Select the correct word, term, or phrase.
The Hundred refers to the flurry of activity and enormous amount of legislation Congress enacted during the first three months of President Franklin Roosevelt's first administration.
The was primarily designed to provide employment for young men in soil conservation and reforestation projects.
With the Act, President Roosevelt hoped to stimulate business recovery through the artificial suspension of antitrust laws.
The , led by John L. Lewis, was the labor organization that tried to organize semi-skilled and unskilled workers in mass production industries in the 1930s.
The most serious weakness of the Act was its failure to assist tenant farmers and sharecroppers.
Louisiana Senator , leader of the "Share Our Wealth" movement, was perhaps the most formidable extremist opponent of President Roosevelt's New Deal program.
Father , the "Radio Priest," promoted a near-fascist program of anti-Semitism and opposition to the New Deal.
Dr. created popular support for Social Security legislation with his advocacy of federally funded old-age pensions.
In its decision in , the Supreme Court ruled the National Industrial Recovery Act unconstitutional.
The Second New Deal's Act gave workers the right to organize and bargain collectively with their employers.
John Collier was the New Deal's Commissioner of who tried to implement more humane and pluralistic policies.
In the mid-1930s, North Dakota Republican Senator led a Senate investigation that concluded that the arms industry had conspired with bankers to drag America into World War I.
In August 1939, Germany and signed a nonaggression pact as a prelude to their joint assault on Poland on September 1, 1939, which began World War II.
The slogan "We Do Our Part" and the Blue Eagle symbol were identified with the New Deal's Administration.
A state-federal system of unemployment insurance was one provision of the 1935 Act.