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Transcript
Round 1
Ultimate
Question
Round 2
$00
Winston
Churchill
$00
Franklin
Roosevelt
$00
Charles
de Gaulle
WWII
Road to
War
Holocaust
$100
$100
$100
$100
$200
$200
$200
$200
$200
$300
$300
$300
$300
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$400
$400
$400
$400
$400
$400
$500
$500
$500
$500
$500
$500
Nazi
Germany
Lenin
Stalin
$100
$100
$200
$100
In this 1938 event, the
Nazis attacked Jewish
synagogues and
businesses and beat up
and arrested many Jews.
Scoreboard
Answer
$100
Kristallnacht (“Night of
Broken Glass”)
Scoreboard
$200
This 1934 event resulted
in Hitler’s destruction of
the S.A. (at the request of
the German military).
Scoreboard
Answer
$200
“Night of Long
Knives”
Scoreboard
$300
This idea from Mein Kampf
called for Germany to
conquer lands in eastern
Europe to expand
Germany’s empire.
Scoreboard
Answer
$300
“lebensraum”
(“living space”)
Scoreboard
$400
These laws gave Hitler
dictatorial power in
Germany beginning in
1934.
Scoreboard
Answer
$400
Enabling Acts
Scoreboard
$500
These laws, beginning in
1935, stripped Jews of
their citizenship and
severely discriminated
against all Jewish people.
Scoreboard
Answer
$500
Nuremburg Laws
Scoreboard
$100
Lenin reluctantly
allowed some
capitalistic measures in
the early 1920s when he
instituted this program.
Scoreboard
Answer
$100
NEP (New
Economic Policy)
Scoreboard
$200
During the Russian Civil
War, this became the first
type of communism
practiced in the Soviet
Union between 1918 and
1920.
Scoreboard
Answer
$200
war communism
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$300
Lenin oppressed his
opponents through
the use of this secret
police organization.
Scoreboard
Answer
$300
Cheka
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$400
This leader of the Red
Army had more
philosophically in
common with Lenin
than did Stalin.
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Answer
$400
Leon Trotsky
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$500
This 20th-century political
philosophy claims a
communist society must first
be controlled by a
dictatorship of a small group
of professional revolutionary
elites.
Scoreboard
Answer
$500
MarxistLeninism
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$100
In order to catch up to
the West industrially,
Stalin instituted the
first of these in 1928.
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Answer
$100
Five-Year Plans
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$200
This was Stalin’s
program to communize
the countryside and
increase agricultural
productivity.
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Answer
$200
collectivization
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$300
Stalin staged these
events in the 1930s to
rid his government of
Old Bolsheviks.
Scoreboard
Answer
$300
show trials or
purges
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Place a bet between
$100 to $1000 (or
higher if you have
more money)
Question
$400
Millions of Soviet
citizens died in these
Soviet camps.
Scoreboard
Answer
$400
gulags
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$500
Unlike Trotsky who
believed in an immediate
international communist
revolution, Stalin believed
in this policy by the mid1920s.
Scoreboard
Answer
$500
“Socialism in
One Country”
Scoreboard
$100
This 1942-43 battle
was the turning point
of the war in Eastern
Europe.
Scoreboard
Answer
$100
Stalingrad
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$200
This June, 1944 battle
was the turning point
of the war in western
Europe.
Scoreboard
Answer
$200
D-Day (invasion of
Normandy)
Scoreboard
$300
This 1945 war-time
conference stated that
Germany would be
divided into four zones
and that a United Nations
would be created.
Scoreboard
Answer
$300
Yalta Conference
Scoreboard
$400
This August, 1939
agreement opened the way
for Germany’s invasion of
Poland and the division of
that country with the USSR.
Scoreboard
Answer
$400
German-Soviet
Non-Aggression
Pact?
Scoreboard
$500
This 1938 conference
represented the height of
appeasement and gave
part of Czechoslovakia to
Germany.
Scoreboard
Answer
$500
Munich
Conference
Scoreboard
$100
This economic catastrophe
of the late 20s and early
30s became a major cause
for the rise of fascism in
Germany and Japan.
Scoreboard
Answer
$100
Great
Depression
Scoreboard
$200
This international
organization failed in its
mission of collective
security to prevent
another World War.
Scoreboard
Answer
$200
League of
Nations
Scoreboard
$300
Germany reoccupied this
German region in 1936 in
direct violation of the
Versailles Treaty.
Scoreboard
Answer
$300
Rhineland
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$400
This German term refers
to Germany’s
annexation of Austria in
1938.
Scoreboard
Answer
$400
Anschluss
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$500
In 1939, Hitler demanded
that this city in the Polish
Corridor become a “free
city” with clear access to
Germany via rail.
Scoreboard
Answer
$500
Danzig
Scoreboard
$100
This Nazi death camp in
Poland is the most
notorious as nearly one
million Jews died there.
Scoreboard
Answer
$100
Auschwitz
Scoreboard
$200
Prior to the construction
of death camps, Jews
were herded into these
sealed districts in Polish
cities.
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Answer
$200
What are
ghettos?
Scoreboard
$300
This 1941 meeting
resulted in the “Final
Solution” to the Jewish
question.
Scoreboard
Answer
$300
Wannsee
Conference
Scoreboard
$400
This Nazi organization
headed by Heinrich
Himmler oversaw the
Holocaust.
Scoreboard
Answer
$400
SS
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$500
In addition to six million
others who died in the
Holocaust, this percentage
of European Jews perished
in the Holocaust.
Scoreboard
Answer
$500
two-thirds
Scoreboard
The Third
Il Duce
Reich
Soviet
Union
World
War II:
Reloaded
Pacific
War
Grab
Bag
$200
$200
$200
$200
$200
$200
$400
$400
$400
$400
$400
$400
$600
$600
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$600
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$800
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$800
$800
$800
$1000
$1000
$1000
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$1000
$1000
$200
This group of paramilitary thugs provided
the muscle for
Mussolini’s rise to
power.
Scoreboard
Answer
$200
Black Shirts
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$400
In 1935, Mussolini
ordered the invasion of
this African nation as
payback for a pre-WWI
defeat.
Scoreboard
Answer
$400
Ethiopia
Scoreboard
$600
This 1922 event
resulted in Mussolini
taking power in the
Kingdom of Italy.
Scoreboard
Answer
$600
March on Rome
Scoreboard
$800
In this 1929 deal, Mussolini
gave the Vatican
sovereignty while the pope
agreed to stay largely out of
Italy’s political matters.
Scoreboard
Answer
$800
Lateran Pact
Scoreboard
$1000
Mussolini organized this
type of fascist state, where
various economic interests
in the country function
collectively for the benefit
of the state.
Scoreboard
Answer
$1000
corporate state
Scoreboard
$200
Hitler believed that this
race was superior to all
others.
Scoreboard
Answer
$200
Aryan
Scoreboard
$400
This 1933 event in
Germany gave Hitler an
excuse to destroy the
communist party and
arrest its leaders.
Scoreboard
Answer
$400
Reichstag fire
Scoreboard
$600
This member of Hitler’s
inner circle was the Nazi
propaganda minister who
was determined to make
the Führer look like a
“god.”
Scoreboard
Answer
$600
Joseph Goebbels
Scoreboard
$800
This member of Hitler’s
inner circle eventually
became the leader of the
German Luftwaffe (air
force).
Scoreboard
Answer
$800
Hermann Göring
Scoreboard
$1000
This filmmaker contributed
to the larger-than-life
image of Hitler through
her film Triumph of the
Will.
Scoreboard
Answer
$1000
Leni Riefenstahl
Scoreboard
$200
These relatively wealthy
peasants became targets
of Stalin’s wrath as they
resisted collectivization.
Scoreboard
Answer
$200
Kulaks
Scoreboard
$400
This city became the
new capital of Russia
after the Russian
Revolution.
Scoreboard
Answer
$400
Moscow
Scoreboard
$600
This phrase represents
Stalin’s belief in brutal topdown rule during the FiveYear Plans.
Scoreboard
Answer
$600
“Revolution from
Above”
Scoreboard
$800
This novel by George
Orwell satirized the
Russian Revolution and
Stalinist rule.
Scoreboard
Answer
$800
Animal Farm
Scoreboard
$1000
Stalin conquered these
three Baltic states
shortly after the
beginning of World War
II.
Scoreboard
Answer
$1000
Estonia,
Latvia,
Lithuania
Scoreboard
$200
This technological
innovation enabled the
Royal Air Force’s victory
over the Luftwaffe during
the Battle of Britain.
Scoreboard
Answer
$200
radar
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Place a bet between
$200 to $2000 (or
higher if you have
more money)
Question
$400
This new type of German
warfare in WWII allowed it
to defeat its enemies
quickly.
Scoreboard
Answer
$400
blitzkrieg
Scoreboard
$600
The Allies founded this
international organization
in 1945 in the hopes of
promoting peace after
World War II.
Scoreboard
Answer
$600
United Nations
Scoreboard
$800
Marshal Henri-Philippe
Pétain headed this new
puppet state in the German
empire beginning in 1940.
Scoreboard
Answer
$800
Vichy France
Scoreboard
$1000
This 1941 document
proclaimed the Allies would
not fight for territorial
conquest but rather to
promote peace through a new
international organization.
Scoreboard
Answer
$1000
Atlantic Charter
Scoreboard
$200
The United States entered
World War II when Japan
attacked this target.
Scoreboard
Answer
$200
Pearl Harbor,
Hawaii
Scoreboard
$400
On August 6, 1945, the
United States dropped the
first atomic bomb on this
Japanese city.
Scoreboard
Answer
$400
Hiroshima
Scoreboard
$600
This 1942 battle was the
turning point of the war in
the Pacific.
Scoreboard
Answer
$600
Midway
Scoreboard
$800
This American strategy in
the Pacific war saw U.S.
forces conquer strategic
islands northwards
toward Japan.
Scoreboard
Answer
$800
Island Hopping
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Place a bet between
$200 to $2000 (or
higher if you have
more money)
Question
$1000
This July 1945 wartime
conference of the “Big Three”
established that Germany
would be de-Nazified while it
demanded unconditional
surrender from Japan.
Scoreboard
Answer
$1000
Potsdam
Conference
Scoreboard
$200
This was the world’s first
freeway system, built in
Germany during Hitler’s
rule in the 1930s.
Scoreboard
Answer
$200
Autobahn
Scoreboard
$400
This fascist rebel took
control of Spain in the
mid-1930s with the
military aid of Nazi
Germany and Fascist Italy.
Scoreboard
Answer
$400
Francisco
Franco
Scoreboard
$600
This general became the
leader of the “Free
French” after France was
defeated in June, 1940.
Scoreboard
Answer
$600
Charles de Gaulle
Scoreboard
$800
This 1928 peace
agreement proclaimed
“war is illegal,” thus giving
Europeans a false sense of
security.
Scoreboard
Answer
$800
Kellogg-Briand
Pact
Scoreboard
$1000
This 1933 economic
summit ended
unsuccessfully when the
U.S. undermined it. Hitler
was very encouraged!
Scoreboard
Answer
$1000
London Economic
Conference
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Category: Wartime
Diplomacy
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Question
Ultimate Question
This 1940 pact created a
military alliance between
Germany, Italy, and Japan:
they became known as the
“Axis Powers”
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Ultimate Question
Tripartite Pact
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