front 1 Many Americans feared that the end of World War II would bring | back 1 a return of the Great Depression. |
front 2 The Taft-Hartley Act delivered a major blow to labor by | back 2 outlawing closed (all-union) shops. |
front 3 The passage of the Servicemen's Readjustment Act (GI Bill of Rights) was partly motivated by | back 3 fear that the labor markets could not absorb millions of discharged veterans. |
front 4 One striking consequence of the postwar economic boom was | back 4 the vast expansion of the home-owning middle class. |
front 5 Since 1945, population in the United States has grown most rapidly in the | back 5 Sunbelt |
front 6 The refusal of the Federal Housing Authority to grant home loans to black Americans contributed to | back 6 driving many blacks into public housing. |
front 7 Children of the baby boom | back 7 comprised a lucrative market for prepared baby food and other infant products. None of these grew into teenagers who spend $20 billion a year on clothes and music. became the foundation of the youth movements of the 1960s and 1970s. |
front 8 In early 1945, the United States was extremely eager to secure the Soviet Union's participation in the projected invasion of Japan because | back 8 American casualties were expected to be high if only Americans were involved. |
front 9 The crucial origins of the Cold War lay in a fundamental disagreement between the United States and Soviet Union over postwar arrangements in | back 9 Eastern Europe. |
front 10 Which of the following was not among the early successes of the United Nations? | back 10 Stopping the spread of atomic weapons |
front 11 When the Soviet Union denied the United States, Britain, and France access to Berlin in 1948, President Truman responded by | back 11 organizing a gigantic airlift of supplies to Berlin. |
front 12 The fundamental idea of the containment doctrine, embraced by President Truman, was | back 12 Soviet expansion should be blocked by firm but not aggressive military and diplomatic strength. |
front 13 Under the Truman Doctrine, the United States pledged to | back 13 support those who were resisting subjugation by communists. |
front 14 President Truman's Marshall Plan called for | back 14 substantial financial assistance to rebuild Western Europe. |
front 15 The United States' participation in NATO | back 15 marked a dramatic departure from traditional American isolationism. |
front 16 Jiang Jieshi (Chiang Kai-shek ) and the Nationalist government lost the Chinese civil war to the Communist and Mao Ze-dong mainly because | back 16 Jiang lost the support and the confidence of the Chinese people. |
front 17 Republicans used the communist victory in the Chinese civil war to claim that | back 17 pro-Communist elements in the Truman administration had prevented Chiang Kai-shek from winning. |
front 18 In an effort to detect communists within the federal government, President Harry Truman established the | back 18 Loyalty Review Board. |
front 19 President Harry Truman relieved General Douglas MacArthur from command of United Nations troops in Korea when | back 19 MacArthur began to openly criticize Truman's orders on military policy. |
front 20 By the end of the 1948 presidential campaign, almost everyone expected Governor Thomas Dewey to win because | back 20 President Truman seemed unpopular and the Democrats had split three ways. |
front 21 Which of the following was not true of the changing nature of work in the 1950's? | back 21 There were fewer jobs in the military-related aerospace industry. |
front 22 After World War II ended, most American women | back 22 cared for their families and did not work outside the home. |
front 23 The impact of mass media on religion was reflected in the rise of religious televangelists like | back 23 Billy Graham and Oral Roberts |
front 24 Which of these were NOT among the aspects of 1950's popular culture that conservatives found troubling? | back 24 Novels such as The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit |
front 25 In an effort to overturn Jim Crow laws and the segregated system that they had created, African Americans used all of the following methods except | back 25 appeals to foreign governments to pressure the United States to establish racial justice. |
front 26 In the epochal 1954 decision in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, the Supreme Court | back 26 declared that the concept of "separate but equal" facilities for blacks and whites was unconstitutional. |
front 27 On the subject of racial justice, President Eisenhower | back 27 had advised against integrating the armed forces. |
front 28 The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) was an outgrowth of the | back 28 sit-in movement launched by young southern blacks. |
front 29 The Eisenhower-promoted public works project that was far larger and more expensive than anything in Roosevelt's New Deal was the | back 29 interstate highway system. |
front 30 As the French fortress of Dien Bien Phu was about to fall to Ho Chi Minh's communist forces in 1954, President Eisenhower | back 30 refused to permit any American military involvement. |
front 31 The factor that may have tipped the electoral scales for John F. Kennedy in the presidential election of 1960 was | back 31 his televised debates with Richard M. Nixon. |
front 32 The Beat Generation can be described in all the following ways except | back 32 in founding their own movement, the hippies later rejected many of the Beat notions. |
front 33 Two postwar American fiction writers, who explored the problems and anxieties of affluence, were | back 33 John Updike and John Cheever |
front 34 In response to the launching of Sputnik by the Soviet Union in 1957 | back 34 the federal government began spending billions of dollars to improve American science and mathematics education. |
front 35 The 1957 Eisenhower Doctrine empowered the president to extend economic and military aid to nations of __________ that wanted help help to resist communist aggression. | back 35 the Middle East |
front 36 The Suez crisis marked the last time in history that the United States could | back 36 use its oil weapon to make foreign policy demands. |
front 37 During the 1950s, the Central Intelligence Agency engineered pro-American political coups in both | back 37 Iran and Guatemala |
front 38 In 1956, the United States condemned ___________ as the aggressors in the Suez Canal crisis. | back 38 Britain and France |
front 39 In 1956, when Hungary revolted against continued domination by the Soviet Union, the United States under Dwight Eisenhower | back 39 did nothing to help defeat the communists. |
front 40 During his presidency, Dwight Eisenhower accepted the principle and extended the benefits of | back 40 the Social Security system. |
front 41 Before he became vice president and then president of the United States, Lyndon Johnson had exercised great power as | back 41 Majority Leader of the U.S. Senate. |
front 42 President Johnson proved to be much more successful than President Kennedy at | back 42 getting his legislation passed by Congress. |
front 43 President Johnson called his package of domestic reform proposals the | back 43 Great Society. |
front 44 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 44 prohibited sexual as well as racial discrimination. |
front 45 The War on Poverty was inspired by | back 45 Michael Harrington's book "The Other America". the sickness and dire conditions President Johnson witnessed in the mining regions of Appalachia. increasing public faith that an affluent nation such as the United States should be able to end poverty. |
front 46 With the passage of the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution | back 46 Congress handed the president a blank check to use further force in Vietnam. |
front 47 Voters supported Lyndon Johnson in the 1964 presidential election because of their | back 47 loyalty to the Kennedy legacy. trust in Johnson's Vietnam policy. fear of the Republican nominee, Barry Goldwater. faith in the Great Society promises. |
front 48 Lyndon Johnson gained strong support for federal aid to education by | back 48 sidestepping the controversy over parochial schools by channeling aid directly to students. |
front 49 All of the following programs were created by Lyndon Johnson's administration except | back 49 the Peace Corps. |
front 50 In the final analysis, Lyndon Johnson's Great Society programs | back 50 won some noteworthy battles in education and healthcare. |
front 51 The landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964 accomplished all of the following except | back 51 requiring affirmative action against discrimination. |
front 52 As a result of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 | back 52 sources of immigration shifted to Latin America and Asia. |
front 53 The common use of poll taxers to inhibit black voters in the South was outlawed by the | back 53 Twenty-Fourth Amendment. |
front 54 The militant African American leader who most directly challenged Martin Luther King, Jr.'s goal of peaceful integration was | back 54 Malcom X |
front 55 The 1967 Six-Day War intensified the Arab-Israeli conflict by bringing into constant, direct conflict | back 55 Israelis and Palestinians. |
front 56 The most serious blow to Lyndon Johnson's Vietnam policy | back 56 was the Tet Offensive of 1968. |
front 57 The attempt to nominate an antiwar Democratic candidate for president in 1968 suffered a crippling blow when | back 57 Senator Robert Kennedy was assassinated after winning the California primary. |
front 58 The site of the first major militant protest on behalf of gay liberation in 1969 was | back 58 the Stonewall Inn (New York City). |
front 59 Former Vice President Richard Nixon essentially won the 1968 presidential election by | back 59 exploiting Democratic divisions and appealing to moderately conservative law and order sentiment. |
front 60 Richard Nixon's policy of detente | back 60 ushered in an era of relaxed tensions between the United States and the two leading Communist powers, China and the Soviet Union. |