front 1 The Nixon Doctrine proclaimed that the United States would | back 1 A |
front 2 Richard Nixon's policy of détente | back 2 E |
front 3 As a result of U.S. support for Israel in 1973 when it was attacked
by Egypt and Syria, | back 3 C |
front 4 The 1973 War Powers Act | back 4 C |
front 5 With the passage of the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution | back 5 B |
front 6 Voters supported Lyndon Johnson in the 1964 presidential election
because of their | back 6 E |
front 7 As a result of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 | back 7 E |
front 8 The common use of poll taxes to inhibit black voters in the South was
outlawed by the | back 8 C |
front 9 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 9 A |
front 10 As a result of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 | back 10 D |
front 11 The Watts riot in 1965 symbolized | back 11 C |
front 12 The militant African American leader who most directly challenged
Martin Luther King, Jr.'s goal of peaceful integration was | back 12 B |
front 13 By 1972, public schools in the South were | back 13 A |
front 14 The 1968 Democratic party convention witnessed | back 14 B |
front 15 The political challenge to President Johnson's Vietnam policies
gained great momentum when | back 15 E |
front 16 The focal point of congressional opposition to Lyndon Johnson's
Vietnam War policy was | back 16 E |
front 17 The 1967 Six-Day War intensified the Arab-Israeli conflict by
bringing into constant, direct conflict | back 17 E |
front 18 The site of the first major militant protest on behalf of gay
liberation in 1969 was | back 18 E |
front 19 The three P's that largely explain the cultural upheavals of the
1960s are | back 19 C |