Deck 32: Rebellion and Reaction: the 1960s and 1970s

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Question
César Chávez served in the army during WWII.
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Question
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) resolved to use its huge oil supplies as a political and economic weapon.
Question
President Ford vetoed more bills than any previous president.
Question
By 1960-1961, a number of students had become inspired to become social reform activists by:

A) the fear of getting drafted and sent to Vietnam
B) the example of the civil rights movement
C) the boredom and restrictions of campus life
D) musicians and protest singers with political agendas
E) the need to rebel against their conservative parents
Question
For pardoning Nixon, President Ford suffered a huge decline in his popularity.
Question
In 1964, the University of California at Berkeley:

A) was the site of a free-speech movement (FSM)
B) remained racially segregated
C) was shut down by antiwar protestors
D) became the birthplace of the counterculture
E) was the scene of a bloody confrontation between students and the National Guard
Question
The Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) in the early 1960s:

A) was dominated by the Weathermen
B) was a leading proponent of the sexual revolution
C) was the youth wing of the Democratic party
D) looked to the Socialists and Communists of the Depression era for inspiration
E) challenged established authority in favor of "participatory democracy"
Question
Unemployment jumped to 9 percent in 1975, and the annual rate of inflation had reached double digits.
Question
When North Vietnam invaded South Vietnam in 1975, U.S. troops were sent back into the region.
Question
Richard Nixon was impeached for Watergate-related offenses.
Question
President Nixon strongly supported court efforts to complete school desegregation.
Question
César Chávez became the first Hispanic mayor of a major city when he was elected in Los Angeles.
Question
In 1960, unemployment among Native Americans was ten times the national average, their life expectancy was 20 years lower, and their suicide rate was 100 times greater.
Question
In 1968, students managed to shut down Columbia University.
Question
In 1971, Nixon imposed wage and price restrictions in an effort to curb inflation.
Question
Within days of the U.S. withdrawal, the cease-fire in Vietnam collapsed.
Question
Nixon and his White House aides tried to cover up the Watergate break-in.
Question
Hispanic was originally a term for any immigrant in Chicago.
Question
The New Left came together in opposition to Richard Nixon's policies.
Question
Young men were able to avoid service in Vietnam by all of the following methods EXCEPT:

A) joining VISTA or the Peace Corps
B) fleeing to Canada or Sweden
C) obtaining conscientious objector status
D) going to prison
E) failing the physical examination on purpose
Question
By 2012, Hispanics:

A) still rarely voted
B) had become the country's largest minority
C) had attained equality with whites in average income levels
D) launched their own political party
E) no longer desired to speak Spanish
Question
The "silent majority":

A) quietly approved of the social and cultural changes of the 1960s
B) was anti-Vietnam War though not involved in open protest
C) was growing weaker by the early 1970s
D) were not fans of TV's Archie Bunker
E) supported politicians like Richard Nixon
Question
The energy crisis of the early 1970s increased support for:

A) consumption
B) travel and tourism
C) environmentalism
D) suburbanization
E) socialism
Question
The youths of the counterculture:

A) came primarily from poor or working-class families
B) congregated in the Watts district of Los Angeles
C) were the direct descendants of the Beats of the 1950s
D) believed that electoral politics would solve society's problems
E) preferred urban surroundings to a rural life in contact with nature
Question
All of the following are true of César Chávez EXCEPT that he:

A) used boycotts to pressure grape growers
B) was founder and leader of the United Farm Workers
C) as a young man, worked as a migrant laborer in farm fields
D) was committed to nonviolent tactics
E) failed to secure collective bargaining rights for farm workers
Question
In their role at the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago, the Yippies could best be described as:

A) political philosophers
B) terrorists
C) political activists
D) artists
E) pranksters
Question
At the Altamont concert in 1969:

A) Hells Angels killed a man in front of the stage
B) the Beatles gave their last performance
C) the violence of the hippies was fully displayed
D) a huge crowd enjoyed three days of "peace and music"
E) the Rolling Stones recorded live their most classic psychedelic album
Question
The hippie movement ultimately:

A) disappeared once the draft was ended
B) won over much of Middle America to its perspective
C) was limited to San Francisco
D) began to wane as counterculture had become counterproductive
E) got involved in civil rights activism and the war on poverty
Question
The term Hispanic referred to:

A) an increasing opposition of Latin Americans to the Vietnam War
B) Mexican American opposition to illegal immigration
C) efforts of Latin Americans to make Spanish the national language
D) growing political assertiveness among Mexican Americans
E) the New Left's major influence upon young Mexicans
Question
At Columbia University in 1968:

A) anti-war students disrupted a speech by President Johnson
B) the Yippies held their founding convention
C) students successfully fought for free tuition
D) a student strike shut down the campus
E) the presence of military recruiters sparked a riot
Question
Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique:

A) celebrated the cult of female domesticity
B) explained the unhappiness of so many middle-class women
C) told women how to better please their husbands
D) painted an ideal portrait of suburban living
E) argued that women should be paid high wages for housework
Question
The figure who most influenced Nixon's foreign policy was:

A) General Alexander Haig
B) Robert McNamara
C) Henry Kissinger
D) William Rogers
E) Bob Haldeman
Question
One major impetus behind the rise of a Native American rights movement was the:

A) effective work of the Bureau of Indian Affairs
B) interest of many Americans in Indian history
C) realization of Indians that their votes could swing elections in several states
D) fact that Indians were still not recognized as citizens
E) terrible levels of poverty that persisted in the Indian population
Question
Nixon's "southern strategy" involved winning southern support by:

A) capitalizing on their skepticism of federal social welfare programs
B) stepping up the military effort in Vietnam
C) expressing sympathy toward fundamentalist Christians
D) making southerners dominant in his cabinet
E) increasing federal support of the South's economy
Question
Indian activists ultimately discovered that their most effective tactic for bringing about change was:

A) voting
B) occupying places like Alcatraz and Wounded Knee
C) taking legal action to force the government to adhere to old treaties
D) opening casinos on their reservations
E) imitating the civil rights movement in organizing massive protest marches
Question
By 1971, the New Left:

A) was working within the system for moderate reform
B) remained committed to nonviolent movement
C) had split into factions and largely self-destructed
D) was stronger than ever due to Nixon's policies
E) was focusing on personal liberation rather than political change
Question
The feminist movement suffered a setback with the:

A) National Organization for Women's inability to agree on a political agenda
B) Supreme Court's refusal to recognize abortion rights
C) decreasing number of jobs for women
D) failure of the states to ratify the equal-rights amendment
E) refusal of Ivy League universities to admit women
Question
In its earliest years, the gay rights movement especially emphasized:

A) the importance of gays "coming out"
B) the need for more funding for AIDS research
C) the passage of hate-crimes legislation
D) the push to legalize gay marriage
E) getting recognition of gay contributions to American history
Question
In the early 1970s, angry protests began to erupt in cities outside the South over:

A) integration of swimming pools and public parks
B) interracial dating
C) racial profiling by police
D) busing
E) rising rates of crime in the inner cities
Question
The most important factor behind the sexual revolution of the 1960s was the:

A) Supreme Court's legalization of abortion
B) development of birth-control pills
C) free love philosophy of the hippie movement
D) increasing number of women in college
E) permissive messages and images in Hollywood films
Question
The Nixon Doctrine implied a foreign policy that was shaped more by:

A) the determination to defeat communism
B) a need to be selective in its commitments abroad
C) the effort to reshape the world in our own image
D) the needs of the domestic economy
E) the desires of our allies
Question
In April 1970, Nixon extended the war when he sent troops into:

A) Laos
B) China
C) Cambodia
D) Thailand
E) North Vietnam
Question
On October 26, 1972, only a week before the U.S. presidential election, Kissinger announced:

A) Nixon's resignation
B) a peace agreement for the Middle East
C) a new offensive against China
D) his resignation
E) "Peace is at hand"
Question
Nixon's trip to the Soviet Union resulted in:

A) the end of the cold war
B) U.S. wheat sales to the Soviets
C) Soviet withdrawal from Eastern Europe
D) intensification of the nuclear arms race
E) the end of the new relationship with China
Question
In 1971, in an effort to curb inflation, President Nixon:

A) asked American businesses to voluntarily reduce prices
B) imposed tough new limits on petroleum consumption
C) returned the country to the gold standard
D) drastically cut the federal budget
E) imposed a freeze on wages and prices
Question
To punish the United States for supporting Israel during the Yom Kippur War, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC):

A) expelled the United States from membership
B) flooded the American market with cheap petroleum to drive American oil producers out of business
C) threatened to cut off oil shipments to the United States
D) nationalized American oil companies in their countries
E) announced it would deal exclusively with the Soviet Union
Question
The Pentagon Papers:

A) revealed shocking waste in military spending
B) were successfully suppressed from publication by the government
C) put President Johnson's war policy in a more favorable light
D) were the actual diary entries of Defense Secretary Robert McNamara
E) revealed that the Johnson administration had deceived the public in regard to war policy
Question
The burglars arrested at the Watergate apartment complex:

A) were trying to obtain Republican campaign files
B) were spying for the Soviet Union
C) were common thieves hoping to steal valued items
D) had connections to the CIA and the Nixon campaign
E) had been sent there by the FBI
Question
Essential to breaking the Watergate case was the testimony before the Ervin committee of White House legal counsel:

A) Leon Jaworski
B) John Ehrlichman
C) Daniel Ellsberg
D) James McCord
E) John Dean
Question
The major motivation behind the Saturday Night Massacre was Nixon's desire to:

A) elevate his approval ratings
B) expose the corruption of the Democrats
C) avoid handing over the key White House tapes
D) publicly humiliate special prosecutor Archibald Cox
E) appoint a loyal attorney general
Question
The Vietnam settlement signed on January 27, 1973:

A) insured the survival of South Vietnam
B) brought lasting peace to Vietnam
C) was followed by massive bombings of North Vietnam a few months later
D) left 150,000 Communist troops in South Vietnam
E) got Nixon reelected
Question
Nixon's new relationship with China was made possible by:

A) the discovery of China's vast oil deposits
B) China's growing fear of the Soviet Union
C) Nixon's landslide reelection in 1972
D) the American public's more favorable attitude toward communism
E) the removal of Vietnam as a source of division between the United States and China
Question
Senator George McGovern of South Dakota:

A) was the democratic nominee for president in 1972
B) resigned from the Senate
C) ran for governor in South Dakota
D) was Nixon's secretary of defense
E) led U.S. troops in Vietnam
Question
Nixon's policy of "Vietnamization" involved:

A) increasing the number of young men being drafted
B) launching a U.S. invasion of North Vietnam
C) establishing diplomatic and trade relations with North Vietnam
D) gradually reducing the number of American troops in Vietnam
E) working toward the reunification of North and South Vietnam
Question
Economists coined the term stagflation in the early 1970s to describe:

A) a simultaneously stagnant economy with inflationary prices
B) continuing declines in stock prices
C) high oil prices along with declining profits for the petroleum industry
D) the return of economic conditions similar to the Depression
E) continuing economic growth along with a growing budgetary deficit
Question
Shocking events at Kent State University involved:

A) a fight between anti-war students and construction workers
B) the killing of four students by the National Guard
C) violence when police broke up a student strike
D) several deaths when students exploded a bomb in the ROTC building
E) student attacks upon conservative, pro-war professors
Question
In regard to Vietnam policy, Nixon:

A) insisted that he would pursue "peace with honor"
B) was indifferent to an eventual Communist takeover
C) was determined to end the American involvement quickly
D) still believed that the war could be won
E) refused to sit and negotiate with the enemy
Question
As the 1972 election approached, the biggest threat to Nixon's reelection seemed to be:

A) George Wallace's potential to drain away conservative votes from the Republicans
B) the massive popularity of Democratic nominee George McGovern
C) public disapproval of Nixon's efforts to ease tensions with the Chinese and the Russians
D) revelations concerning the Watergate break-in
E) the continuing appeal of 1960s-style social liberalism
Question
A sad legacy of Watergate was:

A) lasting damage to the image of the presidency
B) ongoing limits on press freedom
C) a renewal of divisive partisan politics
D) Congress's inability to pass needed legislation
E) the weakening of the CIA's domestic operations
Question
Gerald Ford suffered terrible political damage when he:

A) continued Nixon's economic policies
B) vetoed the War Powers Act
C) pardoned Nixon
D) sent Americans back into Vietnam
E) failed to achieve peace in the Middle East
Question
Trace how the Watergate crisis brought an end to the Nixon presidency.
Question
All of the following were consequences of the Vietnam War EXCEPT:

A) 58,000 Americans died
B) Saigon fell to the Communists and became Ho Chi Minh City
C) many young Americans questioned the value of military service
D) Americans were more determined than ever to spread democracy
E) deep divisions over foreign policy continued
Question
Describe the gains made by women and ethnic minorities in the 1960s and early 1970s. In each case, what accounted for the gains?
Question
Discuss the various aspects of President Nixon's Vietnam policy. How was Nixon's policy different from those of his predecessors?
Question
During his presidency, Gerald Ford achieved a record for:

A) tax increases
B) Supreme Court appointments
C) press conferences
D) vetoes
E) military interventions
Question
James Earl (Jimmy) Carter Jr. represented:

A) the new liberal wing of the Democratic party
B) the new moderate wing of the Democratic party
C) the new moderate wing of the Republican party
D) the new liberal wing of the Republican party
E) Alabama as its senator
Question
Discuss President Nixon's reasons for believing that a new multipolar world order was emerging to replace the conventional cold war. What actions did he take to shift his foreign policy in that direction?
Question
Match between columns
George Wallace
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
George Wallace
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
George Wallace
wrote Silent Spring
George Wallace
led United Farm Workers
George Wallace
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
George Wallace
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
George Wallace
lost the presidential election of 1976
George Wallace
founded NOW
George Wallace
was secretary of state in 1975
George Wallace
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
Betty Friedan
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
Betty Friedan
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
Betty Friedan
wrote Silent Spring
Betty Friedan
led United Farm Workers
Betty Friedan
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
Betty Friedan
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
Betty Friedan
lost the presidential election of 1976
Betty Friedan
founded NOW
Betty Friedan
was secretary of state in 1975
Betty Friedan
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
Mario Savio
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
Mario Savio
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
Mario Savio
wrote Silent Spring
Mario Savio
led United Farm Workers
Mario Savio
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
Mario Savio
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
Mario Savio
lost the presidential election of 1976
Mario Savio
founded NOW
Mario Savio
was secretary of state in 1975
Mario Savio
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
John Dean
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
John Dean
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
John Dean
wrote Silent Spring
John Dean
led United Farm Workers
John Dean
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
John Dean
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
John Dean
lost the presidential election of 1976
John Dean
founded NOW
John Dean
was secretary of state in 1975
John Dean
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
César Chávez
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
César Chávez
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
César Chávez
wrote Silent Spring
César Chávez
led United Farm Workers
César Chávez
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
César Chávez
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
César Chávez
lost the presidential election of 1976
César Chávez
founded NOW
César Chávez
was secretary of state in 1975
César Chávez
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
Gerald Ford
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
Gerald Ford
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
Gerald Ford
wrote Silent Spring
Gerald Ford
led United Farm Workers
Gerald Ford
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
Gerald Ford
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
Gerald Ford
lost the presidential election of 1976
Gerald Ford
founded NOW
Gerald Ford
was secretary of state in 1975
Gerald Ford
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
William Calley
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
William Calley
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
William Calley
wrote Silent Spring
William Calley
led United Farm Workers
William Calley
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
William Calley
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
William Calley
lost the presidential election of 1976
William Calley
founded NOW
William Calley
was secretary of state in 1975
William Calley
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
Henry Kissinger
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
Henry Kissinger
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
Henry Kissinger
wrote Silent Spring
Henry Kissinger
led United Farm Workers
Henry Kissinger
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
Henry Kissinger
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
Henry Kissinger
lost the presidential election of 1976
Henry Kissinger
founded NOW
Henry Kissinger
was secretary of state in 1975
Henry Kissinger
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
Tom Hayden
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
Tom Hayden
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
Tom Hayden
wrote Silent Spring
Tom Hayden
led United Farm Workers
Tom Hayden
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
Tom Hayden
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
Tom Hayden
lost the presidential election of 1976
Tom Hayden
founded NOW
Tom Hayden
was secretary of state in 1975
Tom Hayden
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
Rachel Carson
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
Rachel Carson
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
Rachel Carson
wrote Silent Spring
Rachel Carson
led United Farm Workers
Rachel Carson
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
Rachel Carson
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
Rachel Carson
lost the presidential election of 1976
Rachel Carson
founded NOW
Rachel Carson
was secretary of state in 1975
Rachel Carson
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
Question
Detail all aspects of the counterculture in the United States during the 1960s.
Question
Jimmy Carter's victory in the 1976 election was aided by all of the following EXCEPT:

A) his electoral strength in the South
B) his non-Washington background in the aftermath of Watergate
C) a huge voter turnout
D) his promise to be an honest president
E) Ford's less-than-impressive presidential record
Question
Describe the domestic policy of the Nixon administration.
Question
Within a year after taking control of the South, the Vietnamese Communists were at war with the:

A) Soviets
B) Cambodian Communists
C) Japanese
D) French
E) South Vietnam
Question
Detail the New Left movement in America during the 1960s. Who were the participants and what issues were at the core of their organization?
Question
Along with the black power movement, other marginalized groups asserted their causes in the 1960s. Detail both the "brown power" (Hispanic rights) and "red power" (Native American rights) movements.
Question
What economic problems did President Ford face? How did he try to solve these problems, and how successful was he?
Question
Discuss the election of 1972 and its implication for the future.
Question
Nixon's Watergate-related resignation came with the revelation that he had:

A) burned his tapes of White House conversations
B) lied to the Senate's Ervin committee
C) authorized the use of dirty tricks against Democratic campaigns
D) ordered a cover-up of the original Watergate break-in
E) ordered the IRS to harass his political enemies
Question
MATCHING
Match each description with the item below.
MATCHING Match each description with the item below.  <div style=padding-top: 35px>
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Deck 32: Rebellion and Reaction: the 1960s and 1970s
1
César Chávez served in the army during WWII.
False
2
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) resolved to use its huge oil supplies as a political and economic weapon.
True
3
President Ford vetoed more bills than any previous president.
True
4
By 1960-1961, a number of students had become inspired to become social reform activists by:

A) the fear of getting drafted and sent to Vietnam
B) the example of the civil rights movement
C) the boredom and restrictions of campus life
D) musicians and protest singers with political agendas
E) the need to rebel against their conservative parents
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k this deck
5
For pardoning Nixon, President Ford suffered a huge decline in his popularity.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
In 1964, the University of California at Berkeley:

A) was the site of a free-speech movement (FSM)
B) remained racially segregated
C) was shut down by antiwar protestors
D) became the birthplace of the counterculture
E) was the scene of a bloody confrontation between students and the National Guard
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) in the early 1960s:

A) was dominated by the Weathermen
B) was a leading proponent of the sexual revolution
C) was the youth wing of the Democratic party
D) looked to the Socialists and Communists of the Depression era for inspiration
E) challenged established authority in favor of "participatory democracy"
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
8
Unemployment jumped to 9 percent in 1975, and the annual rate of inflation had reached double digits.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
When North Vietnam invaded South Vietnam in 1975, U.S. troops were sent back into the region.
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k this deck
10
Richard Nixon was impeached for Watergate-related offenses.
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11
President Nixon strongly supported court efforts to complete school desegregation.
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12
César Chávez became the first Hispanic mayor of a major city when he was elected in Los Angeles.
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13
In 1960, unemployment among Native Americans was ten times the national average, their life expectancy was 20 years lower, and their suicide rate was 100 times greater.
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14
In 1968, students managed to shut down Columbia University.
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15
In 1971, Nixon imposed wage and price restrictions in an effort to curb inflation.
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16
Within days of the U.S. withdrawal, the cease-fire in Vietnam collapsed.
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17
Nixon and his White House aides tried to cover up the Watergate break-in.
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18
Hispanic was originally a term for any immigrant in Chicago.
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19
The New Left came together in opposition to Richard Nixon's policies.
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20
Young men were able to avoid service in Vietnam by all of the following methods EXCEPT:

A) joining VISTA or the Peace Corps
B) fleeing to Canada or Sweden
C) obtaining conscientious objector status
D) going to prison
E) failing the physical examination on purpose
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Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
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21
By 2012, Hispanics:

A) still rarely voted
B) had become the country's largest minority
C) had attained equality with whites in average income levels
D) launched their own political party
E) no longer desired to speak Spanish
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22
The "silent majority":

A) quietly approved of the social and cultural changes of the 1960s
B) was anti-Vietnam War though not involved in open protest
C) was growing weaker by the early 1970s
D) were not fans of TV's Archie Bunker
E) supported politicians like Richard Nixon
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23
The energy crisis of the early 1970s increased support for:

A) consumption
B) travel and tourism
C) environmentalism
D) suburbanization
E) socialism
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k this deck
24
The youths of the counterculture:

A) came primarily from poor or working-class families
B) congregated in the Watts district of Los Angeles
C) were the direct descendants of the Beats of the 1950s
D) believed that electoral politics would solve society's problems
E) preferred urban surroundings to a rural life in contact with nature
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
All of the following are true of César Chávez EXCEPT that he:

A) used boycotts to pressure grape growers
B) was founder and leader of the United Farm Workers
C) as a young man, worked as a migrant laborer in farm fields
D) was committed to nonviolent tactics
E) failed to secure collective bargaining rights for farm workers
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
In their role at the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago, the Yippies could best be described as:

A) political philosophers
B) terrorists
C) political activists
D) artists
E) pranksters
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
At the Altamont concert in 1969:

A) Hells Angels killed a man in front of the stage
B) the Beatles gave their last performance
C) the violence of the hippies was fully displayed
D) a huge crowd enjoyed three days of "peace and music"
E) the Rolling Stones recorded live their most classic psychedelic album
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
The hippie movement ultimately:

A) disappeared once the draft was ended
B) won over much of Middle America to its perspective
C) was limited to San Francisco
D) began to wane as counterculture had become counterproductive
E) got involved in civil rights activism and the war on poverty
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
The term Hispanic referred to:

A) an increasing opposition of Latin Americans to the Vietnam War
B) Mexican American opposition to illegal immigration
C) efforts of Latin Americans to make Spanish the national language
D) growing political assertiveness among Mexican Americans
E) the New Left's major influence upon young Mexicans
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
At Columbia University in 1968:

A) anti-war students disrupted a speech by President Johnson
B) the Yippies held their founding convention
C) students successfully fought for free tuition
D) a student strike shut down the campus
E) the presence of military recruiters sparked a riot
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31
Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique:

A) celebrated the cult of female domesticity
B) explained the unhappiness of so many middle-class women
C) told women how to better please their husbands
D) painted an ideal portrait of suburban living
E) argued that women should be paid high wages for housework
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32
The figure who most influenced Nixon's foreign policy was:

A) General Alexander Haig
B) Robert McNamara
C) Henry Kissinger
D) William Rogers
E) Bob Haldeman
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33
One major impetus behind the rise of a Native American rights movement was the:

A) effective work of the Bureau of Indian Affairs
B) interest of many Americans in Indian history
C) realization of Indians that their votes could swing elections in several states
D) fact that Indians were still not recognized as citizens
E) terrible levels of poverty that persisted in the Indian population
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34
Nixon's "southern strategy" involved winning southern support by:

A) capitalizing on their skepticism of federal social welfare programs
B) stepping up the military effort in Vietnam
C) expressing sympathy toward fundamentalist Christians
D) making southerners dominant in his cabinet
E) increasing federal support of the South's economy
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35
Indian activists ultimately discovered that their most effective tactic for bringing about change was:

A) voting
B) occupying places like Alcatraz and Wounded Knee
C) taking legal action to force the government to adhere to old treaties
D) opening casinos on their reservations
E) imitating the civil rights movement in organizing massive protest marches
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36
By 1971, the New Left:

A) was working within the system for moderate reform
B) remained committed to nonviolent movement
C) had split into factions and largely self-destructed
D) was stronger than ever due to Nixon's policies
E) was focusing on personal liberation rather than political change
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37
The feminist movement suffered a setback with the:

A) National Organization for Women's inability to agree on a political agenda
B) Supreme Court's refusal to recognize abortion rights
C) decreasing number of jobs for women
D) failure of the states to ratify the equal-rights amendment
E) refusal of Ivy League universities to admit women
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38
In its earliest years, the gay rights movement especially emphasized:

A) the importance of gays "coming out"
B) the need for more funding for AIDS research
C) the passage of hate-crimes legislation
D) the push to legalize gay marriage
E) getting recognition of gay contributions to American history
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39
In the early 1970s, angry protests began to erupt in cities outside the South over:

A) integration of swimming pools and public parks
B) interracial dating
C) racial profiling by police
D) busing
E) rising rates of crime in the inner cities
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40
The most important factor behind the sexual revolution of the 1960s was the:

A) Supreme Court's legalization of abortion
B) development of birth-control pills
C) free love philosophy of the hippie movement
D) increasing number of women in college
E) permissive messages and images in Hollywood films
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41
The Nixon Doctrine implied a foreign policy that was shaped more by:

A) the determination to defeat communism
B) a need to be selective in its commitments abroad
C) the effort to reshape the world in our own image
D) the needs of the domestic economy
E) the desires of our allies
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42
In April 1970, Nixon extended the war when he sent troops into:

A) Laos
B) China
C) Cambodia
D) Thailand
E) North Vietnam
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43
On October 26, 1972, only a week before the U.S. presidential election, Kissinger announced:

A) Nixon's resignation
B) a peace agreement for the Middle East
C) a new offensive against China
D) his resignation
E) "Peace is at hand"
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44
Nixon's trip to the Soviet Union resulted in:

A) the end of the cold war
B) U.S. wheat sales to the Soviets
C) Soviet withdrawal from Eastern Europe
D) intensification of the nuclear arms race
E) the end of the new relationship with China
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45
In 1971, in an effort to curb inflation, President Nixon:

A) asked American businesses to voluntarily reduce prices
B) imposed tough new limits on petroleum consumption
C) returned the country to the gold standard
D) drastically cut the federal budget
E) imposed a freeze on wages and prices
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46
To punish the United States for supporting Israel during the Yom Kippur War, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC):

A) expelled the United States from membership
B) flooded the American market with cheap petroleum to drive American oil producers out of business
C) threatened to cut off oil shipments to the United States
D) nationalized American oil companies in their countries
E) announced it would deal exclusively with the Soviet Union
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47
The Pentagon Papers:

A) revealed shocking waste in military spending
B) were successfully suppressed from publication by the government
C) put President Johnson's war policy in a more favorable light
D) were the actual diary entries of Defense Secretary Robert McNamara
E) revealed that the Johnson administration had deceived the public in regard to war policy
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48
The burglars arrested at the Watergate apartment complex:

A) were trying to obtain Republican campaign files
B) were spying for the Soviet Union
C) were common thieves hoping to steal valued items
D) had connections to the CIA and the Nixon campaign
E) had been sent there by the FBI
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49
Essential to breaking the Watergate case was the testimony before the Ervin committee of White House legal counsel:

A) Leon Jaworski
B) John Ehrlichman
C) Daniel Ellsberg
D) James McCord
E) John Dean
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50
The major motivation behind the Saturday Night Massacre was Nixon's desire to:

A) elevate his approval ratings
B) expose the corruption of the Democrats
C) avoid handing over the key White House tapes
D) publicly humiliate special prosecutor Archibald Cox
E) appoint a loyal attorney general
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51
The Vietnam settlement signed on January 27, 1973:

A) insured the survival of South Vietnam
B) brought lasting peace to Vietnam
C) was followed by massive bombings of North Vietnam a few months later
D) left 150,000 Communist troops in South Vietnam
E) got Nixon reelected
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52
Nixon's new relationship with China was made possible by:

A) the discovery of China's vast oil deposits
B) China's growing fear of the Soviet Union
C) Nixon's landslide reelection in 1972
D) the American public's more favorable attitude toward communism
E) the removal of Vietnam as a source of division between the United States and China
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53
Senator George McGovern of South Dakota:

A) was the democratic nominee for president in 1972
B) resigned from the Senate
C) ran for governor in South Dakota
D) was Nixon's secretary of defense
E) led U.S. troops in Vietnam
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54
Nixon's policy of "Vietnamization" involved:

A) increasing the number of young men being drafted
B) launching a U.S. invasion of North Vietnam
C) establishing diplomatic and trade relations with North Vietnam
D) gradually reducing the number of American troops in Vietnam
E) working toward the reunification of North and South Vietnam
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55
Economists coined the term stagflation in the early 1970s to describe:

A) a simultaneously stagnant economy with inflationary prices
B) continuing declines in stock prices
C) high oil prices along with declining profits for the petroleum industry
D) the return of economic conditions similar to the Depression
E) continuing economic growth along with a growing budgetary deficit
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56
Shocking events at Kent State University involved:

A) a fight between anti-war students and construction workers
B) the killing of four students by the National Guard
C) violence when police broke up a student strike
D) several deaths when students exploded a bomb in the ROTC building
E) student attacks upon conservative, pro-war professors
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57
In regard to Vietnam policy, Nixon:

A) insisted that he would pursue "peace with honor"
B) was indifferent to an eventual Communist takeover
C) was determined to end the American involvement quickly
D) still believed that the war could be won
E) refused to sit and negotiate with the enemy
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58
As the 1972 election approached, the biggest threat to Nixon's reelection seemed to be:

A) George Wallace's potential to drain away conservative votes from the Republicans
B) the massive popularity of Democratic nominee George McGovern
C) public disapproval of Nixon's efforts to ease tensions with the Chinese and the Russians
D) revelations concerning the Watergate break-in
E) the continuing appeal of 1960s-style social liberalism
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59
A sad legacy of Watergate was:

A) lasting damage to the image of the presidency
B) ongoing limits on press freedom
C) a renewal of divisive partisan politics
D) Congress's inability to pass needed legislation
E) the weakening of the CIA's domestic operations
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60
Gerald Ford suffered terrible political damage when he:

A) continued Nixon's economic policies
B) vetoed the War Powers Act
C) pardoned Nixon
D) sent Americans back into Vietnam
E) failed to achieve peace in the Middle East
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61
Trace how the Watergate crisis brought an end to the Nixon presidency.
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62
All of the following were consequences of the Vietnam War EXCEPT:

A) 58,000 Americans died
B) Saigon fell to the Communists and became Ho Chi Minh City
C) many young Americans questioned the value of military service
D) Americans were more determined than ever to spread democracy
E) deep divisions over foreign policy continued
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63
Describe the gains made by women and ethnic minorities in the 1960s and early 1970s. In each case, what accounted for the gains?
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64
Discuss the various aspects of President Nixon's Vietnam policy. How was Nixon's policy different from those of his predecessors?
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65
During his presidency, Gerald Ford achieved a record for:

A) tax increases
B) Supreme Court appointments
C) press conferences
D) vetoes
E) military interventions
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66
James Earl (Jimmy) Carter Jr. represented:

A) the new liberal wing of the Democratic party
B) the new moderate wing of the Democratic party
C) the new moderate wing of the Republican party
D) the new liberal wing of the Republican party
E) Alabama as its senator
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67
Discuss President Nixon's reasons for believing that a new multipolar world order was emerging to replace the conventional cold war. What actions did he take to shift his foreign policy in that direction?
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68
Match between columns
George Wallace
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
George Wallace
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
George Wallace
wrote Silent Spring
George Wallace
led United Farm Workers
George Wallace
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
George Wallace
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
George Wallace
lost the presidential election of 1976
George Wallace
founded NOW
George Wallace
was secretary of state in 1975
George Wallace
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
Betty Friedan
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
Betty Friedan
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
Betty Friedan
wrote Silent Spring
Betty Friedan
led United Farm Workers
Betty Friedan
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
Betty Friedan
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
Betty Friedan
lost the presidential election of 1976
Betty Friedan
founded NOW
Betty Friedan
was secretary of state in 1975
Betty Friedan
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
Mario Savio
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
Mario Savio
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
Mario Savio
wrote Silent Spring
Mario Savio
led United Farm Workers
Mario Savio
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
Mario Savio
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
Mario Savio
lost the presidential election of 1976
Mario Savio
founded NOW
Mario Savio
was secretary of state in 1975
Mario Savio
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
John Dean
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
John Dean
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
John Dean
wrote Silent Spring
John Dean
led United Farm Workers
John Dean
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
John Dean
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
John Dean
lost the presidential election of 1976
John Dean
founded NOW
John Dean
was secretary of state in 1975
John Dean
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
César Chávez
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
César Chávez
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
César Chávez
wrote Silent Spring
César Chávez
led United Farm Workers
César Chávez
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
César Chávez
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
César Chávez
lost the presidential election of 1976
César Chávez
founded NOW
César Chávez
was secretary of state in 1975
César Chávez
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
Gerald Ford
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
Gerald Ford
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
Gerald Ford
wrote Silent Spring
Gerald Ford
led United Farm Workers
Gerald Ford
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
Gerald Ford
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
Gerald Ford
lost the presidential election of 1976
Gerald Ford
founded NOW
Gerald Ford
was secretary of state in 1975
Gerald Ford
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
William Calley
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
William Calley
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
William Calley
wrote Silent Spring
William Calley
led United Farm Workers
William Calley
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
William Calley
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
William Calley
lost the presidential election of 1976
William Calley
founded NOW
William Calley
was secretary of state in 1975
William Calley
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
Henry Kissinger
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
Henry Kissinger
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
Henry Kissinger
wrote Silent Spring
Henry Kissinger
led United Farm Workers
Henry Kissinger
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
Henry Kissinger
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
Henry Kissinger
lost the presidential election of 1976
Henry Kissinger
founded NOW
Henry Kissinger
was secretary of state in 1975
Henry Kissinger
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
Tom Hayden
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
Tom Hayden
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
Tom Hayden
wrote Silent Spring
Tom Hayden
led United Farm Workers
Tom Hayden
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
Tom Hayden
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
Tom Hayden
lost the presidential election of 1976
Tom Hayden
founded NOW
Tom Hayden
was secretary of state in 1975
Tom Hayden
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
Rachel Carson
was a philosophy major who led UC Berkeley's free-speech movement (FSM)
Rachel Carson
was convicted for My Lai Massacre
Rachel Carson
wrote Silent Spring
Rachel Carson
led United Farm Workers
Rachel Carson
gave testimony before Senate committee that linked Nixon directly to Watergate cover-up
Rachel Carson
founded SDS and authored the Port Huron Statement
Rachel Carson
lost the presidential election of 1976
Rachel Carson
founded NOW
Rachel Carson
was secretary of state in 1975
Rachel Carson
was shot and left paralyzed in 1972
Unlock Deck
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69
Detail all aspects of the counterculture in the United States during the 1960s.
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70
Jimmy Carter's victory in the 1976 election was aided by all of the following EXCEPT:

A) his electoral strength in the South
B) his non-Washington background in the aftermath of Watergate
C) a huge voter turnout
D) his promise to be an honest president
E) Ford's less-than-impressive presidential record
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k this deck
71
Describe the domestic policy of the Nixon administration.
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72
Within a year after taking control of the South, the Vietnamese Communists were at war with the:

A) Soviets
B) Cambodian Communists
C) Japanese
D) French
E) South Vietnam
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
73
Detail the New Left movement in America during the 1960s. Who were the participants and what issues were at the core of their organization?
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74
Along with the black power movement, other marginalized groups asserted their causes in the 1960s. Detail both the "brown power" (Hispanic rights) and "red power" (Native American rights) movements.
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75
What economic problems did President Ford face? How did he try to solve these problems, and how successful was he?
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76
Discuss the election of 1972 and its implication for the future.
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77
Nixon's Watergate-related resignation came with the revelation that he had:

A) burned his tapes of White House conversations
B) lied to the Senate's Ervin committee
C) authorized the use of dirty tricks against Democratic campaigns
D) ordered a cover-up of the original Watergate break-in
E) ordered the IRS to harass his political enemies
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77
MATCHING
Match each description with the item below.
MATCHING Match each description with the item below.
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locked card icon
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 78 flashcards in this deck.