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Algebra Chapter 4 Graphing Linear Equations Flashcards

Flashcards for Algebra 1 chapter 4 Graphing Linear Equations

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118877534quadrantOne of 4 regions of the coordinate plane formed by the intersection of the x- and y-axes.
118877535abscissaThe x-coordinate of an ordered pair.
118877536ordinateThe y-coordinate of an ordered pair.
118877537ordered pairDescribes a location on the coordinate plane, with the x-coordinate listed first and the y-coordinate listed second.
118877538originOrdered pair (0,0); the place where the axes in a coordinate plane meet.
118877539Ax + By = CStandard form of a linear equation, where A, B, and C represent constant numbers and x and y represent variables.
118877540Table of Values Graphing MethodOne way to graph a function; first find some x-values in the domain, and then calculate the y-values using the function rule; points can then be plotted and connected.
118877541x-interceptThe place where the graph of a relation touches or crosses the x-axis; the y-value is always 0.
118877542y-interceptThe place where the graph of a relation touches or crosses the y-axis; the x-value is always 0.
118877543Intercepts Graphing MethodOne way to graph a function; find the x-intercept (set y = 0 and solve) and the y-intercept (set x = 0 and solve); plot the intercepts and connect.
118877544y = mx + bThe slope-intercept form of a linear equation, where m represents slope and b represents y-intercept.
118877545Slope-Intercept Graphing MethodPut a linear equation in slope-intercept form (y = mx + b); plot the y-intercept; use the slope ratio to find other points relative to the y-intercept (make slope a fraction - numerator is change in y (up or down), denominator is change in x (left or right)).,
118877546slopeThe ratio of change in y-value (vertical) to change in x-value (horizontal) between two points on a line.
118877547slope formulaGiven two points (x1, y1) and (x2, y2), slope is found using the formula m = (y2 - y1)/(x2 - x1), or delta y over delta x.
118877548undefined slopeThe slope of a vertical line (cannot be found because it would force a division by 0, undefined in mathematics)
118877549positive slopeThe slope of a line that increases as x-values increase (points go up left to right).
118877550negative slopeThe slope of a line that decreases as x-values increase (points go down left to right).
118877551zero slopeThe slope of a horizontal line (the change in y-values is 0).
118877552constant of variationThe constant applied to input values to create the output values in a direct variation; given y = ax is a direct variation, then a is the constant of variation.
118877553y-intercept = 0One way to determine if a linear equation is a direct variation.
118877554f(x) notationFunction notation where f is the name of the function and x is the input; for example if f(x) = x + 2, then f(3) = 3 + 2 = 5.
118877936domainThe set of inputs for a relation.
118877937rangeThe set of outputs for a relation.
118949519x = a, a is a constantGraph of a vertical line; for example, x = 5 is a vertical line that goes through point (5, 0); it has an undefined slope
118949520y = a, a is a constantGraph of a horizontal line; for example, y = 5 is a horizontal line that goes through point (0, 5); it has a slope of 0

Graphing-Vocabulary Flashcards

Terms and definitions for graphing

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286485047Positive SlopeA line that goes up from left to right.
286485048Negative SlopeA line that goes down from left to right.
286485049Undefined SlopeA vertical line, or two points where the difference of the x values is zero.
286485050Zero SlopeA horizontal line, or two points where the difference of the y values is zero.
286485051Point Slope FormulaA formula which gives us the slope for two points. Ex. (y2-y1)/(x2-X1)
286485052Parallel LinesLines that have the same slope.
286485053Perpendicular LinesLines whose slopes are negative reciprocals (Ex: m= 3, m= (-1/3) Lines which form a 90 degree angle.
286485054Y-InterceptWhere the line crosses the y-axis.
286485055X-InterceptWhere the line crosses the x-axis.
286485056Finding X-InterceptTo find the x-intercept we substitute zero for y.
286485057Standard FormAx + By = C
286485058Slope-Intercept FormY = mX + B
286485059Slope and a Point MethodGiven: Slope: (m= 1/2) Point: (1,2) First: Plot the point! Second: Use the top number of slope to move up (rise), and the bottom number of slope (run) to move left or right

US Presidents/Vice Presidents, Terms Flashcards

United States Presidents/Vice Presidents/Terms

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658193737George WashingtonVP: John Adams Served: 1789-1797
658193738John AdamsVP: Thomas Jefferson Served: 1797-1801
658193739Thomas JeffersonVP: Aaron Burr, George Clinton (second term) Served: 1801-1809
658193740James MadisonVP: George Clinton, Elbridge Gerry (second term) Served: 1809-1817
658193741James MonroeVP: Daniel D. Thompkins Served: 1817-1825
658193742John Quincy AdamsVP: John C. Calhoun Served: 1825-1829
658193743Andrew JacksonVP: John C. Calhoun, Martin Van Buren (2nd term) Served: 1829-1837
658193744Martin Van BurenVP: Richard Johnson Served: 1837-1841
658193745William H. HarrisonVP: John Tyler Served: 1841- April 4, 1841 (died in office)
658193746John TylerVP: Vacant/None Served: 1841-1845
658193747James K. PolkVP: George M. Dallas Served: 1845-1849
658193748Zachary TaylorVP: Millard Fillmore Served: 1849-1850 (died in office)
658193749Millard FillmoreVP: Vacant/NONE Served: 1850-1853
658193750Franklin PierceVP: William R. King (first term), vacant (2nd term) Served: 1853-1857
658193751James BuchananVP: John C. Breckinridge Served: 1857-1861
658193752Abraham LincolnVP: Andrew Johnson Served: 1861-1865 (died in office)
658193753Andrew JohnsonVP: Vacant/NONE Served: 1865-1869
658193754Ulysses S. GrantVP: Shuyler Colfax, Henry Wilson Served: 1869-1877
658193755Rutherford B. HayesVP: William A. Wheeler Served: 1877-1881
658193756James A. GarfieldVP: Chester A. Arthur Served: 1881-1881 (died in office)
658193757Chester A. ArthurVP: None Served: 1881-1885
658193758Grover ClevelandVP: Thomas Hendricks Served: 1885-1889
658193759Benjamin HarrisonVP: Levi Morton Served: 1889-1893
658193760Grover ClevelandVP: Adlai Stevenson Served: 1893-1897
658193761William McKinleyVP: Garret Hobart, Theodore Roosevelt Served: 1897-1901
658193762Theodore RooseveltVP: Charles Fairbanks Served: 1901-1909
658193763William Howard TaftVP: James Sherman Served: 1909-1913
658193764Woodrow WilsonVP: Thomas Marshall Served: 1913-1921
658193765Warren G. HardingVP: Calvin Coolidge Served: 1921-1923
658193766Calvin CoolidgeVP: Charles Dawes Served: 1923-1929
658193767Herbert HooverVP: Charles Curtis Served: 1929-1933
658193768Franklin D. RooseveltVP: John Garner, Henry Wallace, Harry S. Truman Served: 1933-1945
658193769Harry S. TrumanVP: Alben Barkley Served: 1945-1953
658193770Dwight D. EisenhowerVP: Richard Milhous Nixon Served: 1953-1961
658193771John F. KennedyVP:Lyndon Johnson Served: 1961-1963
658193772Lyndon B. JohnsonVP: Humbert Humphrey Served: 1963-1969
658193773Richard NixonVP: Spiro Agnew, Gerald R. Ford Served: 1969-1974
658193774Gerald FordVP: Nelson Rockefeller Served:1974-1977
658193775Jimmy CarterVP: Walter Mondale Served: 1977-1981
658193776Ronald ReaganVP: George H.W. Bush Served: 1981-1989
658193777George H. W. BushVP: James Dandforth Quayle Served: 1989-1993
658193778Bill ClintonVP: Al Gore Served: 1993-2001
658193779George W. BushVP: Richard Cheney Served: 2001-2009
658193780Barack ObamaVP: Joseph Biden Served: 2009- NOW

APUSH Chapter 33 Key Terms Flashcards

Key terms from chapter 33 in APUSH.

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155134220Reconstruction Finance CorporationRFC was an independant agency of the United States government. It granted over 2 billion dollars to the local and state governments. It was charted under the Herbert Hoover administration.
155134221Bank HolidaysPart of the Emergency Banking Act under FDR; plan to close down bankrupt banks and reorganize and reopen those banks strong enough to survive
155134222Huey LongAs senator in 1932 of Washington preached his "Share Our Wealth" programs. It was a 100% tax on all annual incomes over $1 million and appropriation of all fortunes in excess of $5 million. With this money Long proposed to give every American family a comfortable income, etc
155134223Father CoughlinA Catholic priest from Michigan who was critical of FDR on his radio show. His radio show morphed into being severly against Jews during WWII and he was eventually kicked off the air, however before his fascist rants, he was wildly popular among those who opposed FDR's New Deal.
155134224Francis TownsendTownshend was a retired physician who developed a plan in which the government would give monetary resources to senior citizens ages sixty and over He and other demagogues pushed FDR to move the New Deal to help people directly and laid the foundations of the creation of Social Security.
155134225John SteinbeckUnited States writer noted for his novels about agricultural workers. Wrote "The Grapes of Wrath" and "Of Mice and Men".
155134226Indian Reorganization ActGovernment legislation that allowed the Indians a form of self-government and thus willingly shrank the authority of the U.S. government. It provided the Indians direct ownership of their land, credit, a constitution, and a charter in which Indians could manage their own affairs.
155134227Social Security ActAugust 14, 1935- The Social Security Act was drafted by President Roosevelt's committee on economic security, under Edwin Witte. The Act provided benefits to retirees and the unemployed, and a lump-sum benefit at death. Payments to retirees were financed by a payroll tax on current workers' wages, half directly as a payroll tax and half paid by the employer.
155134228Alphabet AgenciesIn 1933 President Franklin D. Roosevelt launched his New Deal to deal with the Great Depression. The administrative style was to create new agencies. Some were set up by Congress (such as TVA) and others by Roosevelt's Executive Order (such as WPA). The agencies were also referred to as "alphabet soup".FIB,CIA,EPA,etc.
155134229Agricultural Adjustment AdministrationRestricted agricultural production in the New Deal era by paying farmers to reduce crop area. Its purpose was to reduce crop surplus so as to effectively raise the value of crops, thereby giving farmers relative stability again.
155134230Civilian Conservation CorporationProvided employment in fresh air government camps for about 3 million workers, which helped in reforestation, firefighting, flood control, and swamp drainage. Income were mandatorily sent back to their parents. Critiics of this policy called it "militarizing" nation's youth
155134231Federal Deposit Insurance CorporationCreated by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, insured individual deposits up to $5000, thereby decreasing the amount of bank failures and restored faith in the banks. Created by Glass-Steagall Reform Act. It insures up to $100,000 for bank deposits, thus helping put faith back into the banks.
155134232Federal Emergency Relief CorporationFederal Emergency Relief Administration (1933)- Relief, Recovery- Combined cash relief to needy families with work relief; superseded in early 1935 by the extensive work relief projects of the WPA and unemployment insurance established by Social Security.
155134233Federal Housing AdministrationUnited States government agency created as part of the National Housing Act of 1934. Insured loans made by banks and other private lenders for home building and home buying. The goals of this organization are: to improve housing standards and conditions; to provide an adequate home financing system through insurance of mortgage loans; and to stabilize the mortgage market.
155134234National Labor Relations BoardCreated by the National Labor Relations Act, also known as the Wagner Act it was created in the 1930's by congressman Wagner who was sympathetic to labor unions. The National Labor Relation Board was an administrative board that gave laborers the rights of self-organization and collective bargaining.
155134235Wagner Act1935; established National Labor Relations Board; protected the rights of most workers in the private sector to organize labor unions, to engage in collective bargaining, and to take part in strikes and other forms of concerted activity in support of their demands.
155134236National Recovery AdministrationGovernment agency that was part of the New Deal and dealt with the industrial sector of the economy. It allowed industries to create fair competition which were intended to reduce destructive competition and to help workers by setting minimum wages and maximum weekly hours.
155134237National Youth Administration(FDR) , (NYA) 1935, Provided education jobs counseling and recreation for young people. part time positions at schools for students allowed for aid in High School, college, and grad school. Gave part time jobs to drop outs.
155134238Public Works Administration(FDR) , 1935 Created for both industrial recovery and for unemployment relief. Headed by the Secretary of Interior Harold L. Ickes, it aimed at long-range recovery and spent $4 billion on thousands of projects that included public buildings, highways, and parkways.
155134239Tennessee Valley AuthorityA New Deal agency created to generate electric power and control floods in a seven-U.S.-state region around the Tennessee River Valley . It created many dams that provided electricity as well as jobs. Was a relief, recovery, and reform effort that gave 2.5 million poor citizens jobs and land. It brought cheap electric power, low-cost housing, cheap nitrates, and the restoration of eroded soil.
155134240Securities and Exchange CommissionGovernment agency having primary responsibility for enforcing the Federal securities laws and regulating the securities industry. It protected investors, listened to complaints, issued licenses and penalized fraud.
155134241Works Progress AdministrationMay 6, 1935- Began under Hoover and continued under Roosevelt but was headed by Harry L. Hopkins. Provided jobs and income to the unemplyed but couldn't work more than 30 hours a week. It built many public buildings and roads, and as well operated a large arts project.
155134242Francis PerkinsWas the U.S. Secretary of Labor from 1933 to 1945, and the first woman ever appointed to the US Cabinet. As a loyal supporter of her friend Franklin D. Roosevelt, she helped pull the labor movement into the New Deal coalition. She and Interior Secretary Harold Ickes were the only original members of Roosevelt's cabinet who remained in offices for his entire Presidency
155134243Black TuesdayThis is the nickname for the day the stock market crashed (October 29, 1929). People who had unwisely borrowed money to buy high-priced stocks (intending to sell the stocks at a profit and repay lenders), went bankrupt. Black Tuesday marked the beginning of the Great Depression, a period of economic hardship in the United States lasting from 1929 to 1939.
155134244Black ThursdayOctober 24, 1929. Stock prices fluctuated greatly for several weeks, but panic did not start until this day.There was an extremely lartge volume of selling on Wall Street and the stock prices plunged. A group of bankers bought millions of stocks to try to stabalize the prices, but it only worked for a day.
155134245Dust bowlParts of Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico, and Texas that were hit hard by dry topsoil and high winds that created blinding dust storms; this area of the Great Plains became called that because winds blew away crops and farms, and blew dust from Oklahoma to Albany, New York.
155134246Boulder DamHoover Dam; A dam on the Colorado River built during the Great Depression as part of a public-works program indented to stimulate buisness and provide jobs. Named Hoover Dam after its completion to honor President Hoover.
155134247Franklin Delano RooseveltThe 32nd president of the United States. He was president from 1933 until his death in 1945 during both the Great Depression and World War II. He is the only president to have been elected 4 times, a feat no longer permissible due to the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution.
155134248New DealPresident Franklin Roosevelt's precursor of the modern welfare state (1933-1939); programs to combat economic depression enacted a number of social insureance measures and used government spending to stimulate the economy; increased power of the state and the state's intervention in U.S. social and economic life.
155134249Mary McLeod BethuneMary McLeod Bethune was a leader in the struggle for women's and black equality. She founded a school for black students that eventually became Bethune-Cookman University. She also served as an advisor to President Franklin D. Roosevelt
155134250Brain TrustMany of the advisers who helped Roosevelt during his presidential candidacy continued to aid him after he entered the White House. A newspaperman once described the group as "Roosevelt's Brain Trust." They were more influential than the Cabinet. The group of expert policy advisers who worked with FDR in the 1930s to end the great depression
155134251Congress of Industrial OrganizationA federation of labor union for all unskilled workers. It provided a national labor union for unskilled workers, unlike the AFL, which limited itself to skilled workers. Included skilled and unskilled workers; open to women and minorities
155134252Court Packing ProposalIn the wake of Supreme Court decisions that declared key pieces of New Deal legislation unconstitutional, Roosevelt proposed increasing the number of justices. If a justice did not retire at age 70, the president could appoint an additional justice up to a maximum of 6.
155134253Deficit SpendingThe practice where a government spends more money that it receives as revenue. Usually refers to the conscious effort to stimulate economic growth by lowering taxes or increasing government expenditures. FDR's admnistration was based on this concept. It involved stimulating consumer buying power, business enterprise, and ultimately employment by pouring billions of dollars of federal money into the economy even if the government didn't have the funds, and had to borrow money.
155134254HoovervillesLittle huts made out of cardboard and trashy components. People were forced to live in them for houses during the Depression, and people called the neighborhoods of "broken houses" Hoovervilles because they thought President Hoover did not care about the economic situation
155134255100 DaysThe House and the Senate met for 100 days between March-June 1933. FDR's new deal which changed the way American government operates., March 9th to June 16th 1933. Congress passed more then 15 pieces of legislation. Laws and others that followed that expanded the federal governemnts role in the nations economy
155134256Share the Wealtha program advocated by Louisiana Senator Huey P. Long that appealed to desperate lower middle class Americans during the Great Depression. One version proposed confiscating large personal fortunes, guaranteeing every family a cash grant of $5,000 and every worker an annual income of $2,5000, providing pensions to the aged, reducing work hours, paying veterans' bonuses and ensuring college education for every qualified student. The figures didn't add up and offered little to promote economic recovery.

APUSH Chapter 33- The Great Depression and the New Deal Flashcards

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359982829Election of 1932The Republicans nominated Herbert Hoover to run for president in the election of 1932. The Democrats chose Franklin Delano Roosevelt. He had been born to a wealthy New York family and served as the governor of New York.
359982830Eleanor RooseveltFDR's Wife and New Deal supporter. Was a great supporter of civil rights and opposed the Jim Crow laws. She also worked for birth control and better conditions for working women
359982831March 4, 1933Franklin Roosevelt is sworn in as the 32nd President of the United States.
359982832Hundred Days CongressFDR began sending bill after bill to Congress. Between March 9 and June 16, 1933 which came to be called the HUNDRED DAYS. Congress passed 15 major acts to meet the economic crisis setting a pace for new legislation that has never been equaled. Later became known as 1st New Deal.
3599828333 R's of the New Dealrelief, recovery, reform
359982834blank-check powerspowers that Congress gave the president that some of the laws it passed expressly delegated legislative authority to the chief executive (such as the NRA over ring the Anti-Trust laws)
359982835progressive ideasunemployment insurance, old-age insurance, minimum-wage regulations, conservation and development of natural resources, and restrictions on child labor.
359982836Emergency Banking Relief Act of 1933It gave the president power to regulate banking transactions and foreign exchange and to reopen solvent banks. -- this act established insurance on individual deposits and ended the epidemic of bank failures
359982837fireside chatsinformal talks given by FDR over the radio; sat by White House fireplace; gained the confidence of the people
359982838Glass-Steagall Banking Reform Actthat provided the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) which insured individual deposits up to $5000, thereby eliminating the epidemic of bank failure and restoring faith to banks.
359982839Gold Standard after the Great DepressionPresident Roosevelt ordered all private holdings of gold to be given to the Treasury in exchange for paper currency and then the nation to be taken off the gold standard-Congress passed laws providing for these measures.
359982840FDR and InflationFDR believed that inflation would relieve debtors' burdens and stimulate new production. Inflation was achieved through gold buying; the Treasury purchased gold at increasing prices, increasing the dollar price of gold. This policy increased the amount of dollars in circulation.
359982841Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)provided employment for about 3 million men in government camps. Their work included reforestation, fire fighting, swamp drainage, building levees for flood control, and improving national parks. This program gave jobs to men but it also benefited the public.
359982842Federal Emergency Relief ActThe Act was the first direct-relief operation under the New Deal, and was headed by Harry L. Hopkins, a New York social worker who was one of Franklin D. Roosevelt's most influential advisers *, law provided money for food and other necessities for the unemployed *Affected the people in trying to aid people feeling the effects of the depression, still in effect today. Hopkins's agency granted about $3 billion to the states for direct relief payments or for wages on work projects.
359982843Civil Works Administration (CWA)provided work in federal jobs; designed to provide temporary jobs during the winter emergency. Thousands of unemployed were employed at leaf raking and other manual-labor jobs.
359982844Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA)1933 sought to help raise commodity prices by paying farmers to cut back production; the money for the benefit payments made to farmers would be raised from a "processing tax" levied on the businesses..Also made available millions of dollars to help farmers meet their mortgages.
359982845Home Owners' Loan Corporation (HOLC)loaned money at low interest to homeowners who could not meet mortgage payments
359982846Father Charles Coughlina critic of the New Deal; created the National Union for Social Justice; wanted a monetary inflation and the nationalization of the banking system
359982847Senator Huey P. Long"Share the Wealth" program ;; every family receives $5000 at expense of the wealthy... he was assassinated in 1935 so the plans were never carried out
359982848Dr. Francis E. TownsendAmerican physician and social reformer whose plan for a government-sponsored old-age pension was a precursor of the Social Security Act of 1935. attracted millions of senior citizens with his plan that each citizen over the age of 60 would receive $200 a month.
359982849Works Progress Administration (WPA)New Deal program that employed men and women to build hospitals, schools, parks, and airports; employed artists, writers, and musicians as well. Taxpayers criticized the agency for paying people to due "useless" jobs such as painting murals.
359982850National Recovery Administration (NRA)1933. First atempt to achieve economic advance through planning and cooperation among labor, business and government. Codes and regs. to control production, labor relations, and trade among businesses. Declared unconstitutional in 1935. Recovery and also Reform. Individual industries, through "fair competition" codes, were forced to lower their work hours so that more people could be hired; a minimum wage was also established
359982851Schechter Case1935; Shut down the NRA -- Congress could not "delegate legislate powers" to the executive, and "Congressional control could not apply to a local fowl business.
359982852Public Works Administration (PWA)industrial recovery and for unemployment relief. --its goal was to stimulate the economy through the building of huge public works projects that needed large numbers of workers. It set up jobs for people without jobs which gave the employers money and the employers funded the job.
359982853Harold L. Ickesthe Interior Secretary in charge of the PWA, he hired private contractors instead of workers on a government payroll, it indirectly served the purpose of work relief -- put $4 billion into the PWA
35998285421st Amendment1933 - repeal of prohibition
359982855Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA)Created in 1933 as part of FDR's New Deal. The AAA controlled the production and prices of crops by offering subsidies to farmers who stayed under set quotas. The Supreme Court declared the AAA unconstitutional in 1936.
359982856Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act of 1936.1936 -- reduction of crop acreage was now achieved by paying farmers to plant soil-conserving crops.
360079002Second Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938replaced National Recovery Administration (Agricultural Adjustment Act), it paid farmers to plant crops like soybeans or leave the land fallow
360079003Dust Bowl1933 - prolonged drought struck the states of the trans-Mississippi Great Plains. Partially caused by the cultivation of countless acres, dry-farming techniques, and mechanization.
360079004Frazier-Lemke Farm Bankruptcy ActIt made possible a suspension of mortgage foreclosures for 5 years. It was struck down in 1935 by the Supreme Court.
360079005Resettlement Administration 1935charged with the task of removing near-farmless farmers to better land.
360079006Indian Reorganization Act of 1934the Indian "New Deal"; encouraged Native American tribes to establish self-government and to preserve their native crafts and traditions. 77 tribes refused to organize under the law, while hundreds did organize.
360079007Federal Securities ActAKA "Truth in Securities Act", this act was created to protect the public against fraud.Before securities could be offered for sale they had to be accompanied by full and true information. Misleading information or the absence of pertinent information could result in prosecution.
360079008Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)1934 - Created to supervise stock exchanges and to punish fraud in sercurities trading.
360079009Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)June 1933. Innovative attempt at regional planning. Series of dams in seven states on the Tennessee river to control floods, ease navigation, and produce electricity. Endures to this day. Relief and Reform... The large project of constructing dams on the Tennessee River brought to the area full employment, the blessings of cheap electric power, low-cost housing, abundant cheap nitrates, the restoration of eroded soil, reforestation, improved navigation, and flood control.
360079010Federal Housing Administration (FHA) 1934.expanded private home ownership among moderate-income families through federal guarantees of private mortgages, the reduction of down payments (from 30 to 10 percent), and the extension of payment form 20 to 30 years
360079011United States Housing Authority (USHA) 1937meant to strengthen the FHA, It was designed to lend money to states or communities for low-cost construction.
360347144Social Security Act of 1935provided for federal-state unemployment insurance. To provide security for old age, specified categories of retired workers were to receive regular payments from Washington. -- old-age pensions. Was an idea taken from Europe.
360347145National Labor Relations Act of 1935 (Wagner Act)Made to counter the Supreme Court striking down the NRA -- This law created a powerful National Labor Relations Board for administrative purposes and reasserted the rights of labor to engage in self-organization and to bargain collectively through representatives of its own choice.
360347146John L. Lewislong-time labor leader who organized and led the first important unskilled workers labor union, called in to represent union during sit-down strike. He formed the Committee for Industrial Organization (CIO) in 1935 and boss of the United Mine Workers
360347147Committee for Industrial Organization (CIO) 1935Originally formed by leaders within the AFL who wanted to expand its principles to include workers in mass production industries. John L. Lewis led a series of strikes including the sit-down strike at the General Motors automobile factory in 1936. In 1938, the CIO joined with the AF of L and the name "Committee for Industrial Organization" was changed to "Congress of Industrial Organizations." By 1940, the CIO claimed about 4 million members.
360347148Fair Labor Standards Act (Wages and Hours Bill) 1938.Industries involved in interstate commerce were to set up minimum-wage and maximum-hour levels. Labor by children under the age of 16 was forbidden.
360347149Election of 1936Republicans - Alfred M. Landon, However FDR was reelected. FDR won primarily because he had appealed to the "forgotten man." He had forged a powerful and enduring coalition of the South, blacks, urbanites, and the poor.
36034715020th AmendmentRatified in 1933, shortened the period from election to inauguration by 6 weeks. FDR took the presidential oath on January 20, 1937, instead of the traditional March 4.
360347151FDR and Supreme Court (2nd Term)President Roosevelt released his plan to ask Congress to pass legislation allowing him to appoint one new justice to the Supreme Court for every member over the age of 70 who would not retire; the maximum number of justices would now be 15. Shocking both Congress and the public, the plan received much negative feedback.
360347152Owen J. Robertsconservative Supreme Court judge who began voting more liberally thereby undermining FDR's "court packing"
360347153Supreme Court and the New Deal (FDR's 2nd Term)Supreme Court upheld the principle of state minimum wage for women, reversing its stand on a different case a year earlier. The Court, now sympathetic towards the New Deal, upheld the National Labor Relations Act (Wagner Act) and the Social Security Act.
360347154John Maynard Keynes"Keynesianism" --, British economist who argued that for a nation to recovery fully from a depression, the govt had to spend money to encourage investment and consumption
360347155Reorganization Act 1939Passed by congress, giving President Roosevelt limited powers for administrative reforms, including the new Executive Office in the White House.
360347156Hatch Act of 1939barring federal administrative officials from active political campaigning and soliciting. It also forbade the use of government funds for political purposes as well as the collection of campaign contributions from people receiving relief payments.
360347157Actual truth about the Great Depression and New DealPrivate enterprise was being suppressed and states' rights were being ignored. The most damning indictment of the New Deal was that it did not end the depression; it merely administered "aspirin, sedatives, and Band-Aids." Not until World War II was the unemployment problem solved.

Apush Chapter 27 Part 2 Flashcards

Apush Chapter 27 Part 2

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653937102Anti-Imperialist LeagueThe ____________________sprang into being, firmly opposed to this new imperialism of America, and its members included Mark Twain, William James, Samuel Gompers, and Andrew Carnegie.
653937104FilipinosThe _____________ wanted freedom, and denying that to them was un-American.
653937106Expansionists________________ cried that the Philippines could become another Hong Kong.
653937108Rudyard KiplingBritish writer ___________wrote about "The White Man's Burden," urging America to keep the Philippines and "civilize them."
653937110treatyIn the Senate, the __________ was almost not passed, but finally, William Jennings Bryan argued for its passage, saying that the sooner the treaty was passed, the sooner the U.S. could get rid of the Philippines. The treaty passed by only one vote.
653937112Foraker ActThe ___________ of 1900 gave Puerto Ricans a limited degree of popular government.
653937115Insular CasesIn the _____________, the Supreme Court barely ruled that the Constitution did not have full authority on how to deal with the islands (Cuba and Puerto Rico), essentially letting Congress do whatever it wanted with them. Basically, the cases said the island residents do not necessarily share the same rights as Americans.
653937117Platt AmendmentIn 1902, the U.S. walked away from Cuba, but it also encouraged Cuba to write and pass the ________________, which became their constitution. This amendment said that (1) the U.S. could intervene and restore order in case of anarchy, (2) that the U.S. could trade freely with Cuba, and (3) that the U.S. could get two bays for naval bases, notably Guantanamo Bay.
653937119world powerThe Spanish-American War lasted only 113 days and affirmed America's presence as a _________________.
653937121happiestFinally, one of the ____________ results of the war was the narrowing of the bloody chasm between the U.S. North and South, which had been formed in the Civil War.
653937123revoltedThe Filipinos had assumed that they would receive freedom after the Spanish-American War, but when they didn't they __________ against the U.S.
653937125independenceThe Americans tried to assimilate the Filipinos, but the islandersresisted; they finally got their __________________on July 4, 1946.
653937128exportFollowing its defeat by Japan in 1894-1895, China had been carved into "spheres of influence" by the European powers. Americans were alarmed, as churches worried about their missionary strongholds while businesses feared that they would not be able to __________their products to China. Finally, Secretary of State John Hay dispatched his famous Open Door note, which urged the European nations to keep fair competition open to all nations willing and wanting to participate. This became the "Open Door Policy."
653937130President McKinleywas considered a puppet to the public. He easily election.
653937132youngest .Six months later, McKinley was shot and killed by a deranged murderer, making Theodore Roosevelt the _____________ president ever at age 42
653937134policiesTheodore Roosevelt promised to carry out McKinley's.___________. Theodore Roosevelt was a barrel-chested man with a short temper, large glasses, and a stubborn mentality that always thought he was right.
653937135"Speak softly and carry a big stick,Born into a rich family and graduated from Harvard, he was highly energetic and spirited, and his motto was"_____________________" or basically, "Let your actions do the talking."
653937136first modern president."Roosevelt rapidly developed into a master politician, and a maverick uncontrollable by party machines, and he believed that a president should lead, which would explain the precedents that he would set during his term, becoming the "___________________.
653937137CanalTheodore Roosevelt had traveled to Europe and knew more about foreign affairs than most of his predecessors, and one foreign affair that he knew needed to be dealt with was the creation of a _______ through the Central American isthmus.
653937138TipDuring the Spanish-American War, the battleship U.S.S. Oregon had been forced to steam all the way around the ___ of South America to join the fleet in Cuba.
653937139DefenseSuch a waterway would also make ________ of the recent island acquisitions easier (i.e. Philippines, Puerto Rico, Guam, Hawaii).
653937140nullifiedThe 1850 Clayton-Bulwer Treaty with Britain had forbade the construction by either country of a canal in the Americas without the other's consent and help, but that statement was ___________ in 1901 by the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty.
653937141PanamaThe U.S. finally chose after Mount Pelée erupted and killed 30,000 people. The U.S. negotiated a deal that would buy a 6-mile-wide strip of land in Panama for $10 million and a $250,000 annual payment, but this treaty was retracted by the Colombian government, which owned Panama. TR was furious, since he wanted construction of the canal to begin before the 1904 campaign.
653937142ColumbiaAt this point, TR and the U.S. decided enough was enough and it was time for action. On November 3, 1903, another revolution in Panama began with the killing of a Chinese civilian and a donkey, and when ______________ tried to stop it, the U.S., citing an 1846 treaty with Colombia, wouldn't let the Colombian fleet through.
653937143SignedPanama was thus recognized by the U.S., and fifteen days later, Bunau-Varilla, the Panamanian minister despite his French nationality, ________ the Hay-Bunau-Varilla Treaty that gave a widened (6x10 mi.) Panamanian zone to the U.S. for $15 million.
653937144TearTR didn't actively plot to ______ Panama away from Colombia, but it seemed like it to the public, and to Latin America, and his actions in this incident saw him suffer a political black eye.
653937145ConstructionIn 1904, ______________ began on the Panama Canal, but at first, problems with landslides and sanitation occurred.
6539371461914The canal was finally finished and opened in _____, at a cost of $400 million.

U.S. History: Chapter 25 Flashcards

Chapter 25 terms

Terms : Hide Images
483870521Reason for subsidization of railroadsPrivate investors were unwilling to take risks. Congress convinced of subsidy needs due to postal and military concerns. Railroad companies got free land as an incentive. Congress used the military and mail system to get people to use government money for railroads.
483870522Which railroad built the most tracks?The Union Railroad because the Central railroad went through the rocky mountains
483870523Where did the Union Railroad and the Central Railroad meet?Promentory Point, Utah. Met at the "golden stake."
483870524Steel railsVanderbilt replaced his old iron rails with steel because it was safer and more economical. It could also handle a heavier load.
483870525The Standard Track Gaugegave the tracks a standard width which eliminated the expense and inconvenience of changing from line to line
483870526The Westinghouse AirbreakAdopted in the 1870s, a great contribution to the efficiency and safety of railroads
483870527Pullman Palace CarsAdvertised as gorgeous traveling hotels, but condemned as wheel torture chambers; wooden equipped cars
483870528GrangeAlso known as the patrons of husbandry, it was state legislatures who began to attempt to regulate the railroad monopoly
483870529Wabash CaseDeclared that states had no power to regulate interstate commerce, federal law had to regulate it
483870530Stock wateringRailroad stock promoters grossly inflated claims about a given line's assets and profitability. They sold stocks and bonds far in excess of the railroads actual value
483870531RebatesGuaranteed secret kickbacks to powerful shippers in return for steady and assured traffic
483870532Vertical IntegrationCarnegie, combination consisting of a number of corporations engaged in the same or related fields.
483870533Holding companyDid not itself engage in the production and distribution of goods, yet it held a controlling stock interest in all of related enterprises
483870534Interlocking DirectoriesEliminated wasteful competition by consolidating rival enterprises and placing officers of your own company on the board of competitors
483870535Bessemer ProjectHe invented the process of air injected into hot iron to remove impurities and carbon is added to the mix to create tough steal
483870536CarnegieEntered the steel business in Pittsburgh and by the year 1900 he was producing 1/4th of the nation's Bessemer steel. Divided profits of 40 million dollars a year.
483870537J.P. MorganBy 1900, he was invested in steel pipe tubing and Carnegie threatened to take his business unless he bought him out. Carnegie got 400 million dollars. By 1900, Carnegie's mills employed 20,000 workers and produced more steel than Great Britain. U.S. steel was the first billion dollar business. J.P. Morgan had rosacea.
483870538U.S. SteelIt will employ 168,000 people and control 3/5 of the nation's steel business
483870539Revolutionizing OilEdwin Drake drilled the world's first successful oil well near Titusville, PA.
483870540KeroseneDerived from petroleum and is the first major product of the infant oil industry. It was a better lubricant than oil and grease.
483870541Rockefeller90 percent of the oil refinery businesses in factories in Cleveland, Ohio. He sought out to eliminate the middle man - "Horizontal Integration." In political cartoons, he was often referred to as "Wreck-a-Fellow." Owned a lot of trusts, specifically in sugar and Tobacco.
483870542Sherman Anti-Trust of 1890Due to vague wording, the act was not enforced and did not stop the growth of trusts.
483870543LockoutEmployers could lock their doors against rebellious workers and then starve them into submission. They could compel them to sign ironclad oaths or yellow dog contracts
483870544Yellow dog contractsA solemn agreement not to join a labor union
483870545Black listsused by employers during a lockout to prevent rebellious workers from being able to work for other employers
483870546Company Townshigh priced grocery stores and "easy" credit

apes vocabulary final review, the solid earth Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
285327569A horizontopsoil horizon that is generally gray to black, contains the remains of living things (humus)
285327570abyssal floorrises at a gentle slope of less than 1 degree toward the mid-ocean ridge. often has submarine channels. has a lot of marine sealife
285327571B horizonsubsoil horizon the rock has been weathered into fine grains, but no living things are present
285327572C horizonhorizon made of rock fragments on top of unweathered bedrock
285327573continental crustthe portion of the earth's crust that primarily contains granite, is less dense than oceanic crust, and is 20-50 km thick
285327574continental driftthe hypothesis that the continents slowly move across earth's surface after splitting up from their once super continent (Pangea)
285327575continental marginthat portion of the sea floor adajecent to the continents; it may include the continental shelf, continental slope, and continental rise
285327576continental shelfa gently sloping, shallow area of the ocean floor that extends outward from the edge of a continent
285327577continental slopethe steep descent of the seabed from the continental shelf to the abyssal zone
285327578convergent plate boundaryboundary between two colliding plates, often associated with mountain building ocean trenches and volcanic islands. Plates can either slide past each other, both go up, or one go down (usually oceanic) and the other go up (usually land)
285327579corethe central part of the earth
285327580crustthe thin and solid outermost layer of the earth above the mantle
285327581epicenterthe point on the earth's surface directly above the focus of an earthquake
285327582epocha distinct period of time, era, or age
285327583eraa major division of geological time
285327584faulta crack in the earth's crust resulting from the displacement of one plate with another
285327585glaciershuge, slow moving sheets of ice, reflects suns heat like mirrors
285327586magmamolten rock in the earth's crust
285327587oceanic platethis is a tectonic plate that is a thinner, denser and heavier type
285327588plate tectonicsthe theory that pieces of earth's lithosphere are in constant motion, driven by convection currents in the mantle
285327589P wavea type of seismic wave that compresses and expands the ground
285327590Richter scalea logarithmic scale of 1 to 10 used to express the energy released by an earthquake based on size of seismic waves
285327591sedimentary rocka type of rock that forms when particles from other rocks or the remains of plants and animals are pressed and cemented together
285327592shield volcanoa low, flat, gently sloping volcano built from many flows of fluid, low-viscosity basaltic lava
285327593subduction zonethe region where an oceanic plate sinks down into the asthenosphere at a convergent boundary, usually between continental and oceanic plates
285327594S wavea type of seismic wave that moves the ground up and down or side to side

apes vocabulary final review, energy Flashcards

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285115213active solar heatingthe gathering of solar energy by collectors to heat up water or a building
285115214anthracitea coal that burns with very little smoke or flame; hard coal. it consists almost entirely of carbon
285115215alpha particlea positively charged particle that is the nucleus of the helium atom with two protons and two neutrons
285115216atomic mass numberthe total number of protons and neutrons in an atom's nucleus
285115217atomic numberthe number of protons in the nucleus of an atom
285115218biogasa mixture of gases that can be burned directly or converted to gas or liquid fuels
285115219biomassthe total mass of living matter in a given unit area
285115220bituminous coalsoft coal; third stage in the development of coal and is most common type of coal
285115221breeder nuclear fission reactornuclear fission reactor that produces more nuclear fuel than it consumes by converting nonfissionable uranium-238 into fissionable plutonium-239.
285115222british thermal unit (BTU)a unit of energy frequently used in engineering, equivalent to 252 calories or 1.054 kj, unit used to measure the heat released by burning coal
285115223calorieunit of heat defined as the quantity of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water by 1 degree centigrade at atmospheric pressure
285115224cogenerationusing waste heat to make electricity
285115225energy efficiencythe percentage of energy put into a system that does useful work
285115226first-law efficiencyamount of energy needed over amount supplied
285115227law of conservation of energy/thermodynamicsenergy is neither created nor destroyed but can be changed from form to form
285115228fissiona nuclear reaction in which a massive nucleus splits into smaller nuclei with the simultaneous release of energy
285115229fusiona nuclear reaction in which nuclei combine to form more massive nuclei with the simultaneous release of energy
285115230geothermal energyenergy derived from the heat in the interior of the earth
285115231high-quality energyorganized & concentrated; can perform useful work (fossil fuel, nuclear, high temperature heat, and the energy in electricity, coal, oil, gasoline, sunlight, and the nuclei of uranium-235)
285115232high-throughput societyattempt to boost economic growth by increasing the flow of matter and energy resources extracted from the environment through their economic systems to produce goods and services.
285115233joulea unit of electrical energy equal to the work done when a current of one ampere passes through a resistance of one ohm for one second; a unit of work equal to one newton-meter
285115234kilocaloriea unit of heat equal to the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of one kilogram of water by one degree at one atmosphere pressure
285115235kilowatta unit of power equal to 1000 watts
285115236lignitea soft brown rock; 2nd stage of coal formation
285115237low-throughput societyeconomy based on working with nature by recycling and reusing discarded matter, preventing pollution, conserving matter and energy resources by reducing unnecessary waste and use, not degrading renewable resources, building things that are easy to recycle, reuse, and repair, not allowing population size to exceed the carrying capacity of the environment, and preserving biodiversity.
285115238methanecolorless, odorless, flammable gas present in natural gas and formed by the decomposition of plant matter, one carbon
285115239passive solar heating systemsystem that captures sunlight directly within a structurea and converts it into low-temperature heat for space or water heating for domestic use
285115240second-law efficiencyminimum amount of work neccessary to perform the task
285115241second law of thermodynamicsstates that with each successive energy transfer or transformation in a system, less energy is available to do work
285115242third law of thermodynamicsabsolute zero cannot be reached
285115243watta unit of power equal to 1 joule per second

apes vocabulary final review, the cycling of matter Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
285314239abioticnonliving, physical features of the environment, including air, water, sunlight, soil, temperature, and climate
285314240ammoniaa small, very toxic molecule made up of three hydrogen atoms and one nitrogen atom; produced by nitrogen fixation and as a metabolic waste product of protein and nucleic acid metabolism.
285314241ammonificationdecomposers convert organic waste into ammonia
285314242ammoniumNH4+
285314243assimilationchanging absorbed substances into chemically different forms
285314244carbon dioxide (CO2)a heavy odorless colorless gas formed during respiration and by the decomposition of organic substances
285314245cyanobacteriagroup of prokaryotes that generate oxygen as a waste product of their photosynthesis (blue-green algae)
285314246decomposerorganism that breaks down and obtains energy from dead organic matter
285314247denitrificationprocess in which fixed nitrogen compounds are converted back into nitrogen gas and returned to the atmosphere
285314248legumesa group of plants part of nitrogen cycle; convert atmospheric nitrogen (N2) into a form that plants can use (beans)
285314249nitrificationthe oxidation of ammonium compounds in dead organic material into nitrates and nitrites by soil bacteria (making nitrogen available to plants)
285314250sinkany part of a plant that stores sugars produced during photosynthesis

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