Across
- 2. - Most celebrated defense attorney. Defended Scopes, and his right to teach/discuss evolution.
- 7. - Director of the CPI. Created and sold posters that dramatized the needs of America and its allies in the war. Also spoke at rallies.
- 9. - The commander of the US Forces in Europe.
- 10. - The growing trend to emphasize science and secular values over traditional religious beliefs.
- 12. Opposed treaty of Versailles in every way. Stay out of world affairs. Did not want to have to “fight for” other countries.
- 13. - Republican President elected in 1920. Signaled the end of support for continuation of League of Nations. America wanted to move on.
- 14. Supported the treaty as it was written. Believed no changes were necessary. Wanted to be a part of the League of Nations.
- 15. - This group of states (Countries) would work together to ensure that every country had the guarantees of political independence and territorial integrity.
Down
- 1. - Devotion to one’s nation above all else. Social Darwinism played a role in the moral and racial superiority of certain nation’s thinking they had the right to do as they pleased in the world.
- 3. Henry Cabot Lodge - Make amendments to the treaty, didn’t like the League of Nations removing national sovereignty to declare war.
- 4. - Goods, usually defined as weapons or other articles used to fight in a war, to be confiscated by any belligerent nation.
- 5. - The glorification of the military. Arms race competition between different countries and their militaries.
- 6. - Peace without victory. This was Wilson’s solution to achieve peace without vengeance or or greed or punishment so the world could heal.
- 8. - Battle ground in NE France that became the critical battlefront. Whoever won this, would likely win the war.
- 11. - A trial that pit modernism versus fundamentalism. The theory of evolution, developed by Charles Darwin , believed that complex forms of life had developed from simpler forms of life.