Apush 36-37
Americans feared that the end of World War II would bring
a.
heightened racial tensions.
b. a return of the Great
Depression.
c. moral and religious decline.
d. continued
fascist resistance in Germany.
e. a new war with the Soviet Union.
B
The Taft-Hartley Act delivered a major blow to labor by
a.
outlawing strikes by public employees.
b. creating a serious
inflationary spiral.
c. banning labor's political action
committees.
d. outlawing "closed" (all-union)
shops.
e. forbidding union organizers to enter workplaces.
D
The passage of the Servicemen's Readjustment Act (GI Bill of Rights)
was partly motivated by
a. fear of postwar veterans'
protests.
b. memories of the mistreatment of the veterans' Bonus
Army in the 1930s.
c. fear that the labor markets could not
absorb millions of discharged veterans.
d. a desire to expand the
social diversity of American colleges and universities.
e. the
need of American business for a more highly educated workforce.
C
The Taft-Hartley Act of 1947 was passed to check the growing power
of
a. the presidency.
b. blacks.
c. labor
unions.
d. the federal bureaucracy.
e. leftists and communists.
C
The growth of organized labor in the post-WWII era was slowed by all
of the following except
a. the Taft-Hartley Act.
b. the
rapidly growing number of service-sector workers.
c. the failure
of Operation Dixie.
d. the reduced number of women in the work
force.
e. the growing number of part-time workers.
D
In an effort to forestall an economic downturn, the Truman
administration did all of the following except
a. create the
President's Council of Economic Advisers.
b. sell war factories
and other government installations to private businesses at very low
prices.
c. pass the Employment Act, which made it government
policy to promote maximum employment, production, and purchasing
power.
d. pass the Servicemen's Readjustment Act, known as the GI
Bill of Rights.
e. continue wartime wage and price controls.
E
The post-World War II prosperity in the United States was most
beneficial to
a. African Americans.
b. labor unions.
c.
women.
d. Hispanics.
e. farmers.
C
One striking consequence of the postwar economic boom was
a. the
continued exclusion of most women from the workplace.
b. the
growing split between urban and rural America.
c. the growing
concentration of wealth at the top of society.
d. a vast
expansion of the home owning middle class.
e. the growth of
blue-collar employment.
D
The long economic boom from World War II to the 1970s was fueled
primarily by
a. low energy costs.
b. reduced military
expenditures.
c. low inflation.
d. low taxes.
e. high
labor efficiency.
B
Much of the prosperity of the 1950s and 1960s rested on the
underpinnings of
a. foreign aid.
b. a rising stock
market.
c. foreign trade.
d. a thriving automobile
industry.
e. colossal military budgets.
E
One sign of the stress that the widespread post-World War II
geographic mobility placed on American families was the
a.
redistribution of income.
b. popularity of advice books on
child-rearing.
c. increasing reliance on television as a
"baby sitter."
d. increased number of long-distance
telephone calls.
e. dramatic rise in divorces.
B
The dramatically reduced number of American farms and farmers in the
postwar era was accompanied by
a. growing poverty in rural
America.
b. increasing shortages of American-grown food and
fiber.
c. radical protests by farmers and farm laborers.
d.
a romantic "back to the land" movement among city
dwellers.
e. spectacular gains in American agricultural
productivity and food growing.
E
Since 1945, population in the United States has grown most rapidly in
the
a. Northeast.
b. Midwest.
c. Sunbelt.
d.
Frostbelt.
e. Pacific Northwest.
C
Much of the Sunbelt's new prosperity was based on its
a.
tremendous influx of money from the federal government.
b. policy
of high state taxes.
c. regulated economic growth.
d.
cooperative effort rather than unbridled individualism.
e.
attention to environmental issues.
A
All of the following encouraged many Americans to move to the suburbs
except
a. development of fuel-efficient automobiles.
b.
home-loan guarantees from the Federal Housing Authority and the
Veterans' Administration.
c. government-built highways.
d.
tax deductions for interest payments on home mortgages.
e.
"white flight" from racial change.
A
Which of the following did not contribute to the rapid rise of
suburbia in post-WWII America?
a. the baby boom.
b.
government mortgage guarantees.
c. new highways.
d.
"white flight."
e. the environment crisis.
E
By 1960, the proportion of Americans who lived in areas classified as
metropolitan suburbs was approximately
a. three out of four
(75%).
b. one out of four (25%).
c. half (50%).
d. one
out of ten (1 0%).
e. four out of ten (40%).
B
The continued growth of the suburbs led to
a. increased school
integration.
b. better entertainment opportunities in the
cities.
c. an increase in urban poverty.
d. a decrease in
urban crime.
e. more efficient transportation.
C
Population distribution after World War II followed a pattern
of
a. movement into the Northeast and out of the South.
b.
mass migration of blacks from the West to the Midwest.
c.
movement from the Southwest to Appalachia.
d. movement out of the
cities and into small towns.
e. an urban-suburban segregation of
blacks and whites in major metropolitan areas.
E
The refusal of the Federal Housing Authority to grant home loans to
blacks contributed to
a. the growth of savings and loan
institutions exclusively for blacks.
b. driving many blacks into
public housing.
c. the development of exclusively black
suburbs.
d. a decline in black migration to the cities.
e.
all of the above.
E
The huge postwar "baby boom" reached its peak in
the
a. late 1940s
b. early 1950s
c. late 1950s
d.
mid-1960s
e. early 1970s
C
Before he was elected Vice President of the United States in
1944,Harry S Truman had served as all of the following except
a.
a haberdashery store owner.
b. secretary of the navy.
c. a
World War l artillery officer.
d. a Missouri judge.
e. a
United States Senator.
B
Harry Truman possessed all of the following personal characteristics
except
a. willingness to admit mistakes.
b. few
pretensions.
c. willingness to accept responsibility.
d.
honesty.
e. courage.
A
In early 1945, the United States was eager to have the Soviet Union
participate in the projected invasion of Japan because
a. the
communists would be so busy in Asia that they could commit no mischief
in Europe.
b. without Soviet help, the Japanese could not be
defeated.
c. Soviet help could reduce the number of American
casualties.
d. Roosevelt believed that Stalin could help to
control the communists in China.
e. the Soviets could help
control the Chinese communists.
C
The origins of the Cold War lay in a fundamental disagreement between
the United States and the Soviet Union over postwar arrangements
in
a. North Africa.
b. East Asia.
c. the Middle
East.
d. the Third World.
e. Eastern Europe.
E
The United States and the Soviet Union resembled one another in that
they
a. had long experience as great powers in Europe.
b.
accepted the idea of balance of power and spheres of
influence.
c. believed that control of the Middle East was
essential to maintaining their national security.
d. had been
largely isolated from world affairs and practiced an ideological
"missionary" foreign policy.
e. both believed that
Britain and France must be destroyed as major powers.
D
Unlike the failed League of Nations, the new United Nations
a.
denied the power of veto to any party in an international
dispute.
b. established no forum for the smaller nations besides
the great powers.
c. assumed that there would eventually be
conflict among the great powers.
d. was unable to achieve
approval by the United States Senate.
e. was established in a
spirit of cooperation before the war's actual end.
E
The earliest and most serious failure of the United Nations involved
its inability to
a. preserve peace in places such as
Iran.
b. command widespread support in the United States.
c.
control atomic energy, especially the manufacture of weapons.
d.
prevent the Soviet Union from exercising its veto power in the
Security Council.
e. establish a Jewish homeland in Israel.
C
The victorious World War II Allies quickly agreed that
a.
Germany should pay economically crippling war reparations.
b.
Nazism should be destroyed in Germany and high-ranking Nazis should be
tried and punished for war crimes.
c. occupied Germany should be
reunited as soon as possible.
d. Germany should receive massive
economic aid.
e. Germany should be divided into East and West Germany.
B
When the Soviet Union denied the United States, Britain, and France
access to Berlin in 1948, President Truman responded by
a. asking
the United Nations to intervene.
b. denying the Soviets access to
West Germany.
c. declaring that an "iron curtain" had
descended across Central Europe.
d. organizing a gigantic airlift
of supplies to Berlin.
e. sending an armed convoy to Berlin.
D
Soviet specialist George F. Kennan framed a coherent approach for
America in the Cold War by advising a policy of
a.
detente.
b. appeasement.
c. containment.
d. limited
war.
e. negotiation.
C
America's postwar containment policy was based on the assumption that
the Soviet Union was fundamentally
a. weak but dangerous.
b.
irrational but fearful.
c. revolutionary arid
warmongering.
d. ripe for a democratic revolution.
e.
expansionist but cautious.
E
The immediate crisis that prompted the announcement of the Truman
Doctrine was related to the threat of a communist takeover in
a.
Iran.
b. Greece and Turkey.
c. Communist China.
d.
Czechoslovakia.
e. Berlin.
B
Under the Truman Doctrine, the United States pledged to
a.
refrain from polarizing the world into pro-Soviet and pro-American
camps.
b. maintain prosperity in America after World War
II.
c. give very limited assistance to nations fighting
communism.
d. support those who were resisting subjugation by
communists.
e. work to liberate the "captive nations"
of Eastern Europe.
D
Match each postwar American program below with its primary
purpose.
A. Point Four 1. assist communist threatened Greece and
Turkey
B. NATO 2. promote economic recovery of Europe
C.
Truman Doctrine 3. aid underdeveloped nations of Latin America, Asia,
and Africa
D. Marshall Plan 4. resist Soviet military threat
a. A-4, B-1, C-3, D-2
b. A-2, B-3, C-1, D-4
c. A-1,
B-2, C-4, D-3
d. A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2
e. A-4, B-3, C-2, D-l
D
A leading American theologian who urged a vigorous American foreign
policy and a return to Christian foundations was
a. Paul
Tillich.
b. Billy Graham.
c. Benjamin Spock.
d. Pope
Pius XII.
e. Norman Vincent Peale.
A
President Truman's Marshall Plan called for
a. military supplies
for Britain and France.
b. substantial financial assistance to
rebuild Western Europe.
c. economic aid for Japan.
d.
foreign aid for Third World countries to resist communism.
e. an
alliance to contain the Soviet Union.
B
The Marshall Plan succeeded in reviving Europe's economy and
thwarting the large internal Communist parties threatening to take
over
a. Italy and France.
b. West Germany and East
Germany.
c. Britain and Ireland.
d. Spain and Italy.
e.
Greece and Turkey.
A
President Truman risked American access to Middle Eastern oil
supplies when he
a. sent U.S. military forces into
Lebanon.
b. refused to recognize the authoritarian Saudi Arabian
monarchy.
c. supported British control of the Suez Canal.
d.
tried to force the Soviet Union out of the Middle East.
e.
recognized the new Jewish state of Israel.
E
American membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization did all
of the following for the country except
a. strengthen the
containment of the Soviet Union.
b. help reintegrate Germany into
the European family.
c. reduce our defense expenditures, since we
would get help from other countries.
d. reassure Europeans that
the U.S. would not abandon them.
e. strike a major blow to
American isolationists.
C
The United States' participation in NATO
a. reaffirmed our
long-standing commitment to the defense of Europe.
b. marked a
dramatic departure from traditional American isolationism.
c.
reduced the need for increased military spending.
d. helped to
resolve the problem of Germany.
e. all of the above.
E
Postwar Japan
a. was, like Germany, divided into Allied
occupation zones.
b. was destabilized by a civil war between
nationalist and communist elements.
c. resisted the imposition of
American-style democracy.
d. was governed from the island of
Formosa (Taiwan) until 1949.
e. had its military leaders tried
for war crimes, as had occurred in Germany.
E
Which of the following was not true of the new Japanese government
installed by General Douglas MacArthur in 1946?
a. it joined an
American military alliance to prevent the spread of communism in East
Asia.
b. it pledged itself to providing for women's
equality.
c. it introduced a Western-style democratic
constitution.
d. it paved the way for a spectacular economic
recovery.
e. it renounced militarism.
A
Jiang Jieshi and the Nationalist government lost the Chinese civil
war to the communists and Mao Ze-dong mainly because
a. Jiang
lost the support and confidence of the Chinese people.
b. the
United States failed to give Jiang enough aid.
c. Mao received
much assistance from the Soviet Union.
d. communists within the
Truman administration undermined Jiang's efforts.
e. the
communists were closer to traditional Chinese culture.
A
In an effort to detect communists within the federal government,
President Harry Truman established the
a. Committee on
Un-American Activities.
b. Central Intelligence Agency.
c.
Smith Act.
d. McCarran Internal Security Act.
e. Loyalty
Review Board.
E
In 1948, many southern Democrats split from their party to support
Governor J. Strom Thurmond because
a. China had fallen to the
communists.
b. they opposed American membership in the United
Nations.
c. President Truman took a strong stand in favor of
civil rights.
d. they found the Republican candidate, Thomas E.
Dewey, more sympathetic to their conservative ideology.
e. Truman
appointed an ambassador to the Catholic Vatican City
C
Match each 1948 presidential candidate below with his political
party.
A. J. Strom Thurmond 1. Progressive
B. Henry Wallace
2. Democratic
C. Harry S Truman 3. States' Rights
D. Thomas
E. Dewey 4. Republican
a. A- 1, B-3, C-2, D-4
b. A-4, B-2, C-1, D-3
c. A-3,
B-1, C-2, D-4
d. A- 1, B-4, C-3, D-2
e. A-2, B-3, C-4, D-1
C
President Truman's domestic legislative plan was dubbed the
a.
Square Deal.
b. New Deal.
c. Fair Deal.
d.
Redeal.
e. New Frontier.
C
President Truman's action upon hearing of the invasion of South Korea
illustrated his commitment to a foreign policy of
a.
appeasement.
b. liberation.
c. détente.
d.
multilateralism.
e. containment.
E
NSC-68 called for
a. the invasion of North Korea by United
Nations troops.
b. a blockade of the China coast and bombing of
Manchuria.
c. a program of spying on the Soviet Union.
d.
the reorganization of the Defense Department.
e. a massive
increase in military spending.
E
The NSC-68 document reflected the American belief
a. in the
limitless capabilities of the American economy and society.
b.
that we needed help to fight the spread of communism.
c. that
huge sacrifices would be needed by Americans to fight the Cold
War.
d. in the futility of containment.
e. that military
spending would help the economy
A
President Harry Truman relieved General Douglas MacArthur from
command of United Nations troops in Korea when
a. MacArthur
continued to lose crucial battles.
b. MacArthur crossed the 38th
parallel and entered North Korea.
c. the Chinese entered the
Korean War after MacArthur said they would not.
d. MacArthur
began to take issue publicly with presidential policies.
e.
MacArthur began to mock Truman for being only a captain in the army.
D
The imperious and insubordinate commander in Korea who was fired by
President Truman was General
a. Dwight Eisenhower.
b. George
Patton.
c. "Bull" Halsey.
d. Matthew
Ridgeway.
e. Douglas MacArthur
E
Arrange the following events in chronological order: (A) Berlin
airlift, (B) Korean War, (C) fall of China.
a. A, C, B
b. B,
C, A
c. A, B, C
d. C, A, B
e. C, B, A
A
Arrange the following in chronological order of their appearance: (A)
Marshall Plan, (B) Truman Doctrine, (C) NATO.
a. A, C, B
b.
B, A, C
c. C, B, A
d. B, C, A
e. A, B, C
B
Which of the following was not true of the changing nature of work in
the 1950s?
a. science and technology drove economic
growth.
b. there were fewer jobs in the military-related
aerospace industry.
c. white collar workers were surpassing blue
collar workers in numbers.
d. labor unions reached a peak and
then began to decline.
e. job opportunities were opening to women
in the white collar work force.
B
Richard Nixon was selected as Dwight Eisenhower's vice-presidential
running mate in 1952 as a concession to the
a.
isolationists.
b. liberal Republicans.
c. hard-line
anticommunists.
d. moderate Republicans.
e. southern Republicans
C
During the 1952 presidential campaign, Republican candidate Dwight
Eisenhower declared that he would __________ to help to end the Korean
War.
a. use atomic weapons
b. blockade the China coast and
bomb Manchuria
c. open negotiations with Mao Zedong
d. order
United Nations troops to invade North Korea
e. personally go to Korea
E
In tems of politics, television did all of the following
except
a. threaten the traditional role of political
parties.
b. apply the standards of show business and
commercialism to political messages.
c. enable political parties
to continue their role of educating and mobilizing the
electorate.
d. allow lone-wolf politicians to address voters
directly.
e. encourage reliance on short slogans and sound bites.
C
Dwight Eisenhower's greatest asset as president was his
a. vast
military experience.
b. willingness to take a partisan
stand.
c. commitment to social justice.
d. willingness to
involve himself in rough campaigning.
e. enjoyment of the
affection and respect of the American people
E
Among anticommunists, Senator Joseph R. McCarthy was the
a. most
effective.
b. first Republican.
c. only true World War II
hero.
d. one who most damaged free speech and fair play.
e.
one who organized a national movement.
D
The record would seem to indicate that President Eisenhower=s
strongest commitment during his presidency was to
a. social
justice.
b. social harmony.
c. party loyalty.
d. racial
desegregation.
e. political reform.
B
In response to Senator Joseph McCarthy's anticommunist attacks,
President Eisenhower
a. publicly denounced him only after he
attacked General George Marshall.
b. quietly encouraged him to
continue his attacks on Democrats.
c. publicly opposed his
ruthless tactics but privately enjoyed his personal charm.
d.
allowed him to control personnel policy at the State
Department.
e. privately supported him but publicly kept his distance.
D
Senator Joseph McCarthy first rose to national prominence by
a.
revealing that Communist spies were passing atomic secrets to the
Soviet Union.
b. charging that there was extensive Communist
influence in Hollywood and the media.
c. asserting that General
George Marshall was part of a vast Communist conspiracy within
the
U.S. Army.
d. mobilizing Republicans to demand a
stronger anticommunist foreign policy in East Asia.
e. charging
that dozens of known Communists were working within the U.S. State Department.
E
As a result of Senator McCarthy=s crusade against communist
subversion in America,
a. the FBI was shown to have had several
spies working as communist agents.
b. the United States Army was
forced to give dishonorable discharges to more than one
hundred
officers.
c. the State Department lost a number of Asian
specialists who might have counseled a wiser
course in
Vietnam.
d. Eisenhower nearly lost the Republican presidential
nomination in 1956.
e. the U.S. achieved a stronger settlement in Korea.
C
Senator McCarthy's anticommunist crusade ended when he
a. began
to attack the personal integrity of his critics.
response to
Senator Joseph McCarthy's anticommunist attacks, President Eisenhower
b. alleged that there were communists in Hollywood.
c.
alleged that there were communists in the Foreign Service.
d.
alleged that many college professors were communists.
e. alleged
that there were communists in the army.
E
The new militancy and restlessness among many members of the African
American community after 1945 was especially generated by
a. he
growing moral criticism of segregation by white church
leaders.
b. the gap between American ideals and racial practices
revealed by World War II.
c. the appointment of Thurgood
Marshall, chief legal counsel of the NAACP, to the Supreme
Court.
d. Dwight Eisenhower's commitment to civil rights. e. the
agitation of A. Philip Randolph.
B
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
a. economic boycotts.
b. legal attacks on
underpinnings of segregation in the courts.
c. appeals to foreign
governments to pressure the United States to establish racial
justice.
d. mobilization of black churches on behalf of black
rights.
e. use of the nonviolent tactics of Mohandas Gandhi.
C
Which one of the following is least related to the other
three?
a. nonviolent direct action.
b. Martin Luther King,
Jr.
c. Rosa Parks
d. Montgomery bus boycott
e. Orval Faubus
E
The Supreme Court began to advance the cause of civil rights in the
1950s because
a. the Court was the only branch of government with
the Constitutional authority to do so.
b. the courts were
dominated by New Deal liberals.
c. President Eisenhower had
requested the Court=s assistance.
d. Congress and the presidency
had largely abdicated their responsibilities by keeping hands
off
the issue.
e. the Constitution clearly prohibited any segregation.
D
In the epochal 1954 decision in Brown v. Board of Education of
Topeka, the Supreme Court unconstitutional.
a. declared that the concept of separate but equal facilities
for blacks and whites was
b. upheld its earlier decision in
Plessy v. Ferguson.
c. rejected desegregation.
d. supported
the ADeclaration of Constitutional Principles@ issued by
Congress.
e. ordered immediate and total integration of all
American schools.
A
The 1954 Supreme Court case that ruled racially segregated school
systems Ainherently unequal was
a. Roe v. Wade.
b. Plessy v.
Ferguson.
c. Sweatt v. Painter.
d. Johnson v. Little Rock
School District.
e. Brown v. Board of Education.
E
On the subject of racial justice, President Eisenhower
a. had
demanded the integration of the armed forces as early as 1948.
b.
publicly endorsed the 1954 Supreme Court school desegregation
decision.
c. vetoed the Civil Rights Act of 1957.
d. had
advised against integrating the armed forces.
e. admired the
Christian philosophy of Martin Luther King.
D
President Dwight Eisenhower's attitude toward racial justice can best
be described as
a. not inclined toward promoting
integration.
b. very supportive of racial integration.
c.
endorsing the concept of using laws to compel people to change their
opinions and actions.
d. supporting racial justice over social
harmony.
e. strictly adhering to the philosophy of states= rights.
A
The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) was an outgrowth
of the
a. antiwar movement of the 1960s.
b. black power
movement of the 1960s.
c. ban-the-bomb movement of the
1950s.
d. Civil Rights Act of 1957.
e. A sit-in movement
launched by young southern blacks.
E
As president, Dwight Eisenhower supported
a. putting the brakes
on military spending.
b. the abolition of the Social Security
system.
c. the dismissal of his secretary of health, education,
and welfare for condemning free
distribution on the Salk polio
vaccine as Asocialized medicine.
d. the continuation of the
Tennessee Valley Authority.
e. a stronger voice for organized labor.
A
President Eisenhower defined the domestic philosophy of his
administration as
a. the Fair Deal.
b. the silent
majority.
c. dynamic conservatism.
the subject of racial
justice, President Eisenhower
d. two cars in every
garage.
e. compassionate conservatism.
C
Dwight Eisenhower's policies toward Native Americans included
a.
efforts at tribal preservation.
b. the establishment of tribes as
legal entities.
c. incentives for tribes to hold onto their
land.
d. a return to the assimilation goals of the Dawes
Severalty Act of 1887.
e. an emphasis on education and job
training for Indians.
D
The Eisenhower-promoted public works project that was far larger and
more expensive than anything in Roosevelt's New Deal was
a. the
interstate highway system
b. the Grand Coulee dam
project.
c. the St. Lawrence seaway.
d. the airport
construction program.
e. the public housing system.
A
During his presidency, Dwight Eisenhower accepted the principle and
extended the benefits of
a. federal health care programs.
b.
the Tennessee Valley Authority.
c. deficit spending.
d.
racial equality.
e. the Social Security system.
E
As a part of his New Look foreign policy, President
Eisenhower
a. sought an alliance with China.
b. refused to
talk with leaders of the Soviet Union.
c. called for open skies
over both the United States and the Soviet Union.
d. sent help to
the Hungarian freedom fighters.
e. allied with Israel against the
Arab states.
C
As the French fortress of Dienbienphu was about to fall to Ho Chi
Minhs communist forces in 1954, President Eisenhower
a. agreed to
send small military units to aid the French.
b. relied on the
advice of Vice President Nixon and Secretary of State Dulles.
c.
sought a compromise settlement at Geneva.
d. refused to permit
any American military involvement.
e. threatened nuclear attack
on the Vietnamese communists.
D
President Eisenhower's New Look foreign policy in the 1950s planned
for
a. the dismantling of the military-industrial
complex.
b. massive new military spending.
c. greater
reliance on air power and the deterrent power of nuclear weapons than
on the army
and navy.
d. a buildup of unconventional and
guerrilla-warfare forces.
e. the rapid deployment of the navy and
marines to trouble spots.
C
In 1956, when Hungary revolted against continued domination by the
Soviet Union, the United States under Dwight Eisenhower
a. sent
money to the rebels.
b. quickly recognized the new Hungarian
government.
c. refused to admit any Hungarian refugees.
d.
gave only outdated military equipment to the Hungarian freedom
fighters.
e. did nothing to help to defeat the communists.
E
The leader of the nationalist movement in Vietnam since World War
was
a. Mao Zedong (Mao Tse-tung).
b. Ngo Dinh Diem.
c.
Dienbienphu.
d. Ho Chi Minh.
e. Nguyen Cao Ky.
D
The 1955 Geneva Conference
a. unified the two Vietnams.
b.
made Ngo Dinh Diem president of Vietnam.
c. called for the two
Vietnams to hold national elections within two years.
d. created
the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization.
e. established a
permanent division of Vietnam.
C
In response to a supposed Soviet threat to Middle Eastern oil, the
American Central Intelligence Agency in 1953
a. began seeking
alternative sources of energy.
b. staged a coup to overthrow the
Iranian government and install Shah Mohammed Reza
Pahlevi as
dictator.
c. engaged in sabotage against pro-Soviet governments
in the region.
d. developed close cooperation with Israeli
intelligence agencies.
e. gathered conclusive evidence of the
Soviets= plans to control Egypt.
B
In 1956 the United States condemned ___________ as the aggressors in
the Suez Canal crisis.
a. Egypt and Jordan
b. the Soviet
Union and Warsaw Pact members
c. Israel and Turkey
d.
Lebanon and Syria
e. Britain and France
E
During the 1950s, the Central Intelligence Agency engineered
pro-American political coups in both
a. Iran and
Guatemala.
b. Iraq and Nicaragua.
c. Lebanon and El
Salvador.
d. Libya and Costa Rica.
e. Egypt and Cuba.
A
The Suez crisis marked the last time in history that the United
States could
a. use the threat of nuclear war to win
concessions.
b. criticize Israel's foreign policy.
c.
condemn its allies for their actions in the Middle East.
d.
invoke the Eisenhower Doctrine.
e. use its oil weapon to make
foreign policy demands.
E
The 1957 Eisenhower Doctrine empowered the president to extend
economic and military aid to nations of __________ that wanted help to
resist communist aggression.
a. Southeast Asia
b.
Africa
c. Central and Eastern Europe
d. the Middle
East
e. Latin America
D
During his second term, President Eisenhower
a. no longer
trusted his vice president, Richard Nixon, to lend assistance.
b.
hoped that doing so would enable him to win a third term.
c. took
a more active personal role in governing.
d. believed that the
civil rights movement needed his personal involvement if it were
to
succeed.
e. recognized that only he had the experience to
deal with the Soviets.
C
In response to the launching of Sputnik by the Soviet Union in
1957,
a. Harry Truman condemned the Republicans for allowing a
scientific gap to occur.
b. the federal government began spending
millions of dollars to improve American science and
language
education.
c. the United States spent nearly a decade trying to
equal this achievement.
d. the Republican party took
responsibility for the fact that the United States had fallen
behind
the Soviets in this area of scientific discovery.
e.
scientists blamed Americas slowness on poor math and science education
in the schools.
B
Which of the following is least related to the other four?
a.
the launching of Sputnik
b. Landrum-Griffith Act
c. National
Defense Education Act
d. rocket fever
e. National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
B
The Paris summit conference scheduled for 1960 collapsed because of
the
a. Suez crisis.
b. Bay of Pigs.
c. Quemoy
episode.
response to the launching of Sputnik by the Soviet Union
in 1957,
d. launching of Sputnik.
e. U-2 incident.
E
By the end of the 1950s, Latin American anger toward the United
States had intensified because Washington had done all of the
following except
a. extend massive aid to Europe and little to
Latin America.
b. continue to intervene in Latin American
affairs.
c. support bloody dictators who claimed to be fighting
communism.
d. provide encouragement to Fidel Castro=s communist
government in Cuba.
e. the CIA-directed coup in Guatemala.
D
The factor that may well have tipped the electoral scales for John F.
Kennedy in the presidential election of 1960 was
a. his
age.
b. his religion.
c. his televised debates with Richard
M. Nixon.
d. President Eisenhower's heavy loss of popularity in
his last two years in office.
e. his family
C
When Dwight Eisenhower left the presidency in 1961,
a. it was
noted that his second term had produced little of value, since he was
a Alame duck.
b. Congress was firmly in the hands of the
Republicans.
c. he was unhappy with Vice President Nixon=s
unbending anticommunism.
d. he had clearly lost control of the
Democratic-dominated Congress.
e. he remained an extraordinarily
popular figure.
E
Two postwar American fiction writers who explored the problems and
anxieties of affluence were
a. John Updike and John
Cheever
b. Joseph Heller and Kurt Vonnegut.
c. Tennessee
Williams and Arthur Miller.
d. Ralph Ellison and James
Baldwin.
e. Eudora Welty and Flannery O'Connor
D
The title of Ralph Ellison's novel Invisible Man refers to
a. an
anticommunist agent who is forced to live underground.
b. a World
War II bomber pilot who is ignored upon his return home.
c. a
victim of nuclear testing who is dying of radiation.
d. a father
who is disrespected by his family.
e. an African American whose
supposed supporters are unable to see him as a real man.
E
Compared to World War I, the literary outpouring from World War II
can be best described as
a. much more realistic.
b. lower in
quality.
c. more simplistic in nature.
d. less
realistic.
e. more disillusioned.
D
Many of the better known American poets in the post-World War II
era
a. actually produced second-rate verse.
b. consisted
mainly of those who wrote before the war.
c. ended their lives
through suicide.
d. left the country to live in Paris.
e.
turned to nature for subject matter
C