Chapter 10.The First World War 10.1 Roosevelt Corollary (1904) ·10.2 Vorld War I(1914-1919) 10.3 Treaty of Versailles (1919) 10.4 Prohibition (1919) 10.5 The 19th Amendment (1920) 10.6 The Roaring 20s (1920s) 10.7 The Monkey Trial (1925)
Chapter 10. The First World War Chapter 10. The First World War • 10.1 Roosevelt Corollary (1904) • 10.2 World War I (1914–1919) • 10.3 Treaty of Versailles (1919) • 10.4 Prohibition (1919) • 10.5 The 19th Amendment (1920) • 10.6 The Roaring 20s (1920s) • 10.7 The Monkey Trial (1925)
26 27 28 29 30. 31. Calvin Coolidge 1923-1929 Herbert Hoover 19291933
Chronological Landmarks Landmarks in America • 1901–1909:Theodore Roosevelt as the 26th President • 1903:The First Plane by Orville and Wilbur Wright • 1909–1913William Howard Taft as the 27th President • 1913–1921:Woodrow Wilson as the 28th President • 1917:United States Enters World War I • 1920s:The Jazz Age • 1920:The 19th Amendment Ratified • 1921–1923: Warren G. Harding as the 29th President • 1923–1929:Calvin Coolidge as the 30th President • 1925:The Monkey Trial • 1927:The First Talking Movie, The Jazz Singer • 1929–1933:Herbert Hoover as the 31st President • 1933:The 21st Amendment
Is in China .u Xun 'of China(CPC) n the KMT and CPC
• In Europe • 1899:The Interpretation of Dreams Written by Sigmund Freud • 1914–1919: World War I (The Treaty of Versailles) • 1917: Bolshevik Revolution Led by Vladimir Lenin in November • 1920:Relativity: A General Theory by Albert Einstein • 1930:The Discovery of Penicillin • In China • 1908–1911:Emperor Xuantong of the Qing Dynasty • 1911:The Xin Hai Revolution (The Collapse of Qing Dynasty) • 1912:Republic of China with Sun Yat–sen as President • 1914–1916:The Dictatorship of Yuan Shikai • 1916–1928:The Warfare between Warlords in China • 1918:The Diary of a Madman Written by Lu Xun • 1919:The May Fourth Movement • 1921:Founding of the Communist Party of China (CPC) • 1924–1927:The First Cooperation between the KMT and CPC • 1927:Nanchang Rebellion
10.1 Roosevelt Corollary (1904) “Big Stick” Theodore Roosevelt brought to the Executive Mansi White House by commitment to presidential pos the regulatory pri administrative gc 。Describing his fo Roosevelt once r to“speak softly
10.1 Roosevelt Corollary Roosevelt Corollary (1904) “Big Stick Big Stick” • Theodore Roosevelt brought to the Executive Mansion (officially renamed the White House by him) a passion for order, a commitment to the public, and a sense of presidential possibilities, firmly establishing the regulatory principle as the foundation of administrative government. • Describing his foreign policy, Theodore Roosevelt once remarked that it was his motto to “speak softly and carry a big stick
Roosevelt Corollary,1904
Roosevelt Corollary Roosevelt Corollary, 1904 • In 1904, worried that the defaults(拖欠 ) of Latin American nations on huge debts owed to European banks were provoking European intervention in the western hemisphere, the President issued the Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine. • He warned Latin Americans to stabilize their politics and finances. “Chronic wrongdoing might require intervention by some civilized nation,” the corollary lectured, and “in flagrant (不能容忍的, 公然的 ) cases of such wrongdoing or impotence,” the United States would have to assume the role of “an international an international police power police power