1920S Project Menu

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Across
  1. 3. an establishment in the business of selling alcoholic beverages illegally
  2. 6. an American aviation and motorcycling pioneer, and a founder of the U.S. aircraft industry
  3. 9. one of the largest movements of people in United States history
  4. 12. relations between members or communities of different races within one country
  5. 14. a period of rich cross-disciplinary artistic and cultural activity among African Americans between the end of World War I (1917) and the onset of the Great Depression and lead up to World War II (the 1930s)
  6. 15. a group of American writers who came of age during World War I and established their literary reputations in the 1920s
  7. 16. the action of coming to live permanently in a foreign country
  8. 19. the rate at which electrical energy is transferred by an electric circuit
  9. 20. a telecommunications device that permits two or more users to conduct a conversation when they are too far apart to be easily heard directly
Down
  1. 1. young women known for their energetic freedom, embracing a lifestyle viewed by many at the time as outrageous, immoral or downright dangerous
  2. 2. allowed for the sale of more consumer goods and put automobiles within reach of average Americans
  3. 4. a recording of moving images that tells a story and that people watch on a screen or television a device that receives television signals and reproduces them on a screen
  4. 5. He created the model T
  5. 7. an American lawyer who became famous in the early 20th century for his involvement in the Leopold and Loeb murder trial and the Scopes "Monkey" Trial
  6. 8. the scientifically erroneous and immoral theory of “racial improvement” and “planned breeding”
  7. 10. hysteria over the perceived threat posed by Communists in the U.S. during the Cold War
  8. 11. the first man to successfully fly an airplane across the Atlantic Ocean
  9. 13. founder of the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA)
  10. 17. the transmission and reception of electromagnetic waves of radio frequency, especially those carrying sound messages.
  11. 18. a collection of music publishers and songwriters in New York City that dominated the popular music of the United States in the late 19th and early 20th centuries