WWII Jeopardy Review 2013 updatedx

Download Report

Transcript WWII Jeopardy Review 2013 updatedx

© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
Round 1
Round 2
Final
Jeopardy
$
$
Team
Mac
Team
Cureton
$
Team
Maverick
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
Allied
People
Axis People
Pacific
Battles
Battles
against
Germany
Germany
Tactics
Round 2
$100 $100
$100
$100 $100
$100
Final
Jeopardy
$200 $200
$200
$200 $200
$200
Scores
$300 $300
$300
$300 $300
$300
$400 $400
$400
$400 $400
$400
$500 $500
$500
$500 $500
$500
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$100
Which British leader was against
appeasement and was part of the
Big 3 at Yalta?
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$100
Winston Churchill
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
Which American General was in
charge of forces in Europe and
Africa, and decided D-day was a
go?
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$300
Who made the decision to drop
the bombs on Hiroshima and
Nagasaki to end the war?
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$300
Harry S. Truman
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
This “man of steel’s” industrial
dream created a model
communist country at the cost of
millions of lives.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
Joseph Stalin
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$500
Which General was driven out of
the Philippines, but returned to
help rebuild Japan.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$500
Douglas MacArthur
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$100
Who rebuilt Germany’s army and
led his people to try to conquer
Europe for more living space?
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$100
Adolf Hitler
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
Who led Italy and made up 1/3 of
the axis powers?
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
Benito Mussolini
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$300
Who could not bear to see his
people suffer, so ordered their
surrender September 2, 1945.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$300
Emperor Hirohito
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$800
Who led a civil war in his own
country, claimed neutrality for
WWII, but secretly aided Germany
and Italy.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$800
Francisco Franco
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$500
Which Prime Minister led the
invasion of Manchuria, starting
the war in the Pacific theater.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$500
Hideki Tojo
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$100
What was the deliberate, secret
attack that brought the United
States into WWII?
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$100
The Pearl Harbor Attack
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
Which battle turned the tides in
the Pacific because the US had
broken the Japanese naval code,
then started island hopping?
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
The Battle of Midway
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$300
Which battle is the location of Mt.
Suribachi, where all but 200
Japanese were killed, and gave
the allies a strategic launching
point to Japan?
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$300
Iwo Jima
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
What is the name given to the day
of the formal Japanese surrender
on the USS Missouri?
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
V-J Day
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$500
Which battle was the last
obstacle before the allies hit the
Japanese mainland – whose high
death toll showed us what a
Japanese invasion would be like?
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$500
Okinawa
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$100
What is the name for the largest
land, sea, and air invasion in
history – putting the allies on the
European mainland?
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$100
D-day
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
Which battle was over control of
supplies, and was originally
dominated by German u-boats
until Americans started using
sonar, captured an enigma
machine, and increased our ship
building.
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
Battle of the Atlantic
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$300
Which battle was Germany’s first
cancelled invasion, because the
Luftwaffe were being destroyed
by the RAF, due to radar
technology?
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$300
Battle of Britain
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
What was Germany’s last
offensive, where they were
unable to re-supply and were
forced to retreat for the end of the
war?
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
Battle of the Bulge
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$500
What Island did the Allies
conquer to get back control of
the Mediterranean Sea? After
this, the allies were hoping to
invade Europe through Italy…
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$500
Sicily
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$100
Germany’s first loss was at this
battle, a turning point in Europe,
where they were stopped due to
scorched earth tactics and a
really cold winter.
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$100
Stalingrad
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
This policy of giving in to an
aggressor allowed Germany to
take over the Sudetenland, and
then all of Czechoslovakia.
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
Appeasement
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$300
Germany had this type of
government, where the
government is in the hands of
one or few, and the government
is supreme.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$300
Totalitarian
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
Both Germany and Italy believed
in this, an ideology that glorifies
the country above all, where the
economy and society are
regimented, and force is used to
put down all resistance.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
Fascism
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$500
Germany was able to take over
France fairly easily, but the
French government stayed intact,
in Britain, under whose
leadership?
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$500
Charles DeGaulle
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$100
In order to get a country’s
support for a war, this is often
used, using media to appeal to
people’s emotions.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$100
Propaganda
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
Germany used this tactic to
overwhelm their enemies with
surprise and speed, using tanks,
troops, and planes.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
Blitzkrieg
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$300
It was an honor for a Japanese
soldier to be chosen as this type
of suicide bomber – the “divine
wind.”
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$300
Kamikaze
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
The Japanese were not especially
pleasant to their prisoners, which
is illustrated by which incident
involving American POWs who
surrendered in the Philippines?
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
The Bataan Death March
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$500
America’s saving grace against
Japan was using an unbreakable
code – this language.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$500
Navajo
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
On the
Map
In Time
(Dates)
Treatment
of People
Agreements
$200 $200
$200
$400 $400
Homefront
Propaganda
Round 1
$200 $200
$200
Final
Jeopardy
$400
$400 $400
$400
Scores
$600 $600
$600
$600 $600
$600
$800 $800
$800
$800 $800
$800
$1000 $1000 $1000 $1000 $1000 $1000
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
Germany’s invasion of this
country started WWII.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
H - Poland
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
The allies invaded mainland
Europe on D-day in this country.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
B - France
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$600
The location of the death camps
are in this country.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$600
H - Poland
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$800
The site of the Japanese bombing
of Pearl Harbor.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$800
D - Hawaii
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$1000
MacArthur’s troops had to
surrender here, but he vowed “I
shall return!”
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$1000
B - Philippines
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
Bombing of Pearl Harbor by
Japan
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
December 7, 1941
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$800
Start of WWII, Germany invades
Poland
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$800
September 1, 1939
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$600
V-E Day, Germany surrenders
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$600
May 8, 1945
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$800
V-J Day, Japan surrenders
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$800
September 2, 1945
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$1000
D-Day invasion of France by the
allies
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$1000
June 6, 1944
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
The holocaust was Hitler’s way of
creating the master race –
describe the master race.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
Blonde hair, blue eyes
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
This Night of Broken Glass was
the first outward violence against
the Jews, burning synagogues
and breaking shop windows.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
Kristallnacht
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$600
This ship containing hundreds of
German Jews fleeing Germany
was turned away from the United
States.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$600
The St. Louis
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$800
The largest death camp located in
Poland was this one.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$800
Auschwitz
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$1000
At the end of the war, this set the
standard that all people in war
are responsible for their own
actions.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$1000
Nuremburg War Trials
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
Hitler signed this agreement with
Stalin, agreeing not to attack one
another so they could invade
Poland.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
The Non-aggression Pact
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
The Big 3 leaders met here and
agreed to divide Germany if
Stalin would hold free elections.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
Yalta Conference
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$1200
This legislation forced JapaneseAmericans away from the West
Coast for our security, and put
them in internment camps.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$1200
Executive Order 9066
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$800
This agreement was signed by
Neville Chamberlain, allowing
Hitler to take over the
Sudetenland in
Czechoslovakia…appeasing him.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$800
The Munich Pact/Agreement
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$1000
This legislation signed after WWI
was a promise by the US not to
sell arms to countries at war.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$1000
Neutrality Acts
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
List two minorities that
Americans depended on for
WWII, but still discriminated
against after the war was over.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
African-Americans, NativeAmericans, Mexican-Americans,
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
This organization was created in
the US to help meet war needs by
re-tooling factories for war
production.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
The War Production Board (WPB)
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$600
This organization was
responsible for fixing prices of
goods so they were affordable for
all, but raised taxes as well.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$600
OPA – Office of Price
Administration
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$800
The US remained neutral at the
beginning of WWII, but found this
way to help the allies – they had
to come get their supplies and
pay for them immediately.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$800
Cash and Carry
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$1000
When the allies ran out of money,
the US still assisted using this
policy, which allowed allies to
pay later for shipped supplies.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$1000
Lend-Lease Plan
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
This uncle Sam poster is
foreshadowing which event?
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$200
Dropping the atomic bombs on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
This propaganda poster
illustrates what?
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$400
Rationing
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$600
This poster illustrates what
legislation that had to increase
the size of our military force?
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$600
Selective Service Act
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$800
This poster is recruiting for which
organization that started in
WWII?
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$800
WAAC – Women’s Army Auxiliary
Corps
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$1000
This poster illustrates what
organization that teamed
scientists and the military during
the war?
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
$1000
Manhattan Project (or OSRD)
Scores
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
Technology
Scores
Final
Jeopardy
Question
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
This man was the leading
scientific developer of the atomic
bomb.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved
J. Robert Oppenheimer
Scores