroad Strike of 1877 • Henry George • James G. Blaine • Yellow-Dog Contract • Edward Bellamy • Chester A. Arthur • Alexander Graham Bell • Looking Backward • Mugwumps • Gospel of Wealth • Jane Addams • Half-Breeds • Social Darwinism • Tenements • Stalwarts • Thomas Edison • American Protective • Roscoe Conkling Association • Adam Smith • Contract Labor Law • Gilded Age • Laissez-Faire Capitalism • Ellis Island • United States v. E. C. • Social Gospel Knight • Sherman Antitrust Act • Chinese Exclusion Act • John D. Rockefeller • Horizontal Integration • Vertical Integration • Andrew Carnegie • Bessemer Process • Rebates • J. Pierpont Morgan • Jay Gould • Trunk Lines • Cornelius Vanderbilt Amsco Term Quiz Study Guide Chapter Twenty One Chapter Twenty Two Chapter Twenty Three • NAACP • Red Scare • Warren Harding • W.E.B. Du Bois • Palmer Raids • Teapot Dome • Carrie Chapman Catt • Lusitania • Bureau of Budget • Clayton Antitrust Act • Schenck v. United States • Henry Ford, assembly line • Hepburn Act • Irreconcilables • F. Scott Fitzgerald • Newlands Reclamation • Reservationists • Ernest Hemingway Act • Meat Inspection Act • Zimmerman Telegram • Open Shop • Pure Food and Drug Act • Submarine Warfare • Lost Generation • Upton Sinclair • George Creel • Welfare Capitalism • Square Deal • American Expeditionary • Charles Lindbergh Forces • Initiative, Referendum, • Selective Service Act • Margaret Sanger Recall • Direct Primary • Fourteen Points • Modernism • Robert LaFollette • Espionage Act • Fundamentalism • 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th • Sedition Act • Billy Sunday Amendments • Henry Demarest Lloyd • Treaty of Versailles • Harlem Renaissance • Frederick W. Taylor, • League of Nations • Marcus Garvey scientific management • John Dewey • Washington Conference • Ida Tarbell, “The History • Kellogg-Briand Pact of Standard Oil” • Jacob Riis, “How the • Dawes Plan Other Half Lives” • Lincoln Steffens, “The • Scopes Trial Shame of the Cities” • Reparations • Sacco and Vanzetti • Volstead Act Amsco Term Quiz Study Guide Chapter Twenty Four Chapter Twenty Five Chapter Twenty Six • Hawley-Smoot Tariff • Tydings-McDuffie Act • Servicemen's Readjustment Act • Reconstruction Finance • Good Neighbor Policy • Taft–Hartley Act Corporation • Franklin D. Roosevelt • Nye Committee • Fair Deal • Brain Trust • Benito Mussolini • Thomas Dewey • Black Tuesday • Adolf Hitler • States' Rights Democratic Party • Bank Holiday • Neutrality Acts • J. Strom Thurmond • FDIC • Ethiopia • Iron Curtain • National Recovery • Appeasement • George Kennan Administration • Civilian Conservation • Lend-Lease Act • Marshall Plan Corps • Securities and Exchange • America First Committee • Truman Doctrine Commission • Frances Perkins • Atlantic Charter • Containment Policy • Indian Reorganization Act • Pearl Harbor • North Atlantic Treaty Organization • Father Charles Coughlin • Smith v. Allwright • National Security Act of 1947 • Francis Townsend • Korematsu v. U.S. • Employment Act • Schechter v. U.S. • Office of Price • Joseph McCarthy Administration • Social Security Act • Manhattan Project • House Un-American Activities Committee • John Steinbeck,
Recommended publications
  • Turning Points in History
    Turning Points in history Colorado topic starting points 1. Indian Wars in the Colorado Territory 2. The Gold Rush: How George A. Jackson’s discovery of Gold along Chicago Creek changed Colorado. 3. The consequences of the Sand Creek Massacre—how the aftermath changed Indian relations. 4. The work of the Colorado Prisoner’s Aid Society. 5. How the election of 1904 was a turning point in Colorado politics. 6. Helen Hunt Jackson and her Indian relations reform legacy. 7. How “Honest John” Shaforth, Governor from 1909—1913, changed Colorado. 8. Nathan Meeker and the Ute Indians. 9. A Turning Point in Denver history—the defeat of Mayor Robert Speer. 10. Justina Ford changes health care in Colorado. 11. The Homestead Act—How Homesteading won the west. 12. How Executive order 9066 affected Japanese Americans living in Colorado. 13. The impact of Camp Amache on the farming community of Lamar, Colorado. 14. How the Bonfil sisters’ feud changed philanthropy in Colorado. 15. The treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo cedes the Southwest to the United States. 16. The Christmas Day 1854 massacre at Ft. Pueblo. 17. Nathaniel Hill’s Blackhawk smelter ushered in the hard-rock mining era in Colorado. 18. Irrigation farming—a turning point in dryland farming. 19. Women’s voting rights in the west. (Wyoming was first, but Colorado was second.) 20. How “Home Rule” changed Denver. 21. Changed Opportunities: The Emily Griffith School. 22. The Battle of Ludlow—the coal mine strike of 1914 changed worker rights. 23. The Denver Tramway strike of 1920. 24. The Child Labor amendment to the federal constitution, and the role Colorado played in its attempted ratification.
    [Show full text]
  • Helen Hunt Jackson
    Helen Hunt Jackson By: Ashlyn Hauser American poet and writer, Helen Hunt Jackson, is currently making history with her recent non-fiction book, Century of Dishonor. Her book covers all the terrible injustices the ​ ​ Native Americans had to face with America from the time the revolution took place to 1881 when she published the book. After publishing, she sent a copy to every member in Congress, which called attention to the affairs, causing the creation of the Dawes Act in 1887, an act that separated members of a tribe into individuals. Later, in 1884, Helen Hunt published her second book, Ramona, a romance novel about ​ ​ an orphaned Native American girl and a wealthy owner of a sheep ranch. Although it sounds sweet, the novel emphasizes the government’s mistreatment of the Native Americans after the Mexican-American wars in South Carolina. Born on October 15, 1830, in Amherst, Massachusetts, Helen Fiske was born into a rich and religious family, her father being a professor. She was well educated, better than most women of her time, having been exposed to mathematics, science, and philosophy. As a child, she was described as a high-spirited, and fun-loving child; however, Helen ended up having a difficult childhood, for she was orphaned at 14 from the death of her mother through tuberculosis when Helen was 11, and her father dying only three years later. In 1852, Helen Fiske married Edward Bissell Hunt, a mechanical engineer in the U.S. Army. His constant changes in stations gave her the chance to connect with many writiers of her time.
    [Show full text]
  • Discovering Denver: Brick by Brick Teacher's Guide
    Discovering Denver: Brick by Brick Teacher’s Packet Table of Contents Introduction to Discovering Denver 2 Oscar’s Stone Tool, Prehistory to 1858 6 Alexander’s Map, 1858-1859 8 Emaline’s Rocky Mountain News , 1859-1869 10 Sand Creek Massacre 12 Beth’s Timetable, 1870-1881 14 Joseph’s Square, 1881-1890 16 Julia’s Button Tin, 1893-1900 18 Margaret Tobin Brown 20 Marie’s Little Journal, 1908-1914 21 Edward’s Pen, 1914-1930 23 Jacob’s Keys, 1930-1941 25 Frank’s Drugstore, 1941-1960 27 Rachel’s Photograph, 1960-1980 29 Natty’s Gold, 1988-Present 31 Matrix of 3 and 4 th Grade Colorado Standards 33 Bibliography 34 Online Teacher Resources 36 Architecture Glossary of Terms 38 Field Trip Options 41 How to use Denver Story Trek 43 Scavenger Hunts Around the Capitol 45 Around the Capitol Answer Key 46 Capitol Building to Molly Brown House Museum 47 Capitol Building to Molly Brown House Museum Answer Key 48 Molly Brown House Museum to Capitol Building 49 Molly Brown House Museum to Capitol Building Answer Key 50 Civic Center Park 51 Civic Center Park Answer Key 52 Civic Center Cultural Complex 53 Civic Center Cultural Center Answer Key 54 LoDo Sixteenth St. Mall (Tremont to Arapahoe) 55 LoDo Sixteenth St. Mall (Tremont to Arapahoe) Answer Key 56 LoDo Sixteenth St. Mall (Arapahoe to Wazee) 57 LoDo Sixteenth St. Mall (Arapahoe to Wazee) Answer Key 58 LoDo Sixteenth St. Mall Warehouse District 59 LoDo Sixteenth St. Mall Warehouse District Answer Key 60 Technology Scavenger Hunts Five Points 61 Five Points Answer Key 65 Civic Center Cultural Complex 66 Civic Center Cultural Complex Answer Key 67 Additional Contributors to Discovering Denver: Brick by Brick Teacher Resource guide include : Melissa Abels, Peggy Filarowicz, Ann Gallagher, Stephanie Gronholz, Susie Isaac, and Darcie Martin.
    [Show full text]
  • Finding List
    I LUINO I S UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN PRODUCTION NOTE University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library Brittle Books Project, 2011. COPYRIGHT NOTIFICATION In Public Domain. Published prior to 1923. This digital copy was made from the printed version held by the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. It was made in compliance with copyright law. Prepared for the Brittle Books Project, Main Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign by Northern Micrographics Brookhaven Bindery La Crosse, Wisconsin 2011 1ol - 1a ; M f FINDING LIST OF THE FREE PUBLIC LIBRARY MACOMB, ILLINOIS. PRICE 10 CENTS. FINDING LIST -OF THE- SPULBLIICI RARY9 MACOMB, ILLINOIS. Organized Novenber 22, 1881. Opened To Public April 8, 1882. BOARD OF DIRECTORS 1897T. President, Mr. Chas. W. Flack. Secretary, Mr. P. E. Kiting. qrs. W. S. Bailey. Mrs. A. Blount. Mrs. J. M. K'ee-fe er. Tjt[r. A. McLean. Mr. A. K. Lodge. Mr. W. H. Bloll lv Mr. L. F. Gumbart. Librarian, Miss Mahala Phelps. MACOMB, ILLINOIS: THE EAGLE PRINTING COMPANY. 1897. 2 FREE PUBLIC LIBRARY. FIules a9d eu1a io9rs. As Revised at Regular Meeting of the Board of Directors March 29, 1897. 1st. The officers of said Board of Direct- which shall at all times be open to the in- ors shall consist of a President, Vice-Presi- spection of any member of the board. He dent, Secretary, Treasurer, and such other shall report to the board once every month officers as may be founid necessary from the receipts and expenditures of the library time to time hereafter, all of whom shall be and other matters regarding the progress elected by ballot, unless directed otherwise or wants of the same.
    [Show full text]
  • Consumptives Traveling for Health in the American West, 1840–1925
    University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Great Plains Quarterly Great Plains Studies, Center for Fall 2010 ON THE ROAD AGAIN CONSUMPTIVES TRAVELING FOR HEALTH IN THE AMERICAN WEST, 1840-1925 Jeanne Abrams University of Denver Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/greatplainsquarterly Part of the American Studies Commons, Cultural History Commons, and the United States History Commons Abrams, Jeanne, "ON THE ROAD AGAIN CONSUMPTIVES TRAVELING FOR HEALTH IN THE AMERICAN WEST, 1840-1925" (2010). Great Plains Quarterly. 2634. http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/greatplainsquarterly/2634 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Great Plains Studies, Center for at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Great Plains Quarterly by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. ON THE ROAD AGAIN CONSUMPTIVES TRAVELING FOR HEALTH IN THE AMERICAN WEST, 1840-1925 JEANNE ABRAMS I set out for the land [Colorado] that was to bring me health. To bring me health! Yes, there was no doubt about it. I never for one moment doubted that I was to be well. -Thomas Galbreath, Chasing the Cure in Colorado To travel hopefully is a better thing than to arrive. -Robert Louis Stevenson, The Art of Writing From the mid-nineteenth century through also commonly known as consumption or "the the first decades of the twentieth century, White Plague," held the dubious distinction of hundreds of thousands of health seekers, on being the leading cause of death in nineteenth­ the advice of their physicians, family members, century America.
    [Show full text]
  • LOS ANGELES LITERATURE and the RECONSTRUCTION of the PAST. Matthew Edwin El
    ABSTRACT Title of Dissertation: ERASURE AND REFORM: LOS ANGELES LITERATURE AND THE RECONSTRUCTION OF THE PAST. Matthew Edwin Elliott, Doctor of Philosophy, 2004 Dissertation Directed By: Professor David M. Wyatt, Department of English My dissertation is a literary and cultural history of Los Angeles from 1930-1950. I argue that this particular time and place——this era of Los Angeles history——provides a rich site for an exploration of American identity formations. It was during these years that Los Angeles experienced the extraordinary demographic and cultural changes that transformed the city from a place that in 1930 was still heralded by boosters as a small western outpost of white Americanism into what was by 1950 perhaps the nation’s most multicultural and multiracial city. Yet, this complex history of cultural change has been long invisible, for not only is Los Angeles among the most multicultural U.S. cities, it is also the most heavily mediated of places, and the pervasive images and myths of the city and its past constructed via Hollywood films and Chamber of Commerce postcards have functioned to erase this multicultural past. My study seeks to recover this hidden history of Los Angeles by examining the work of writers who represent and explore the lived complexities of existence in this dynamic setting. I focus on such writers as Chester Himes, Hisaye Yamamoto, and John Fante, who, I argue, not only portray something of the city’s lost past but also examine the process by which marginal voices are repressed and oppositional histories are erased. In addition, I discuss contemporary Los Angeles writers, including Walter Mosley, James Ellroy, and John Gregory Dunne.
    [Show full text]
  • URBAN HISTORY Editor DAVID R
    JOURNAL OF URBAN HISTORY Editor DAVID R. GOLDFIELD History, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Associate Editors RICHARD DENNIS Geography, University College, London MELINDA H. DESMARAIS University of North Carolina at Charlotte TIMOTHY GILFOYLE History, Loyola University, Chicago SUSAN E. HIRSCH History, Loyola University, Chicago ANDREW LEES Rutgers University, Camden BRUCE M. STAVE History, University of Connecticut Assistant to the Editor LA SHONDA MIMS BYARS University of North Carolina at Charlotte Editorial Board CARL ABBOTT Urban Studies and Planning, Portland State University MICHELE H. BOGART State University of New York at Stony Brook BLAINE A. BROWNELL President, Ball State University JÜRGEN BUCHENAU History, University of North Carolina at Charlotte SARAH J. DEUTSCH History, University of Arizona MICHAEL H. EBNER History, Lake Forest College BARBARA FRANCO Historical Society of Washington, D.C. KENNETH W. GOINGS History, University of Memphis TOM HANCHETT Museum of the New South JOSEF KONVITZ Urban Affairs Division, OECD, Paris KEN KUSMER History, Temple University TIMOTHY MAHONEY History, University of Nebraska HELEN MELLER University of Nottingham, England RAYMOND A. MOHL University of Alabama, Birmingham WILLIAM ROWE History, Johns Hopkins University JOEL SCHWARTZ Montclair State University MARY CORBIN SIES University of Maryland, College Park KRISTIN STAPLETON History, University of Kentucky JOEL A. TARR History, Carnegie Mellon University JOE W. TROTTER History, Carnegie Mellon University DIANE WINSTON PewCharitable Trusts For Sage Publications: STEPHANIE ALLEN, MARIA NOTARANGELO, JOE CRIBBEN, JULIE PIGNATARO, and TINA PAPATSOS THE EDITORS AND PUBLISHER wish to acknowledge with gratitude the encouragement of the University of North Carolina at Charlotte in providing support for Journal of Urban History.
    [Show full text]
  • Red and White on the Silver Screen: the Shifting Meaning and Use of American Indians in Hollywood Films from the 1930S to the 1970S
    RED AND WHITE ON THE SILVER SCREEN: THE SHIFTING MEANING AND USE OF AMERICAN INDIANS IN HOLLYWOOD FILMS FROM THE 1930s TO THE 1970s a dissertation submitted to Kent State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy by Bryan W. Kvet May, 2016 (c) Copyright All rights reserved Except for previously published materials Dissertation Written by Bryan W. Kvet B.A., Grove City College, 1994 M.A., Kent State University, 1998 Ph.D., Kent State University, 2015 Approved by ___Kenneth Bindas_______________, Chair, Doctoral Dissertation Committee Dr. Kenneth Bindas ___Clarence Wunderlin ___________, Members, Doctoral Dissertation Committee Dr. Clarence Wunderlin ___James Seelye_________________, Dr. James Seelye ___Bob Batchelor________________, Dr. Bob Batchelor ___Paul Haridakis________________, Dr. Paul Haridakis Accepted by ___Kenneth Bindas_______________, Chair, Department of History Dr. Kenneth Bindas ___James L. Blank________________, Dean, College of Arts and Sciences Dr. James L. Blank TABLE OF CONTENTS…………………………………………………………………iv LIST OF FIGURES………………………………………………………………………v ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS……………………………………………………………...vii CHAPTERS Introduction………………………………………………………………………1 Part I: 1930 - 1945 1. "You Haven't Seen Any Indians Yet:" Hollywood's Bloodthirsty Savages……………………………………….26 2. "Don't You Realize this Is a New Empire?" Hollywood's Noble Savages……………………………………………...72 Epilogue for Part I………………………………………………………………..121 Part II: 1945 - 1960 3. "Small Warrior Should Have Father:" The Cold War Family in American Indian Films………………………...136 4. "In a Hundred Years it Might've Worked:" American Indian Films and Civil Rights………………………………....185 Epilogue for Part II……………………………………………………………….244 Part III, 1960 - 1970 5. "If Things Keep Trying to Live, the White Man Will Rub Them Out:" The American Indian Film and the Counterculture………………………260 6.
    [Show full text]
  • Reading Practice Quiz List Report Page 1 Accelerated Reader®: Friday, 03/04/11, 08:41 AM
    Reading Practice Quiz List Report Page 1 Accelerated Reader®: Friday, 03/04/11, 08:41 AM Lakes Middle School Reading Practice Quizzes Int. Book Point Fiction/ Quiz No. Title Author Level Level Value Language Nonfiction 17351 100 Unforgettable Moments in Pro BaseballBob Italia MG 5.5 1.0 English Nonfiction 17352 100 Unforgettable Moments in Pro BasketballBob Italia MG 6.5 1.0 English Nonfiction 17353 100 Unforgettable Moments in Pro FootballBob Italia MG 6.2 1.0 English Nonfiction 17354 100 Unforgettable Moments in Pro GolfBob Italia MG 5.6 1.0 English Nonfiction 17355 100 Unforgettable Moments in Pro HockeyBob Italia MG 6.1 1.0 English Nonfiction 17356 100 Unforgettable Moments in Pro TennisBob Italia MG 6.4 1.0 English Nonfiction 17357 100 Unforgettable Moments in SummerBob Olympics Italia MG 6.5 1.0 English Nonfiction 17358 100 Unforgettable Moments in Winter OlympicsBob Italia MG 6.1 1.0 English Nonfiction 18751 101 Ways to Bug Your Parents Lee Wardlaw MG 3.9 5.0 English Fiction 11101 A 16th Century Mosque Fiona MacDonald MG 7.7 1.0 English Nonfiction 8251 18-Wheelers Linda Lee Maifair MG 5.2 1.0 English Nonfiction 661 The 18th Emergency Betsy Byars MG 4.7 4.0 English Fiction 9801 1980 U.S. Hockey Team Wayne Coffey MG 6.4 1.0 English Nonfiction 523 20,000 Leagues under the Sea Jules Verne MG 10.0 28.0 English Fiction 9201 20,000 Leagues under the Sea (Pacemaker)Verne/Clare UG 4.3 2.0 English Fiction 34791 2001: A Space Odyssey Arthur C.
    [Show full text]
  • Bits of Travel at Home (1878) by Helen Hunt Jackson
    Bits of Travel at Home (1878) by Helen Hunt Jackson Helen H. Jackson Copyright, By Roberts Brothers. 1878. Bits of Travel at Home (1878) by Helen Hunt Jackson Table of Contents Bits of Travel at Home (1878) by Helen Hunt Jackson...................................................................................1 Ahwahnechee Place Names.....................................................................................................................1 About the Author.....................................................................................................................................2 Bibliographical Information.....................................................................................................................3 BITS OF TRAVEL AT HOME.........................................................................................................................5 By H. H.,.................................................................................................................................................5 CONTENTS.............................................................................................................................................5 CALIFORNIA.........................................................................................................................................6 BITS OF TRAVEL AT HOME.........................................................................................................................7 FROM CHICAGO TO OGDEN..............................................................................................................7
    [Show full text]
  • Period Revival Architecture and Development in Pasadena from 1915-1942
    RESIDENTIAL PERIOD REVIVAL ARCHITECTURE AND DEVELOPMENT IN PASADENA FROM 1915-1942 Prepared by Teresa Grimes and Mary Jo Winder for the City of Pasadena, Planning & Development Department August 2004 1 Period Revival Architecture in Pasadena, California: 1915-1942 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction . 3 Historic Context . 6 Annexation Map by Decade (figure A) . 11 Architects. 12 Period Revival Styles. 25 Mediterranean Styles . 30 English Styles. 32 French Styles . 34 Bibliography. 36 Appendix A . List of Work – by Architect . 37 Appendix B . Historic Districts. 46 Appendix C . Individual Properties for Further Study 88 2 Period Revival Architecture in Pasadena, California: 1915-1942 INTRODUCTION Project Funding The activity which is the subject of this Residential Period Revival Architecture and Development in Pasadena from 1915-1942 has been financed in part with Federal funds from the National Park Service, Department of the Interior, through the California Office of Historic Preservation. However, the contents and opinions do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the Department of the Interior or the California Office of Historic Preservation, nor does mention of trade names or commercial products constitute endorsement or recommendation by the Department of the Interior or the California Office of Historic Preservation. Project Objective The project objective was to document significant historic districts that are representative of the period 1915-1942 in the City of Pasadena as part of a future plan to nominate districts for listing in the National Register of Historic Places and designating local landmark districts. Area Surveyed The initial proposal was to complete a reconnaissance survey of four residential areas in different parts of the City.
    [Show full text]
  • Girl Scout Scavenger Hunt Answer Sheet
    Girl Scout Scavenger Hunt Answer Sheet (We have attempted to find all answers that are correct in this answer sheet. There is a possibility that we may have missed one or more. If you find an answer that is not included on this sheet, please take these steps: • Check your answer to make sure you have bio information to back it up • Send an email to [email protected] and share your information with Colorado Women’s Hall of Fame • You will receive a response about your answer • If appropriate, we will add your answer to the Answer Sheet and reissue it to the Girl Scout office so future troops doing the exercise will have your answer included. Thank you for delving into the remarkable achievements of our Inductees.) One of the options for earning a Colorado Women’s Hall (CWHF) of Fame fun patch is to complete the Scavenger Hunt below. There are clues at the end of the list that may help you find some answers. Please answer at least 15 of the 25 questions below using the following website as your source: www.cogreatwomen.org 1. How often does the Colorado Women’s Hall of Fame induct new women into the Hall? How many women are inducted at each Induction? ANSWER: • Every 2 years on an even year cycle, e.g.2020 • Ten women are inducted (4 historical and 6 contemporary). 2. What are the three criteria for a woman being selected as an Inductee into the Colorado Women’s Hall of Fame? Who can nominate? When? ANSWER: Criteria: • Made significant and enduring contributions to her fil(40%).
    [Show full text]