front 1 When he became attorney general, Robert Kennedy sought to refocus the
attention of the FBI on | back 1 A |
front 2 When he took office in 1961, President Kennedy chose to try to
stimulate the sluggish economy through | back 2 C |
front 3 Kennedy was often cautious and frustrated in advancing social reform
and civil rights legislation because | back 3 D |
front 4 President Kennedy's most bitter confrontation with big business
occurred when he | back 4 D |
front 5 The essential purpose of President Kennedy's promise to land a man on
the moon by the end of the 1960s was to | back 5 A |
front 6 The 1962 Trade Expansion Act | back 6 E |
front 7 John F. Kennedy's strategy of flexible response | back 7 C |
front 8 American military forces entered Vietnam in order to | back 8 C |
front 9 The Alliance for Progress, which intended to improve economic growth
and democratic reforms in Latin America, was | back 9 C |
front 10 The Bay of Pigs invasion failed when | back 10 B |
front 11 When the Soviet Union attempted to install nuclear weapons in Cuba,
President Kennedy ordered | back 11 E |
front 12 The Cuban missile crisis resulted in all of the following
except | back 12 A |
front 13 In a speech at American University in 1963, President Kennedy
recommended the adoption of a policy toward the Soviet Union based
on | back 13 C |
front 14 At first, John F. Kennedy moved very slowly in the area of racial
justice because he | back 14 B |
front 15 The Freedom Riders | back 15 B |
front 16 President John Kennedy and Attorney General Robert Kennedy began to
join hands with the civil rights movement when they | back 16 A |
front 17 President Kennedy ordered hundreds of federal marshals and thousands
of federal troops to force the racial integration of | back 17 E |
front 18 American and world public opinion turned strongly in favor of the
civil rights movement when | back 18 D |
front 19 The 1963 March on Washington led by Martin Luther King, Jr., provided
critical support for | back 19 D |
front 20 During the 1963 March on Washington, Martin Luther King, Jr.,
delivered his famous "I Have A Dream Speech," in which he
proclaimed | back 20 C |
front 21 The War on Poverty was inspired by | back 21 E |
front 22 With the passage of the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution | back 22 B |
front 23 Voters supported Lyndon Johnson in the 1964 presidential election
because of their | back 23 E |
front 24 Lyndon Johnson gained strong support for federal aid to education
by | back 24 C |
front 25 All of the following programs were created by Lyndon Johnson's
administration except | back 25 C |
front 26 In the final analysis, Lyndon Johnson's Great Society
programs | back 26 D |
front 27 The landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964 accomplished all of the
following except | back 27 E |
front 28 As a result of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 | back 28 E |
front 29 The common use of poll taxes to inhibit black voters in the South was
outlawed by the | back 29 C |
front 30 After the passage of the Civil Rights Act in 1964, the chief goal of
the black civil rights movement in the South became to | back 30 A |
front 31 As a result of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 | back 31 D |
front 32 The Watts riot in 1965 symbolized | back 32 C |
front 33 The militant African American leader who most directly challenged
Martin Luther King, Jr.'s goal of peaceful integration was | back 33 B |
front 34 Opponents of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act calculated
that | back 34 B |
front 35 Besides eliminating segregation and racial discrimination in public
facilities and employment, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
included a provision that | back 35 B |
front 36 President Johnson called his package of domestic reform proposals
the | back 36 E |
front 37 President Johnson proved to be much more successful than President
Kennedy at | back 37 A |
front 38 Before he became vice president and then president of the United
States, Lyndon Johnson had exercised great power as | back 38 B |
front 39 President Kennedy's alleged assassin was | back 39 B |
front 40 At the time of his death, President John Kennedy's civil rights
bill | back 40 C |
front 41 Aerial bombardment in Vietnam | back 41 B |
front 42 The Latin American nation where Lyndon Johnson sent 25,000 American
troops to counteract alleged communist influence was | back 42 C |
front 43 By 1972, public schools in the South were | back 43 A |
front 44 Some advocates of Black Power made the movement the basis for | back 44 A |
front 45 By the late 1960s, Black Power advocates in the North focused their
attention primarily on | back 45 E |
front 46 Former vice president Richard Nixon essentially won the 1968
presidential election by | back 46 E |
front 47 Both major-party presidential candidates in 1968 agreed that the
United States should | back 47 E |
front 48 The spoiler third-party candidate for president in 1968 was | back 48 D |
front 49 The 1968 Democratic party convention witnessed | back 49 B |
front 50 The attempt to nominate an antiwar Democratic candidate for president
in 1968 suffered a crippling blow when | back 50 B |
front 51 The political challenge to President Johnson's Vietnam policies
gained great momentum when | back 51 E |
front 52 During the Vietnam War, President Lyndon Johnson ordered the CIA, in
clear violation of its charter, to | back 52 B |
front 53 The most serious blow to Lyndon Johnson's Vietnam policy | back 53 C |
front 54 The focal point of congressional opposition to Lyndon Johnson's
Vietnam War policy was | back 54 E |
front 55 The 1967 Six-Day War intensified the Arab-Israeli conflict by
bringing into constant, direct conflict | back 55 E |
front 56 The site of the first major militant protest on behalf of gay
liberation in 1969 was | back 56 E |
front 57 The three P's that largely explain the cultural upheavals of the
1960s are | back 57 C |
front 58 The skepticism about authority that emerged in the United States
during the 1960s | back 58 D |
front 59 In the worldwide youthful protests of 1968, the movement in ____
succeeded in toppling the government, while the movement in ____ ended
in harsh repression and failure. | back 59 D |