US History 1302 Exam 5: Turbulent Sixties-Vietnam through the 1980s
Founded in 1968, the American Indian Movement (AIM)
*was a particularly militant group seeking greater Indian rights
In 1972, two Washington Post reporters uncovered evidence linking the Watergate break-in to
-a secret reelection fund controlled by White House staff. -both the Committee for the Re-Election of the President, and a secret reelection fund controlled by White House staff. -the Committee for the Reelection of the President. -a former employee of the Nixon White House
The Chicano Movement
-emerged after World War II. -was supported by organizations like the Mexican American Political Association. -patterened itself after similiar groups in the African American civil rights movement.. -confronted discrimination in areas such as schools, politics, and agriculture
The Equal Rights Amendment
-was passed by Congress and submitted to the states for ratification. -seemed almost certain to be ratified in the first years after its introduction. -ceased to be eligible for ratification in 1982. -was strongly opposed by some antifeminist women
The 1968 Tet offensive
All of these answers are correct.
Cesar Chavez and _______________ founded the National Farm Workers Asociation to fight for workers' rights in the grape fields in California.
Delores Huerta
The 1969 Woodstock music festival was
a powerful symbol of the link between rock music and the counterculture
Early during the feminist movement, the National Organization of Women focused its efforts on
addressing the needs of women in the workplace
The 1964 Gulf of Tonkin Resolution was in response to
alleged attacks by North Vietnamese torpedo boats on American destroyers
The National Liberation Front was
also known in the United States as Viet Cong
"Earth Day" in 1970 was
an example of the popularization of environmentalism
According to policies that came to be called the Nixon Doctrine, the United States would
assist in the development and defense of friendly nations
The key evidence in the determination of President Richard Nixon's guilt or innocence in the Watergate scandal was
audio tape recordings made of most conversations in the Oval Office
Throughout the late 1960s,
both deferments for the military draft increased, and opposition in the United States to the Vietnam War intensified.
President Richard Nixon's visit to China in 1972
came after Taiwan was expelled from the United Nations.
In the Vietnam War, the "Ho Chi Minh Trail" was
continually moved by the North Vietnamese
Early in his presidency, Jimmy Carter gave priority attention to
energy and the economy
Rodolfo "Corky" Gonzales was an activist in the Chicano Movement who
founded the Crusade for Justice
Betty Friedan's 1963 book, The Feminine Mystique,
gave a voice to a reemerging women's rights movement
In 1969, President Richard Nixon believed an American withdrawal from Vietnam would
harm America's "credibility"
The intent of President Richard Nixon's "Vietnamization" policy was to
have the South Vietnamese military do more of the fighting.
In 1976, Jimmy Carter appealed to voters by emphasizing
his personal honesty and his religious piety, and his status as a government outsider
The 1969 "Stonewall Riot" is associated with the civil rights movement for
homosexuals
The Johnson administration
inherited a substantial American commitment to maintain South Vietnam
All of the following statements regarding the 1968 Tet offensive are true EXCEPT that it
involved the fall of Saigon to the communists
The Watergate scandal began in 1972 with a break-in at the
offices of the Democratic National Committee
Rachel Carson's 1962 book Silent Spring helped launch the modern environmental movement by focusing on problems concerning
pesticides
In Miranda v. Arizona (1966), the Supreme Court
required authorities to inform a criminal suspect of his or her legal rights.
The so-called Pentagon Papers
revealed the government had misled the public regarding the progress of and motives for the war.
In Gideon v. Wainwright (1963), the Supreme Court
ruled that all felony defendants were entitled to a lawyer regardless of their ability to pay.
In April 1970, the antiwar movement was recharged by
the U.S. invasion of Cambodia
In 1979, Iranians who took American hostages demanded, in return for their release,
the United States' return of the shah of Iran
During the Ford administration,
the cost of oil rose dramatically
In 1974, former President Richard Nixon was pardoned by
the president
President Gerald Ford's foreign policy actions included
the signing of an arms control agreement with the Soviet Union
In 1974, Richard Nixon left the presidency
through resignation.
Under the terms of the Geneva accords, Vietnam was
to hold elections in 1956
In the 1960s, the youth counterculture
was openly scornful of the values and conventions of American middle-class society.
In the late 1970s, the "Christian right"
were alarmed by many Supreme Court rulings
In the 1960s, the radical group known as "Weathermen"
were involved in college bombings that claimed several lives.