| Answer Key for Teachers | Fasttrack
to America's Past
Section 7: Becoming a World Leader Page 7 - 1 Section Title Page |
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| The
Famous Quotes:
1. "Speak softly and carry a big stick." This is a line used by President Theodore Roosevelt to explain his approach to foreign policy in the early 1900s. Roosevelt believed that America had an important role to play in world affairs. He did not mind making a show of force to influence events, as he did in 1903 to win permission to build a canal across Panama. But Roosevelt did not mean America should become a bully among nations. The saying suggests instead that holding a big stick will help win respect that allows a nation to "speak softly." 2. "And we won't come back 'till it's..." These words are from the most famous patriotic song of
World War One. They were written by George M. Cohan, who also wrote
songs for Broadway. The song "Over There" tells proudly that the
Yanks (the Americans) "won't come back 'till it's over over there!"
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3. "Brother,
Can You Spare a Dime?"
This is a famous line repeated throughout a sad song that tells the fate of many Americans in the Great Depression of the 1930s. As the go-go decade of the 1920s ended, the stock market crashed, throwing millions of people out of work. Unemployment hit 25 percent, at a time when few government programs existed to provide relief or help. 4. "I pledge you, I pledge myself, to..." As Franklin Delano Roosevelt won the Democratic Party nomination for president in 1932, he included this line in his acceptance speech. The phrase "New Deal" became the name for his package of proposals to end the Great Depression and give help to the unemployed. 5. "Yesterday, December 7, 1941 - a date..." These are the famous words Americans heard from President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt the day after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor,
an American naval base in the Hawaiian Islands. In response to the
attack, America entered World War Two.
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| The
Pictures:
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3.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the Democrat elected president in 1932 on a
promise to give Americans a "New Deal" and a way out of the Great Depression.
His confident style of leadership helped hold Americans together as the
economic crisis of the 1930s gave way to the challenges of World War Two.
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| Reminder: Students and teachers can also find this information in the Famous Quotes section of our main Internet support site. |
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