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The Roaring Twenties Chapter 24, Section 4
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Charles Lindbergh first person to fly alone across the Atlantic Ocean
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Bessie Smith well-known African American jazz singer
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Langston Hughes accomplished African American writer who wrote during the Harlem Renaissance
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Ernest Hemingway famous writer whose works reflected the mood of Americans in postwar Europe
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Values and Beliefs Nativism Prohibition Scopes trial Intolerance/prejudices
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Women’s Roles Right to vote College and careers Liberated attitudes
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Culture Expatriates African American jazz music African American writers and poets
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Entertainment Radio Movies Sporting events Fads
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Evolution the role of religion in society Two famous lawyers took opposing sides in the trial, and more than a hundred journalists covered it. It continued to rise.
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Coolidge and Hoover by announcing he would not run for reelection He had provided food relief for Europe after World War I and had served Presidents Harding and Coolidge as secretary of commerce.
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1920s Lifestyles More women worked outside the home Many women adopted new “liberated” lifestyles. Movies and radio became popular pastimes People enjoyed different fads.
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Cultural Clashes Cultural clashes in the 1920s included: the fight over Prohibition the clash between nativists and immigrants conflict between the Ku Klux Klan and African Americans the religious controversies highlighted by the Scopes trial.
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Entertainment radio shows sporting events mah–jongg crossword puzzles dance marathons contests Miss America Pageant
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Harlem Renaissance a surge in African American culture and pride led by African American jazz musicians and writers
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Prohibition Religious objections to drinking alcohol Fear of declining morals and values Crime and corruption in cities
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Quota System The number of immigrants allowed from each country was based on a percentage of immigrants who came before them from that country.
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