1. General John Pershing
2. U Boats
3. Unrestricted Submarine Warfare
4. Lusitania
5. National Security League
6. Jane Addams
7. Carrie Chapman Catt
8. Women's Peace Party
9. Sussex Pledge
10. Zimmermann telegram
11. Bernard Baruch
12. War Industries Board
13. Herbert Hoover
14. The Food Administration
15. William McAdoo
16. US Railroad Board
17. American Expeditionary Force
18. Lenin
19. Bolsheviks
20. George Creel
21. Committee on Public Information
22. Randolph Borne
23. Espionage and Sedition acts
24. Eugene Debs
25. Schenck v. U.S.
26. Clear and present danger
27. Race Riots
28. 18th amendment
29. 19th amendment
30. 14 points
31. Council of Four
32. Versailles Peace Treaty
33. League of Nations
34. Henry Cabot Lodge
35. Reservationists
36. Irreconcilables
37. Article 10
38. Red Scare
39. Palmer raids
1. Your book states, “Although World War I enhanced some reform efforts, it also introduced an atmosphere of intolerance and repression into American Life.” How far do you agree with this claim?
2. Wilson’s foreign policy has been described as “Moral Diplomacy”. How far do you agree with this claim?
3. Analyze the ways the government and the American people dealt with dissent during the Great War and how this led to racism and the Red Scare of 1919-1920.
4. Why, having entered the First World War, did the United States not join the League of Nations?
5. Evaluate the importance of the causes that brought the United States into World War I.
6. Analyze the impact of the federal government on the home front during World War I.
7. How far did the U.S. government go to influence public opinion and silent dissent during World War
8. “The Great Peacemaker” to what extent does Woodrow Wilson deserve this title?
9. How did African-Americans lives change during the war?