1920's Newspaper

Task

It is Autumn, 1929. The 1920’s was a decade of great change in American society. You are a reporter for the NDP Press, and your editor-in-chief, (Mr. Perry), has formed a group to begin work on the “Decade in Review” issue of the magazine that will be released in late December, 1929. The committee is divided into five groups: current events, business, entertainment, sports, and advertising. Each reporter must submit two articles which will be published in the magazine, and each reporter will design the layout for his or her article.

Process

STEP ONE: Groups 
Your editor-in-chief has broken you into five groups for the five different sections of the magazine. Each group must decide how they will cover the stories that belong to their sections. Within your group, the following stories must be covered. The group of reporters must decide who will tackle each story. As hard-nosed journalists, you must seek out interviews with participants and remain completely unbiased. Report only the facts! 

Newsreporters: Your stories to cover include: 

The Sacco-Vanzetti Case 
The 18th Amendment: Prohibition
The Scopes Trial 
The Teapot Dome Scandal 
St. Valentine’s Day Massacre and Al Capone 
The 19th Amendment: Woman’s Suffrage 
The Return of the Ku Klux Klan 
Charles Lindbergh Crosses the Atlantic 
An interview with Amelia Earhart 
An interview with Bessie Coleman 


Business Analysts: Your stories to cover include: 
Henry Ford’s Assembly Line 
NBC: National Broadcasting Company 
CBS: Columbia Broadcasting System 

Entertainment Reporters: Your stories to cover include: 
The Jazz Singer, a movie review 
An interview with Mary Pickford or Charlie Chaplin 
The Harlem Renaissance 
A review of Langston Hughes’ poetry or a short story bya Harlem Renaissance Writer 
An interview with Louis Armstrong 
An interview with Duke Ellington 
A review of Emperor Jones, starring Paul Robeson 
The Carter Family: First Family of Country Music 


Sports Reporters: Your stories to cover include: 
An interview with Babe Ruth 
Jack Dempsey’s boxing match with Gene Tunney 
An interview with Bobby Jones (may also be a biographical sketch) 
An interview with Red Grange (may also be a biographical sketch) 
The Black Sox Trial 



Advertising Department: Create an extended advertisement for: 
The book A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway 
The book The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald 
An advertisement for the Amos and Andy Radio Show 
The Cotton Club 
The Model-T 
Sears, Roebuck, and Co. Catalog 



STEP TWO: Research 
Now, it’s time to get started on your research! Below are links that you may use to help write your stories.




Sacco and Vanzetti 
Sacco-Vanzetti Case 
The Sacco-Vanzetti Controversy 
The F.B.I.: Sacco-Vanzetti 
Overview of the Case (with references) 
Report of the Lowell Committee  


The Eighteenth Amendment 
The Eighteenth Amendment 
Temperance and Prohibition 
The Volstead Act and Related Prohibition Doc.’s 

The Scopes Trial 
The Scopes Monkey Trial 
Tennessee v. John Scopes 
Scopes Monkey Trial –(another site) 
American Experience: Monkey Trial 
CourtTV On-line: Monkey Trial

The Teapot Dome Scandal 
Teapot Dome Scandal 
Senate Investigates the Teapot Dome 
History Central.com 

The Saint Valentine’s Day Massacre 
Haunted Chicago 
The St. Valentine’s Day Massacre (an essay) 
The St. Valentine’s Day Massacre (an article) 
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) 

The 19th Amendment: Women’s Suffrage 
The 19th Amendment 
Women’s Fight For the Vote 
Articles from the New York Times 
Susan B. Anthony Center (with links) 
The U.S. Senate 

The Ku Klux Klan 
A Hundred Years of Terror 
Digital History 
Encyclopedia.com 
History Central.com 
Lynchings in America 
American Experience: Scottsboro 

Charles Lindbergh 
Charles Augustus Lindbergh Home Page 
The American Experience: Lindbergh 
Lucky Lindy Links 
CourtTV: The Lindbergh Kidnapping 
Charles A. Lindbergh Historic Site 
Amelia Earhart 
The Official Amelia Earhart Site 
Amelia Earhart Birthplace Museum 
America’s Library 
George Palmer Putnam Collection of A.E. Papers 
U.S. Centennial of Flight Commission 

Bessie Coleman 
Bessie Coleman Site 
The American Experience 
U.S. Centennial of Flight Commission 
Women in Aviation Resource Center 
Handbook of Texas Online 

Henry Ford and the Assembly Line 
The Life of Henry Ford 
People and Discoveries 
Ford Motor Company 
Quotations Page 
Henry Ford Heritage Association 

NBC: National Broadcasting Company and CBS: Columbia Broadcasting System 
NBC.com 
CBS.com 
CBS Network History 
Max Jordan – NBC’s Forgotten Pioneer 
Library of Congress: Recorded Sound Reference Center 
Broadcast History Timeline 
OldRadio.com 
Broadcasting History Resources 

The Jazz Singer 
Filmsite.org 
Plot Summary/Synopsis 
The Jazz Singer 
Rottentomatoes.com 
Al Jolson – The Jazz Singer 

Mary Pickford 
The Mary Pickford Foundation 
Mary Pickford Site 
The American Experience 
Mary Pickford Theater 
Mary Pickford Quotes 

Charlie Chaplin 
CharlieChaplin.com 
The Time 100 
PBS: American Masters 
Charlie Chaplin Archive 
Charlie Chaplin Museum 

The Harlem Renaissance 
Harlem Renaissance 
Harlem Renaissance Bibliography 
Langston Hughes 
Library of Congress: Langston Hughes 
America’s Library 
PBS: Langston Hughes 
Langston Hughes Criticism 
Louis Armstrong 
Redhotjazz.com 
Satchmo.net 
Louis Armstrong: A Cultural Legacy 
Time 100 
LouisArmstrong.net 
Duke Ellington 
Duke Ellington: The Official Website 
Redhotjazz.com 
Duke Ellington: 100 Years 
Duke Ellington’s Washington 
PBS: JAZZ 
Emperor Jones and Paul Robeson 
Green Cine 
American Masters 
Paul Robeson Biography 
The Emperor Jones (oneill.com) 
Emperor Jones: Summary and Essays 
The Carter Family 
The Carter Family Memorial Music Center 
SouthernMusic.net 
The Carter Family Fold 
Country Music Hall of Fame 
The American Experience: Will the Circle Be Unbroken? 
Songs of the Carter Family 
Babe Ruth 
BabeRuth.com 
National Baseball Hall of Fame 
Babe Ruth Museum 
Babe Ruth Quotes 
Babe Ruth Statistics 

Jack Dempsey 
The Official Site 
Jack Dempsey Museum 
ESPN Classic 
Jack Dempsey Quotes 
The Authentic History Center 
Bobby Jones 
BobbyJones.com 
ESPN Classic 
Harvard Magazine.com 
Bobby Jones Quotes 
Bobby Jones: Stroke of Genius 

Red Grange 
College Football News 
White House Kids 
Pro-Football Hall of Fame 
Red Grange Quotes 
College Football Hall of Fame 

The Black Sox Trial 
Chicago Black Sox 
The Chicago Black Sox Trial 
1919 Black Sox Scandal 
JURIST – Legal Intelligence 
The Sporting News 

Ernest Hemingway and A Farewell to Arms 
Summary and Commentary 
Summaries and Essays 
ErnestHemingway.com 
Timeless Hemingway 
Ernest Hemingway Foundation 
The Ernest Hemingway Home and Museum 
F. Scott Fitzgerald and The Great Gatsby 
The Great Gatsby Website 
Time Magazine’s All-Time 100 Novels 
F. Scott Fitzgerald Centenary Home Page 
F. Scott Fitzgerald Society Home Page 
F. Scott Fitzgerald Biography 
Quotes 
Amos and Andy 
The Originial Amos n’ Andy Web Page 
Radio Lovers 
Radio Hall of Fame 
Meet Amos n’ Andy 
Old Time Radio Days 

The Cotton Club 
The Cotton Club, New York 
Jass.com: Cotton Club Revues 
PBS: JAZZ 
The Cotton Club (Info. on the movie) 

The Model T 
Showroom of Automotive History 
Time 100: Henry Ford 
Model T Ford Automotive Heritage Complex 
Muscle Car Club 
History of the Ford Motor Company 
Sears and Roebuck 
Sears Homepage 
Sears Intro 
Sears Archives Homepage 
Houghton Mifflin 

STEP THREE: Write! 
The interviews have been conducted, and the research has been gathered. Now it is time to write your first draft. Use Microsoft Word for all articles. You must have the following format for your article: 
· 12 Point Georgia font. 
· 1 inch margins. 
· Pictures. 
· Columns. 
· Your title and byline (only) for a heading 
Your first step is to write the first drafts. In class, we will conduct a peer-editing session and you may also meet with your editor-in-chief if you wish. Check with the editor-in-chief for the deadline date. You will receive a list of “editing points” in class. 
Next you will write a revised rough draft. You should meet with a different peer editor to read over it. Use the same list of “editing points” that you used when editing your first rough draft. Check with the editor-in-chief for the deadline date. 
Now, it’s time for the final deadline! Your editor-in-chief will let you know when your article is due. Everyone needs to get articles into one person so a magazine can be made.
NOTE: Your articles should include at least one relevant photograph that will catch your readers’ attention. 

STEP FOUR: Publishing 
One person in the group needs to be responsible for taking all the articles written and putting it into a creative, published magazine. 

Evaluation

Evaluation 

Each article will be graded using the following rubric and checklist.

Writing Rubric

Writing
Component
5:
Excellent!
4:
Very Good
3:
Average
2:
Poor
0:
No article submitted
Multiplier Total
Historical
Accuracy
All information presented is historically accurate. There is no more than one minor historical error. There is no more than onecrucial
historical error.
There is no evidence of comprehension of the topic. No article submitted. X 5 (25 pts. possible)
Thoroughness
of
Content
Specific, illustrative content demonstrates the development of sophisticated ideas. Sufficiently developed content with adequate elaboration. Limited content with inadequate elaboration and explanation. Superficial and/or
Minimal content.
No article submitted. X3 (15 pts. possible)
Focus Sharp, distinct controlling point made about a single topic with evident awareness of the task. Apparent point made about a single topic with sufficient awareness of task. No apparent point but evidence of a specific topic. Minimal evidence of a topic. No article submitted. X3 (15 pts. possible)
Organization Sophisticated arrangement of content with evident and/or subtle transitions. Functional arrangement of content that sustains a logical order with some evidence of transitions. Confused or inconsistent arrangement of content with or without attempts at transition. Minimal control of content arrangement. No article submitted. X3 (15 pts. possible)
Grammar,
Mechanical
Conventions, and
Style
Evident control of grammar, mechanics, spelling, usage and sentence formation as well as precise, illustrative use of sentences and words. Sufficient control of grammar, mechanics, usage and sentence formation as well as a generic use and variety of sentences and
words.
Limited control of grammar, mechanics, spelling, usage, and sentence formation as well as limited word choice and control of sentence structure. Minimal control of grammar, mechanics, spelling, usage and sentence formation as well as poor word choice and control of sentence structure. No article submitted. X2 (10 pts. possible)

Format Checklist

Does the article have... Yes  No Points Awarded 
1 inch margins on all sides?
5 points 0 points
3 column format?
5 points 0 points
pictures/graphics?
5 points 0 points
12 point Georgia font?
5 points 0 points
Total:



Grand Total:

___/100

Conclusion

It’s off to the presses!Congratulations on meeting the deadline for this special issue of the NDP Press. With the magazine turned in and the articles written, I hope you learned something about the decade we call the Roaring 20s.