Download satp review packet

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Espionage Act of 1917 wikipedia , lookup

Nonintercourse Act wikipedia , lookup

Jim Crow laws wikipedia , lookup

Smith Act wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
US HISTORY STATE EXAM
MAY 13, 2015
TO CONQUER THE
US HISTORY TEST
“Don’t count the days, make
the days count.”
-Muhammad Ali
Name_________________________
Overview of the Test
Minimal = Below 640
Basic = 641-646
Proficient = 647-657
Advanced = 658 and higher
1
Terminology
Many of these words can be found on the test. If you don’t
know what they mean, you may not understand the question.
unfamiliar and define them.
Mark the ones that are
1. advocate
23. domestic
44. implement
67. international
2. ratify
24. foreign
45. sedition
68. continental
3. annex
25. constitutional
46. arms reduction
69. hysteria
4. affluent
26. unconstitution
47. adhere
70. preceded
48. segregation
71. post
5. essential
al
6. nationalism
27. legislative
49. integration
72. status quo
7. intervention
28. judicial
50. regulate
73. depleted
8. innovation
29. executive
51. ruthless
74. means of
9. capitalism
30. repeal
52. blockade
10. agrarian
31. decade
53. revolution
75. rural
11. drought
32. confine
54. injustice
76. urban
12. suffrage
33. morale
55. illustrate
77. increase
13. insufficient
34. origin
56. civil
78. decrease
14. compare/contr
35. prohibit
57. rivalry
79. prohibit
36. recession
58. aggression
80. acquisition
15. opponent
37. depression
59. contemporary
81. England =
16. proponent
38. inflation
60. turbulent
Great Britain
17. conservative
39. embargo
61. neutral
= United
18. liberal
40. surplus
62. armistice
Kingdom
19. federal
41. deficit
63. literal
20. diplomacy
42. industrialize
64. analyze
Soviet Union
65. denounce
= USSR
ast
21. appease
22. bypass
43. armaments
66. promote
production
82. Russia =
THEME ASSOCIATION - Write the time period and theme associated with the information below.
___________________________
Dates:______________________ Time period of major political corruption in American
politics. Payoffs and bribes determined who won elections. Many immigrants came to America to find wealth.
___________________________
through relief, reform, and recovery.
Dates:______________________ Franklin Roosevelt rallied the country into recovery
___________________________
Dates:______________________ Segregation laws were the backdrops. Rosa Parks
started it, which eventually led Martin Luther King, Jr. to become the leader of the non-violent philosophy. Malcolm X had an
opposite view.
___________________________
Dates:______________________ Began with the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand
from Austria-Hungary. One effect of this was the Red Scare in the 1920’s.
___________________________
Dates:______________________ This party consisted mostly of farmers. The main
issue of the time was the minting of silver or gold.
___________________________
Dates:______________________ The stock market crash began this period in our
history. President Hoover led the nation and believed Americans should help each other out with their problems, not the govt. He
became very unpopular.
___________________________
Dates:______________________ Government became more responsible to the people.
Several amendments were passed during this time to show more support for Americans.
___________________________
Dates:______________________ The U.S.A. could be seen all over the world. One
place was Central America. We built the Panama Canal, which gave us a faster route between oceans.
___________________________
Dates:______________________ Communism was on the minds of most Americans.
The time periods spanned over several presidents, several military conflicts, and ended with the destruction of the Berlin Wall.
___________________________ The Bill of Rights has been limited from time to time by our government. Usually during times of
war. This unit analyzes those restrictions.
___________________________
Dates:______________________ This pulled our country out of the depression. We
were brought into it on December 7, 1941.
___________________________
Dates:______________________ Americans saw an economic boom, while they heard
jazz on the radio. Many Americans found themselves in debt.
___________________________
Dates:______________________ Manifest Destiny, the goal of most Americans, was
achieved. Custer fought the Native Americans for territory and lost. However, that was the Native Americans’ only victory.
___________________________
Dates:______________________ A revolution of new inventions and ideas that
transformed the U.S. Some business leaders became extremely wealthy.
___________________________
Dates:______________________ This period was focused mainly in the Middle East.
Territorial, political, and religious disputes added to the tensions in the region. A major event includes the bombing of the World
Trade Center.
US History Themes - 1877 to Present
1. Westward Expansion
7. World War I
2. Populism
8. The Jazz Age/Roaring 20
3. Industrialism
9. Great Depression
4. The Gilded Age
10. New Deal
5. Progressivism
11. World War II
6. Expansionism/Imperialism
12. The Cold War
13. Civil Rights Movement
14. Constitutional Rights
15. Gulf War/Terrorism
DATES - Note:
A Century is one more than the year. Example: 20th Century is the 1900s
Write the month, day, and year of the following.
Pearl Harbor
Nagasaki Bombing
D-Day
Black Tuesday
Hiroshima Bombing
V-E Day
V-J Day
Write the year or years for the following.
WWII
Vietnam War
TR’s Presidency
WWI
FDR’s Presidency
Populism
The 2nd Red Scare
Kennedy’s Presidency
The Jazz Age
U.S. Involvement in WWI
The Great Depression
Freedom Summer
Cuban Missile Crisis
Voting Rights Act
Hawaii Annexed
Spanish American War
The Cold War
The Red Scare
Bay of Pig
Persian Gulf War
The Baby Boom
Panama Canal Construction
Iraq War
Battle of Little Big Horn
MLK, Jr. Assassination
9/11 Attacks
Russian Revolution
Korean War
Nixon’s Presidency
JFK Assassination
LBJ’s Presidency
People in History
1.
_________________________ authorized the use of the atomic bomb by the USA and signed the Marshall Plan to rebuild
Europe after WWII.
2.
_________________________ fought the Great Depression with his New Deal programs; strong leader during WWII for
America.
3.
_________________________ had presidency filled with scandal because of the Watergate affair; however, he was able to
open up better relations with China through détente and bring troops home from Vietnam.
4.
_________________________ fascist leader of Italy in WWII.
5.
_________________________ leader of Nazi Germany who authorized the killing of over 6 million Jews in WWII.
6.
_________________________ leader of USSR during WWII and aggressive participant in the Cold War.
7.
_________________________ actions led to the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
8.
_________________________ author of The Jungle.
9.
_________________________ captain of the steel industry who was a philanthropist.
10. _________________________ civil rights leader and member of the Nation of Islam, believed in Black nationalism.
11. _________________________ civil rights leader who used non-violent means to achieve his goals.
12. _________________________ developed a new process for making steel.
13. _________________________ first African-American to graduate from Harvard, founded the Niagara Movement and the
NAACP.
14. _________________________ flew non-stop from NY to Paris.
15. _________________________ heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, assassination sparked WWI.
16. _________________________ journalist who exposed the horrors of tenement life hoping to generate public support for
reform.
17. _________________________ leader of Communist North Vietnam.
18. _________________________ led a campaign for women’s suffrage, she was often arrested for civil disobedience.
19. _________________________ led a crusade to investigate officials he claimed were Communists.
20. _________________________ led American soldiers against the Sioux Indians at the Battle of Little Big Horn.
21. _________________________ member of the Lost Generation in the 1920s, wrote The Great Gatsby.
22. _________________________ platform was the Great Society which focused on education & health benefits (Medicare,
Medicaid); he also sent more troops to Vietnam than any other president.
23. _________________________ platform was the New Frontier, his troubles with Cuba included to Bay of Pigs and the Cuban
Missile Crisis, he saw the Berlin Wall constructed in Germany and made great efforts to step up the US space program,
assassinated in 1963.
24. _________________________ Prime Minister of England during WWII, gave the Iron Curtain speech to warn America of
future problems with the Soviet Union.
25. _________________________ Rough Rider who led the US in the Spanish American War, began construction on the
Panama Canal in 1904, he spoke softly and carried a big stick in Latin America.
26. _________________________ Sioux chief who led Native Americans off of their reservation.
27. _________________________ US leader during WWI, goals for post war world were outlined in his 14 Points, tried to
convince Congress to join League of Nations.
28. _________________________ seen as a very ineffective leader during the Great Depression, believed in rugged
individualism and volunteerism.
29. _________________________ yellow journalist who reported the treatment of Cubans by the Spanish to drum up support for
the Spanish American War.
30. _________________________ the first African American to attend the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss).
31. _________________________ Populist and Democrat who ran for president; gave the “Cross of Gold” speech supporting
unlimited coining of silver.
32. _________________________ established a communist govt. in Russia in 1917.
33. _________________________established a communist govt in Cuba in 1959.
34. _________________________was a corrupt political boss in NYC’s Tammany Hall during the Gilded Age.
35. _________________________was the political cartoonist that exposed Gilded Age political corruption.
36. _________________________. WWII hero who was elected president during the 1950s.
37. _________________________ prolific inventor that is credited with the light bulb and central power stations.
38. Muckraker who exposed the corruption of the Standard Oil Company ________________________________
39. _________________________ was the first woman nominated to the US Supreme Court by Ronald Reagan
40. _________________________ Indian leader who surrendered to the US govt and negotiated for peace
41. _________________________ led a successful boycott of grapes and other produce, merged migrant farming unions into the
UFW and led the Chicano Movement.
42. The husband and wife who were convicted and executed for providing atomic energy secrets to the USSR were
____________________________
43. _________________________ Leader of Great Britain during World War II.
NAME BANK:
Fidel Castro
Chief Joseph
Charles Lindbergh
Woodrow Wilson
Martin Luther King, Jr.
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Boss Tweed
Cesar Chavez
FDR
Malcolm X
Susan B. Anthony
George Custer
Thomas Nast
Adolph Hitler
Harry Truman
Rosa Parks
Sitting Bull
Henry Bessemer
Dwight Eisenhower
Andrew Carnegie
Herbert Hoover
William Randolph Hearst
Winston Churchill
Ho Chi Minh
Thomas Edison
The Rosenbergs
Jacob Riis
WEB DuBois
Vladimir Lenin
James Meredith
Upton Sinclair
Archduke Ferdinand
JFK
Ida Tarbell
Lyndon B. Johnson
William Jennings Bryan
Theodore Roosevelt
Winston Churchill
Joseph McCarthy
Sandra Day O’Connor
Josef Stalin
Richard Nixon
Benito Mussolini
Time Period Association
Place the correct word in the time period in which it occurred. If there are words you do not
recognize, look them up and define them. Label the theme that fits in each time period to help
you determine where the terms belong.
1870s-1900_______________/___________________
1880s – 1920s________________/________________
1880s-1896___________________
1914-1918_______________
1920s___________________
1930s-___________________
1939-1945_______________
1945-1989_______________
1950-1953 - Korean War
1955-1975 - Vietnam War
1950s -1960s ________________________
1990s – Present Day_____________
PLACE AN “X” NEXT
TO THE TERMS YOU
CAN’T REMEMBER
14 Points
16th Amendment
17th Amendment
18th Amendment
19th Amendment
24th Amendment
26th Amendment
17th Parallel
38th Parallel
AAA
Affirmative action
Allies/Central Powers
American Federation of Labor
Annex
Appeasement
Arab/Israeli Conflict
Archduke Ferdinand
Arms race
Assimilation
Assembly line
Atlantic Charter
Atomic bomb
Axis/Allied Powers
Baby boom
Bank holiday
Barbed wire
Battle of the Bulge
Bay of Pigs
Benevolent society
Berlin Airlift
Bessemer process
Black Tuesday
Blitzkrieg
Bonus Army
Boss Tweed
Boxer Rebellion
Brown v Board of Ed
Bull Moose Party
Bully Pulpit
Brinkmanship
Breadlines
capitalism
Captains of Industry
Carnegie
CCC
Central Powers/Allies
Cesar Chavez
Challenger disaster
Chicano Movement
Chinese Exclusion Act
Churchill
CIA
Civil Rights Acts
Civil Service Reform
Clayton Antitrust Act
Cold War
Communism
Concentration camp
Conservation
Containment
Compulsory education
Credit
Cross of Gold
Cuban Missile Crisis
Dawes Act
Daylight savings time
D-Day
Deficit Spending
Depression
Détente
Dollar diplomacy
Domino theory
Dust bowl
Edison
Eisenhower
Embargo
Equal Rights Amendment
Exodusters
Expansionism
FDIC
FDR
Federal Reserve Act
Fireside chats
Flappers
Freedom riders
Freedom summer
Free enterprise
Geneva conference
GI Bill of Rights
Gilded Age
Gold bugs
Good Neighbor Policy
Gospel of Wealth
Graft
Grange
Great migration
Great Society
Great Upheaval
Great White Fleet
Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
Harlem Renaissance
Haymarket Riot
Henry Ford
Hitler
Ho Chi Minh
Ho Chi Minh Trail
Hollywood Ten
Holocaust
Homestead Act
Homestead Strike
Hoover
HUAC
Hydrogen Bomb
Immigrants
Imperialism
Internment Camps
Island hopping
Iron Curtain
Isolationism
James Meredith
Jane Addams
Jazz
Jim Crow
JFK
Joseph Glidden
Kent State
Kickbacks
KKK
Knights of Labor
Laissez-faire
League of Nations
Lend-Lease Act
Lost generation
Luftwaffe
Lusitania
MAIN Causes of WWI
MacArthur
Malcolm X
Manhattan Project
Manifest Destiny
Mao Zedong
March on Washington
Marshall Plan
Meat Inspection Act
Medgar Evers
MLK, Jr.
McCarthyism
Monopolies
Montgomery bus boycott
Moral Diplomacy
Morrill Act
Muckrakers
Mussolini
NAACP
NAFTA
NASA
National Defense Education Act
National Park Service
NATO
Nazis
New Deal
New Freedom
New Frontier
New Nationalism
North Korea
No-Man’s-Land
NRA
Nuremberg Trials
Oct. 29, 1929
OPEC
Open Door Policy
Organized crime
Palmer Raids
Panama Canal
Patriot Act
Peace Corps
Pearl Harbor
Pentagon Papers
Pendleton Civil Service Act
Persian Gulf War
Philanthropists
Platt Amendment
Plessy v. Ferguson
Political corruption
Populism
Potsdam Conference
Progressive Income Tax
Prohibition
Pullman Strike
Pure Food & Drug Act
Quotas
Reaganomics
Red Scare
Reparations
Robber barons
Roe v Wade
Roosevelt Corollary
Rough Riders
Rosa Parks
Rosie the Riveter
Russian Revolution
Satellite nations
Scopes Trial
SEC
Sedition Act
Selective service
Self-determination
Settlement houses
Seward’s Folly
Sgt. Alvin York
Sherman Antitrust Act
Silverites
Sit-ins
Smoot-Hawley Tariff
Social Darwinism
Social Gospel
Social security
Sod houses
South Korea
Space race
Spanish-American War
Spheres of influence
Spoils System
Sputnik
Square deal
Suburbs
Suez crisis
Suffrage
Sussex Pledge
Taft
Taft-Hartley Act
Teapot Dome scandal
Television
Tenements
Tet offensive
The Jungle
Theodore Roosevelt
Transcontinental railroad
Treaty of Versailles
Trench warfare
Triangle Shirtwaist Fire
Truman
Truman Doctrine
Trustbuster
Trusts
TVA
Tweed Ring
U2 Spy Plane
UN
USS Maine
Viet Cong
Vietnam
Volunteerism
Voting Rights Acts
Wagner Act
War bonds
War Powers Resolution
Warsaw Pact
Watergate Scandal
WCTU
William Jennings Bryan
welfare capitalism
Wilson
Women’s Suffrage
WPA
Yalta Conference
Yellow journalism
Zimmerman Note
NOW LOOK UP THE
TERMS THAT YOU
MARKED WITH AN “X”
Identify these Plans, Agreements, Decisions, & Organizations
14 Points
New Nationalism
American Federation of Labor
North American Treaty
Chinese Exclusion Act
Organization
Dawes Act
Organization of Petroleum
Fair Deal
Exporting Countries (OPEC)
Federal Deposit Insurance
Pacific Railway Act
Corporation
Pendleton Civil Service Act
Geneva Conference
Progressive Movement
Good Neighbor Policy
Roosevelt Corollary
Great Society
Square Deal
Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
SALT
Homestead Act
Teapot Dome Scandal
Interstate Commerce Commission
Truman Doctrine
Knights of Labor
United Nations
League of Nations
Versailles Treaty
Monroe Doctrine
Wagner Act
Morrill Land Grant Act
Warsaw Pact
New Deal
War Powers Act
New Freedom
Yalta Conference
New Frontier
Atlantic Charter
Environmentalism
Use pages 698 – 703 to complete this timeline
of the Environmental Movement.
1916 - Theodore Roosevelt begins the
Conservation Movement by starting the
National Park Service.
How did Earth Day get started? What is the
date for Earth Day?
Define Conservation –
What did the National Park Service do?
3 Events in the 1960s and 1970s sparked a new
phase in the Environmental Movement.
Rachel Carson’s 1962 book Silent
Spring. What was this book about?
What recent Environmental disaster has caused
problems in the South? (2 years ago -not in
your book)
The Love Canal Incident –
3-Mile Island Incident -
Environmental Protection Agency -
Clean Air Act –
Public outcry grew from these
events, causing the US govt to
react by passing new laws and creating a new
environmental agency
Clean Water Act –
Constitutional
Endangered SpeciesAmendments
Act –
Look up the following amendments.
1. Write the significance of the
amendment.
2. Write the year they were added to the
constitution.
3. Write the theme each is associated
with
13th
21st
14th
22nd
15th
23rd
16th
24th
17th
25th
18th
26th
19th
20th
Ronald Reagan’s Presidency
Use Chapter 26 in your book to complete this page.
Domestic Policies:
Explain the Main Characteristics of these Reagan Policies.
Reaganomics
(Supply-Side Economics)
Iran Hostage Crisis:
How did it end?
Supreme Court
Appointments
Defense Spending on New
Weapons (Strategic
Defense Initiative)
Foreign Policies:
Explain the Significance of these Reagan Foreign Policy Activities.
Iran-Contra Affair
What president lost to
Reagan in 1980 because
of the bad economy and
bad publicity from the
Hostage Crisis?
The Cold War Ends
(Reagan & George H.W.
Bush)
Mikhail Gorbachev, USSR, 1985
GlastnostPerestroika-
Define these terms
associated with
Gorbachev, Reagan,
and the end of the
Cold War.
Radio Free Europe(Hint: Google it.)
19
War with Iraq, 1991??
INF Treaty-
OR
War with Iraq, 2003 – 2011??
1991
Saddam Hussein
George W Bush
George HW Bush
Fear of WMDS
Invasion of Kuwait
UN Involvement
Operation Desert Storm
Operation Iraqi Freedom
Korean War
Protection of Oil
Persian Gulf War
IMPORTANT COURT DECISIONS
A. What year?
B. What were the circumstances of the case?
C. What did the court decide?
1. Brown v Board of Education (Topeka, KS):
2. Plessy v Ferguson:
3. Escobedo v Illinois:
4. Duke v Griggs Power Co:
5. Reynolds v Sims:
6. Roe v Wade:
7. Lochner v. NY:
8. Scopes v Tennessee:
Was it
Teddy or Franklin
Roosevelt?
Write “Teddy” or “Franklin” next to each of these
items that are associated with TR or FDR. Write “Both” next to the
things they both had in common.
President Theodore Roosevelt
1.
Alphabet Soup
30. Relief and Recovery
55. Isolationism
2.
Trustbuster
31. Panama Canal
56. Good Neighbor Policy
3.
Rough Riders
32. TVA
57. Yalta Conference
4.
Secretary of the Navy
33. AAA
58. World War II
5.
NY Police Commissioner
34. Conservation
59. Nobel Peace Prize
6.
Governor of NY
35. “Speak softly and carry a
60. The Dust Bowl
7.
“We have nothing to fear but
fear itself.”
Big Stick.”
36. Corollary to the Monroe
62. Wagner Act
8.
Fireside Chats
9.
Negotiated United Mine
37. Eleanor Roosevelt
64. 1901 – 1909
Workers Strike
38. Brain Trust
65. 1933 – 1945
10. Bull Moose Party
39. William H. Taft
66. Avid Hunter
11. Republican
40. Attempted to Pack the US
67. Spanish – American War
12. Atlantic Charter
Doctrine
61. Bank Failures
Supreme Court
63. WPA
68. Vice President
13. Democrat
41. Square Deal
69. Harry Truman
14. Progressive
42. “December 7th, a date which
70. Fought in Cuba
15. Elected President 4 Times
will live in infamy…”
71. Four Freedoms Speech
16. Social Security Act
43. Great Depression
72. Cash & Carry
17. Bully Pulpit
44. Polio
73. D – Day
18. Defeated Herbert Hoover
45. Received letter from
74. Fought Monopolies
19. Succeeded William
McKinley
20. Met with Churchill and
Stalin
21. Negotiated Peace Treaty
between Japan and Russia
Einstein about Atomic
75. High Unemployment
Weapons
76. Breadlines
46. CCC
47. Government should expand
to help people.
48. “I took the Canal Zone, then
22. Battle of San Juan Hill
I let Congress debate about
23. Pearl Harbor
it.”
77. Securities and Exchange
Commission
78. NRA
79. Open Door Policy
80. Hawaii becomes US
Territory
24. Great White Fleet
49. Pure Food & Drug Act
81. Colombian Revolution
25. Policed Latin America
50. Elkins Act
82. Hay – Bunau – Varilla
26. Bank Holiday
51. National Park Service
27. Meat Inspection Act
52. Lend-Lease Act
83. Sherman Anti – Trust Act
28. FDIC
53. Hepburn Act
84. Youngest President Ever
29. New Deal
54. Imperialism
85. Gunboat Diplomacy
Treaty
VIETNAM
or KOREA ???
Vietnam War
Korean War
Fill the Venn diagram above with the terms listed below that are related to the Vietnam War, the Korean War, or Both Wars.
1. 17th Parallel
16. Communism
31. 1960’s
2. 38th Parallel
17. Search & Destroy Missions
32. Demilitarized Zone (DMZ)
3.
Ho Chi Minh Trail
18. Defoliants
33. CIA
4.
Gen. Douglas MacArthur
19. Inch’on
34. Operation Rolling Thunder
5.
Harry Truman
20. Asia
35. Cambodia
6.
Gulf of Tonkin
21. Pacification
36. Saigon
7.
Kim Il Sum
22. 1950’s
37. Kent State Protests/ Shooting
8.
Mao Zedong
23. Hanoi
38. Gen. William Westmoreland
9.
Seoul
24. Syngman Rhee
39. Tet Offensive
10. Lyndon B. Johnson
25. Dwight Eisenhower
40. Vietnamization Define-
11. Henry Kissinger
26. United Nations
41. 26th Amendment
12. War Powers Act
27. Manchuria
42. The Cold War
13. 1970’s
28. Pyongyang
43. Fighting Chinese Troops
14. Richard Nixon
29. Containment
44. Conflict between Truman and
15. Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
30. Domino Theory
MacArthur
Constitutional Rights & Civil Liberties
What are the limits of free speech???
Example: Schenck
v. United States
(1919), page 300.
1st Amendment =
Freedom of Speech
 How did the
US Supreme Court limit Free Speech
in the case of Schenck v. U.S.?
 According to the Supreme Court, what
are some good reasons for the govt to
limit your free speech?
Can the govt limit a group’s liberties
during wartime???
What is the proper balance between
national security and civil liberties???
Example: The Patriot Act (2002)
Page 536
 Why do some Americans oppose the
power given to the govt by the Patriot
Act?
 Many Americans support the Patriot
Act, what reasons do they have for
supporting it?
Are Affirmative Action Programs
fair???
Example: Regents of the Univ. of
California v. Bakke (1978) page 726
 What is affirmative action?
 What was Bakke’s argument against
affirmative action?
 Do you agree or disagree with Bakke?
Example: Korematsu v. United States
(1944), page 479.
 What is racial profiling?
 Why were these people denied equal
protection under the law and sent to
internment (prison) camps?
What are the limits on a President’s
Executive
Privilege???
Example: United States v. Nixon (1974)
page 718
 What is Executive Privilege?
 What state provided legal position was
started as a result of the Gideon
decision?
 When is Executive Privilege limited?
 What scandal brought about the
situation where President Nixon
claimed Executive Privilege to protect
his presidency?
Can Separate Treatment be Equal
Treatment??? Does Segregation Affect
Education???
Examples: Plessy v. Ferguson (1896),
Brown v. Board of Education (1954)
Pages 192 & 588
 What kinds of laws were allowed by
the Plessy decision?
 What amendment did the Brown
decision say the Plessy decision
violated?
 Why did Chief Justice Warren declare
segregation in schools
unconstitutional?
Can a Poor Person Get a Fair Trial???
Example: Gideon v. Wainwright (1963)
page 628
 What right does the 6th Amendment
give to people accused of a crime?
What Rights Should An Accused
Person Have???
Example: Miranda v. Arizona (1966)
page 637
 What does the 5th Amendment protect
people from?
 What must police do before
statements made by a suspect can be
used in a trial?
 Can you list your Miranda Rights in
the space below?