$("#Ch21-li100 li:nth-child(1)").attr('value', '2');
$("#Ch21-li100 li:nth-child(2)").attr('value', '4');
$("#Ch21-li100 li:nth-child(7)").attr('value', '10');
$("#Ch21-li100 li:nth-child(13)").attr('value', '18');
$("#Ch21-li100 li:nth-child(16)").attr('value', '22');
$("#Ch21-li100 li:nth-child(19)").attr('value', '26');
$("#Ch21-li100 li:nth-child(23)").attr('value', '31');
$("#Ch21-li100 li:nth-child(24)").attr('value', '39');
$("#Ch21-li100 li:nth-child(26)").attr('value', '44');
$("#Ch21-li100 li:nth-child(29)").attr('value', '49');
$("#Ch21-li100 li:nth-child(30)").attr('value', '53');
if (typeof xBookGlossaryTermsObj == "undefined") {
var xBookGlossaryTermsObj = { };
}
xBookGlossaryTermsObj['redscare'] = "Red scare: The fear of Communist-inspired radicalism in the wake of the Russian Revolution. The Red scare following World War I culminated in the Palmer raids on suspected radicals.";
xBookGlossaryTermsObj['palmerraids'] = "Palmer raids: Government roundup of some 6,000 suspected alien radicals in 1919–1920, ordered by Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer and his assistant J. Edgar Hoover. The raids resulted in the deportation of 556 immigrants.";
xBookGlossaryTermsObj['greatmigration'] = "great migration: Population shift of more than 400,000 African Americans who left the South beginning in 1917–1918 and headed north and west hoping to escape poverty and racial discrimination. During the 1920s another 800,000 blacks left the South.";
xBookGlossaryTermsObj['americanplan'] = "American Plan: Voluntary program initiated by businesses in the early twentieth century to protect worker welfare. The American Plan was meant to undermine the appeal of labor unions.";
xBookGlossaryTermsObj['teapotdomescandal'] = "Teapot Dome scandal: Oil and land scandal during the Harding administration that highlighted the close ties between big business and the federal government in the early 1920s.";
xBookGlossaryTermsObj['secondindustrialrevolution'] = "second industrial revolution: Revolution in technology and productivity that reshaped the American economy in the early twentieth century.";
xBookGlossaryTermsObj['newwoman'] = "new woman: 1920s term for the modern, sexually liberated woman. The new woman, popularized in movies and magazines, flouted traditional morality.";
xBookGlossaryTermsObj['lostgeneration'] = "Lost Generation: A term used by the writer Gertrude Stein to describe the writers and artists disillusioned with the consumer culture of the 1920s.";
xBookGlossaryTermsObj['newnegro'] = "New Negro: 1920s term for the second generation of African Americans born after emancipation and who stood up for their rights.";
xBookGlossaryTermsObj['universalnegroimprovementassociationunia'] = "Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA): Organization founded by Marcus Garvey in 1914 to promote black self-help, pan-Africanism, and racial separatism.";
xBookGlossaryTermsObj['saccoandvanzetticase'] = "Sacco and Vanzetti case: 1920 case in which Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were convicted of robbery and murder. The trial centered on the defendants’ foreign birth and political views, rather than the facts pertaining to their guilt or innocence.";
xBookGlossaryTermsObj['nationaloriginsact'] = "National Origins Act: 1924 act establishing immigration quotas by national origin. The act was intended to severely limit immigration from southern and eastern Europe as well as prohibit all immigration from East Asia.";
xBookGlossaryTermsObj['blacktuesday'] = "Black Tuesday: October 29, 1929, crash of the American stock market. The 1929 stock market crash marked the beginning of the Great Depression.";