9-2 Life Dur Great DepressionOnline version USH.4.5 - Analyze the causes of the Great Depression and its social and cultural impacts. by Lance Hiles A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W X Y Z Starts with A Federal officials returned southwestern Mexicans to Mexico, & about half were ___ citizens. Starts with B Homeless hoboes walked, hitchhiked, or rode the rails, sneaking past railroad police to slip into open ___ Starts with C In 1932 of the Great Depression, 30,000 _____ went out of business Starts with D 1930s, ___ hit the Great Plains, & soil/moisture had no root anchors, so the soil turned to dust. Starts with E Hard times of the 1930s led Americans to ___ through entertainment, scraping up money for the movies or listening to radio programs with family. Starts with F Jobless people stood in stood in breadlines for ___ food Starts with G Great Plains topsoil is held in place by prairie ___ with deep roots that preserve moisture in times of low rainfall. Starts with H People lost homes and lived in shacks they called ___ , because president Hoover did not helping. Contains I Photographers roamed the nation with the new 35-___ camera, and in 1936 TIME publisher Henry Luce introduced “LIFE”, a photojournalism magazine. Starts with J Grapes of Wrath was about some migrant farmers called the ___ Family, who lost farm in Oklahoma and traveled to California. Starts with K Jobless people went hungry, or when possible they lined up outside soup ___ Starts with L Dust Bowl blew the dry earth & buried crops & ___ in the dust, Starts with M Dorothea Lange’s ___ ___ depicts a sad & weary woman with seven children who had just sold her car's tires to buy food. Starts with N Hoovervilles were ___ of shacks put up by people who could not pay their mortgage & lost their homes Starts with O Great Plains farmers lost land to banks & headed to California, & since most were from Oklahoma, they were called ___ Starts with P Margaret Bourke-White’s most famous ___ was of poor African Americans waiting in front of a billboard that read, “Highest Standard of Living” Starts with R The ___ offered information & entertainment, as millions of people listened to comedian Jack Benny & ”the Adventures of Green Hornet”. Starts with S Daytime dramas continued each day, and since sponsors were makers of laundry supplies, the shows were nicknamed ___ operas. Starts with T Dust Bowl happened because a drought turned the ___ to dust, which then blew away. Contains U Steinbeck wrote “The Grapes of Wrath” describing the experiences of migrants who headed to California after losing farm to the ___ Bowl. Contains V 60 million Americans went to the ___ each week, where the Marx Brothers amused audiences in “Animal Crackers”. Starts with W ____ blew dry earth & blackening the sky, burying crops & livestock in dust, and sometimes suffocating humans & animals Contains X ___ were targeted because they were the most visible and because it was cheaper than shipping immigrants to Europe Contains Y John Steinbeck focused on how the depression was the result of an economic ___ as well as the importance of family in helping people survive. Contains Z Photographers & the new 35-millimeter camera took off in the 1930s, partly because Henry Luce introduced “LIFE”, a weekly photojournalism ___ .