CHAPTER 38
The proposed Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), passed by Congress in 1972 and eventually ratified by 35 states, stated the following:
"Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or any state on the basis of sex."
Arrange the following events in chronological order: (A) Arab oil embargo, (B) Iranian hostage crisis, (C) fall of Saigon, (D) invasion of Afghanistan.
A, C, B, D
American Indian activists brought attention to their cause in the 1970s by seizing
Alcatraz Island and Wounded Knee, South Dakota
As a result of U.S. support for Israel in 1973 when it was attacked by Egypt and Syria,
Arab nations placed an embargo on oil to America
President Jimmy Carter's most spectacular foreign-policy achievement was the
Camp David agreement between Israel and Egypt
President Nixon's chief foreign-policy adviser was
Henry Kissinger.
The high inflation rate of the 1970s stemmed primarily from
Lyndon Johnson's refusal to raise taxes for spending on social-welfare programs and the Vietnam War
The Amendment the voting age to
Twenty-sixth; lowered; eighteen
President Carter believed that the fundamental problem of the American economy in the late 1970s was
U.S. dependence on foreign oil
President Nixon's policy of "Vietnamization" of the war in Vietnam called for
a gradual handover of the ground war to the South Vietnamese
The major goal successfully pursued by Indian civil rights activists in the 1970s was
a recognition of the semisovereign status of the various Indian tribes under American law.
Vice President Spiro Agnew was forced to resign in 1973 after being accused of
accepting bribes
In the Vietnam conflict, the United States lost a.respect in the eyes of foreigners. b.confidence in its military prowess. c.economic power. d.the war.
all of the above
The Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) failed to be ratified by the needed 38 states largely because
an antifeminist backlash led by Phyllis Schlafly stirred sufficient opposition to stop it.
George McGovern, the Democratic party's presidential candidate in 1972, appealed most strongly to the
antiwar movement.
The Watergate scandals caused by the actions of Richard Nixon's staff in the
ballot stuffing
The most explosive racial controversy of the 1970s was over
busing
George McGovern, the Democratic nominee for the presidency in 1972, alienated the traditional working-class backbone of the Democratic party
by appealing to racial minorities, feminists, and youth
The decisions of the Supreme Court under Chief Justice Earl Warren reflected its
deep concern for the individual
The Pentagon Papers, published in 1971
documented the North Vietnamese attack in the Gulf of Tonkin
Richard Nixon's Philadelphia Plan
equired construction trade unions to establish timetables and goals for hiring black apprentices
Perhaps Richard Nixon's most valuable asset as he began his presidency in 1969 was his
expertise in foreign affairs.
ichard Nixon tried to resist giving his taped conversations to the special prosecutor and the Congress by claiming that
he had executive privilege (confidentiality)
During the Senate Watergate hearings, one of the most damaging revelations for Richard Nixon was that
his conversations in person and on the telephone had been recorded on tape.
James Earl (Jimmy) Carter enjoyed considerable popularity when he won the presidency because
his emphasis on honesty contrasted with the corruptions of Watergate.
The Nixon Doctrine proclaimed that the United States would
honor its existing defense commitment, but that in the future its allies would have to fight their own wars without large numbers of American troops.
The guiding principle of President Carter's foreign policy was
human rights
As president, Richard Nixon succeeded in
implementing the Supplemental Security Income program
To control creeping inflation in the early 1970s, President Richard Nixon
imposed a ninety-day wage-and-price freeze
Richard Nixon's Vietnam policy included all of the following except
increased American troop commitments
The SALT II Treaty between the Soviet Union and the United States died in the Senate when the Soviets
invaded Afghanistan
The most controversial action of Gerald Ford's presidency was
pardoning Nixon for any known or unknown crimes he had committed while presidency
The Helsinki accords, signed by Gerald Ford and leaders of thirty-four other nations,
pledged signatories to guarantee certain basic human rights
Title IX was passed by Congress in 1972 to
prohibit sex discrimination in any federally funded education program or activity
The Supreme Court in the Bakke case held that
racial quotas were unconstitutional but race could be taken into account as one factor in college admissions.
The effect of the Supreme Court ruling in Milliken v. Bradley that integration did not have to take place across school district lines was to
reinforce the division between poorer, minority inner city schools and nearly all white suburbs.
The 1973 War Powers Act
required the president to report to Congress any commitment of American troops.
When it came to welfare programs, Richard Nixon
supported significant expansion in many areas
The difference between Lyndon Johnson's affirmative action programs and those of Richard Nixon was
that Johnson intended to help individuals, but Nixon conferred privileges on groups.
As a result of Richard Nixon's aerial bombing of neutral Cambodia in 1973,
the Cambodian economy was ruined and its politics revolutionized
In an effort to counter OPEC, the United States took the lead in forming
the International Energy Agency
Boycotting the 1980 Olympic Games was one measure taken by President Carter in response to
the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
As part of the cease-fire agreement in Vietnam in 1973,
the United States was to withdraw all its troops from Vietnam.
By the early 1970s, the post-World War II economic boom had crested as a result of all of the following except
the economic recovery of Japan and Germany.
The one major social movement born in the 1960s that retained and gathered momentum in
the feminist movement.
All of the following are legacies of Richard Nixon's presidency except
the food stamp program
One reason for the decline of American workers' productivity during the 1970s was
the general shift in the economy from manufacturing to services.
The American armed forces in Vietnam were composed largely of
the least privileged young Americans
In Griswold v. Connecticut, the Supreme Court upheld a married couple's right to use contraceptives based on
the right to privacy
The people of the United States had provided just about everything for South Vietnam except
the will to win the war
The term "second wave feminism" refers to
those like Betty Friedan who revived feminism in the 1960s and 1970s as a broad movement for women's rights and opportunities.
A primary goal of both the first and second wave of Vietnamese refugees was
to keep their large extended families together
Richard Nixon's policy of détente
ushered in an era of relaxed tensions between the United States and the two leading communist powers, China and the Soviet Union
The Supreme Court case of Roe v. Wade declared state laws prohibiting abortion were unconstitutional because they
violated a woman's constitutional right to privacy in her own person
Critics of the Supreme Court under Chief Justice Earl Warren complained that the Court
was ignoring the Constitution in favor of its own social values
The first wave of Vietnamese refugees who came to the United States in the immediate aftermath of the Vietnam War
were first forced into "assimilation camps" scattered across the country.
Moderate and radical feminists differed over all the following issues except
women's right to choose abortion