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AMSCO 7-8

front 1

Stock Market Crash / Black Tuesday

back 1

The collapse of stock prices on the NYSE beginning October 1929, triggering the Great Depression.

front 2

Dow Jones Index

back 2

Stock market index tracking major companies' share prices, fell ~90% from 1929-1932.

front 3

Income Distribution

back 3

By 1929, the wealthiest 1% held ~40% of national wealth, leading to extreme inequality.

front 4

Buying on Margin

back 4

Purchasing stocks by paying only ~10% upfront; brokers loaned the rest, leading to forced selling.

front 5

Gross National Product (GNP)

back 5

Total value of goods/services produced by a nation's residents, fell from ~$105B (1929) to ~$57B (1932).

front 6

Herbert Hoover

back 6

31st President (1929-1933) who believed in 'rugged individualism' and opposed direct federal relief.

front 7

Hawley-Smoot Tariff (1930)

back 7

Raised tariffs on 20,000+ imported goods, triggering retaliatory tariffs and collapsing international trade.

front 8

Debt Moratorium

back 8

Hoover's 1931 proposal for a one-year halt on WWI war-debt payments between nations.

front 9

Farm Board

back 9

Created by Agricultural Marketing Act (1929) to stabilize farm prices, but failed due to overproduction.

front 10

Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC)

back 10

1932 federal agency providing emergency loans to banks, railroads, and businesses.

front 11

Bonus March (1932)

back 11

~20,000 WWI veterans marched to D.C. demanding early payment of service bonuses.

front 12

Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR)

back 12

32nd President (1933-1945) who transformed the federal government's role through the New Deal.

front 13

Eleanor Roosevelt

back 13

Transformative First Lady who championed civil rights and the poor, and helped draft the UN Declaration.

front 14

Twentieth Amendment ('Lame-Duck')

back 14

Ratified 1933, moved presidential inauguration from March 4 to January 20.

front 15

First New Deal

back 15

FDR's initial wave of legislation (1933-34) focused on relief and recovery.

front 16

Relief, Recovery, Reform

back 16

The three R's summarizing New Deal goals: immediate aid, restarting the economy, fixing structural problems.

front 17

Brain Trust

back 17

FDR's informal group of academic advisers who helped shape New Deal policy.

front 18

Frances Perkins

back 18

First female Cabinet member and chief architect of Social Security and Fair Labor Standards Act.

front 19

Hundred Days

back 19

First 100 days of FDR's presidency (Mar-Jun 1933) where Congress passed 15 major laws.

front 20

Bank Holiday (1933)

back 20

FDR declared a 4-day national bank holiday to halt panic withdrawals.

front 21

Repeal of Prohibition

back 21

21st Amendment (1933) repealed the 18th Amendment, ending 13 years of federal alcohol ban.

front 22

Fireside Chats

back 22

FDR's radio addresses to the American public that made policies understandable.

front 23

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)

back 23

Created by Glass-Steagall Act (1933) to insure individual bank deposits.

front 24

Public Works Administration (PWA)

back 24

1933 agency that built roads, bridges, and schools, spending $6B on 34,000+ projects.

front 25

Harold Ickes

back 25

FDR's Secretary of the Interior and head of the PWA, known for anti-corruption oversight.

front 26

Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)

back 26

1933 program that put unemployed young men to work in national forests, enrolling ~3 million men.

front 27

Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)

back 27

1933 federal agency that developed the Tennessee River valley and built 16 dams.

front 28

National Recovery Administration (NRA)

back 28

1933 agency that set industry-wide codes for wages, hours, and prices.

front 29

Schechter v. United States (1935)

back 29

Supreme Court case that ruled Congress unconstitutionally delegated power to the president via the NRA.

front 30

Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)

back 30

Created 1934 to regulate the stock market and prevent fraud.

front 31

Federal Housing Administration (FHA)

back 31

Created 1934 to insure mortgages and enable 30-year fixed-rate loans.

front 32

Second New Deal

back 32

1935-36 wave of legislation that created Social Security and focused on workers and the poor.

front 33

Works Progress Administration (WPA)

back 33

1935 agency that employed ~8.5 million Americans and built 650,000 miles of roads.

front 34

Harry Hopkins

back 34

Head of the WPA and FDR's closest aide, believed work relief was better than handouts.

front 35

National Labor Relations (Wagner) Act (1935)

back 35

Gave workers the legal right to organize unions and bargain collectively.

front 36

Social Security Act (1935)

back 36

Created federal old-age pension, unemployment insurance, and aid for dependent children.

front 37

Father Charles Coughlin

back 37

Catholic 'Radio Priest' who initially supported FDR but later turned against the New Deal.

front 38

Francis Townsend

back 38

Proposed the 'Townsend Plan' — $200/month pension for Americans over 60.

front 39

Huey Long

back 39

Louisiana Governor/Senator; proposed 'Share Our Wealth' — cap fortunes, guarantee minimum income.

front 40

Supreme Court Reorganization Plan (1937)

back 40

FDR's plan to add up to 6 new justices for each one over 70 — Congress rejected it overwhelmingly.

front 41

Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO)

back 41

Organized workers by industry rather than craft; led by John L. Lewis.

front 42

John L. Lewis

back 42

Leader of the United Mine Workers; founder of the CIO.

front 43

Sit-Down Strike

back 43

Labor tactic where workers occupied factories and refused to leave.

front 44

Fair Labor Standards Act (1938)

back 44

Established first federal minimum wage (25¢/hr) and 40-hour work week.

front 45

New Democratic Coalition

back 45

Broad alliance FDR built that dominated politics for ~30 years.

front 46

John Maynard Keynes

back 46

British economist whose theories underpinned New Deal deficit spending.

front 47

Depression Mentality

back 47

Psychological mindset shaped by the Depression — fear of spending, saving obsessively.

front 48

Dust Bowl / Okies

back 48

Severe 1930s drought + poor farming practices caused massive topsoil erosion.

front 49

John Steinbeck, The Grapes of Wrath

back 49

1939 novel following the Joad family fleeing the Dust Bowl to California.

front 50

Marian Anderson

back 50

World-renowned Black contralto denied permission by the DAR to perform at Constitution Hall.

front 51

Mary McLeod Bethune

back 51

Prominent Black educator; founded Bethune-Cookman College.

front 52

Fair Employment Practices Committee (FEPC)

back 52

Created by Executive Order 8802 (1941) to prevent discrimination in defense industries.

front 53

A. Philip Randolph

back 53

Founder of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters; threatened a 1941 March on Washington.

front 54

Indian Reorganization (Wheeler-Howard) Act (1934)

back 54

Reversed the Dawes Act; restored tribal self-government and allowed tribes to adopt constitutions.

front 55

Manchuria (Manchukuo)

back 55

Japan invaded Manchuria in 1931; created the puppet state of Manchukuo.

front 56

Stimson Doctrine (1932)

back 56

Secretary of State Stimson declared the U.S. would not recognize any territory acquired by force.

front 57

Good-Neighbor Policy

back 57

FDR's 1933 Latin America policy renouncing U.S. intervention.

front 58

London Economic Conference (1933)

back 58

66-nation conference aimed at stabilizing currencies and reviving trade.

front 59

Soviet Union Recognition (1933)

back 59

FDR formally recognized the USSR — 16 years after the Bolshevik Revolution.

front 60

Tydings-McDuffie Act (1934)

back 60

Granted the Philippines a 10-year transition to independence.

front 61

Cordell Hull

back 61

FDR's Secretary of State (1933-1944) — longest-serving ever.

front 62

Fascism

back 62

Ultranationalist, authoritarian ideology rejecting democracy, liberalism, and communism.

front 63

Benito Mussolini / Italian Fascist Party

back 63

Founded the first fascist state in Italy; ruled as Il Duce.

front 64

Adolf Hitler / German Nazi Party

back 64

Austrian-born demagogue; Chancellor then Führer of Germany (1933-45).

front 65

Axis Powers

back 65

Military alliance of Germany, Italy, and Japan.

front 66

Isolationism

back 66

American foreign policy tradition of avoiding European wars and entangling alliances.

front 67

Nye Committee (1934-36)

back 67

Senate committee concluding that bankers and munitions makers had pushed the U.S. into WWI for profit.

front 68

Neutrality Acts (1935-37)

back 68

Series of laws banning arms sales and loans to warring nations.

front 69

Spanish Civil War (1936-1939)

back 69

Civil war between the elected Spanish Republic and Franco's Nationalist rebels.

front 70

Francisco Franco

back 70

Spanish general who led the Nationalist rebellion and established authoritarian dictatorship.

front 71

America First Committee

back 71

Leading non-interventionist organization opposing U.S. entry into WWII.

front 72

Appeasement

back 72

British/French policy of making concessions to Hitler.

front 73

Munich Agreement (1938)

back 73

Surrendered Czechoslovakia's Sudetenland.

front 74

Ethiopia

back 74

Italy invaded independent Ethiopia (1935) under Mussolini.

front 75

Rhineland (1936)

back 75

Hitler remilitarized the Rhineland (demilitarized under Versailles).

front 76

Czechoslovakia / Sudetenland

back 76

Munich Agreement (Sept 1938): Britain and France forced Czechoslovakia to cede its Sudetenland to Hitler.

front 77

Quarantine Speech (1937)

back 77

FDR speech in Chicago calling for international 'quarantine' of aggressor nations.

front 78

Poland / Blitzkrieg

back 78

Germany invaded Poland September 1, 1939 — started WWII in Europe.

front 79

Cash and Carry (1939)

back 79

Revision of Neutrality Act allowing belligerents to buy arms if they paid cash and transported goods themselves.

front 80

Selective Training and Service Act (1940)

back 80

First peacetime military draft in U.S. history.

front 81

Destroyers-for-Bases Deal (1940)

back 81

U.S. gave Britain 50 aging WWI destroyers in exchange for naval base leases.

front 82

Four Freedoms Speech (Jan 1941)

back 82

FDR's State of the Union articulating war aims: freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from want, freedom from fear.

front 83

Lend-Lease Act (Mar 1941)

back 83

Authorized president to lend/lease weapons to any nation vital to U.S. defense.

front 84

Atlantic Charter (Aug 1941)

back 84

Joint statement of war aims between FDR and Churchill.

front 85

Pearl Harbor (Dec 7, 1941)

back 85

Japanese surprise attack on U.S. naval base in Hawaii.

front 86

Office of Price Administration (OPA)

back 86

Federal agency that prevented wartime inflation by controlling prices and rationing goods.

front 87

Smith v. Allwright (1944)

back 87

Supreme Court struck down white-only Democratic primaries in the South.

front 88

Korematsu v. United States (1944)

back 88

Supreme Court upheld FDR's order for Japanese American internment.

front 89

Harry S. Truman

back 89

33rd President (1945-1953). Dropped atomic bombs on Japan.

front 90

Battle of the Atlantic (1939-1945)

back 90

Longest continuous WWII campaign.

front 91

Dwight D. Eisenhower

back 91

Supreme Allied Commander in Europe; later 34th President (1953-61).

front 92

D-Day (June 6, 1944)

back 92

Operation Overlord — largest seaborne invasion in history.

front 93

Battle of the Bulge (Dec 1944-Jan 1945)

back 93

Germany's last major offensive.

front 94

Holocaust

back 94

Nazi Germany's systematic murder of ~6 million Jews.

front 95

Battle of Midway (June 1942)

back 95

Decisive Pacific naval battle — turning point of the Pacific War.

front 96

Chester Nimitz

back 96

Commander in Chief, Pacific Fleet during WWII.

front 97

Douglas MacArthur

back 97

Commanded Allied forces in Southwest Pacific.

front 98

Manhattan Project (1942-1945)

back 98

Secret U.S.-British-Canadian program to build an atomic bomb.

front 99

J. Robert Oppenheimer

back 99

Scientific director of the Manhattan Project at Los Alamos.

front 100

Atomic Bomb / Hiroshima & Nagasaki

back 100

U.S. dropped 'Little Boy' on Hiroshima and 'Fat Man' on Nagasaki.

front 101

Big Three / Yalta (Feb 1945)

back 101

FDR, Churchill, and Stalin met at Yalta.

front 102

United Nations (1945)

back 102

International organization created at San Francisco Conference.

front 103

GI Bill / Servicemen's Readjustment Act (1944)

back 103

Provided veterans with low-cost mortgages, college tuition, and job training.

front 104

Baby Boom (1946-1964)

back 104

~76 million 'baby boomers' born as returning WWII veterans started families.

front 105

Suburban Growth

back 105

Postwar explosion of suburban housing enabled by GI Bill mortgages.

front 106

Sunbelt

back 106

Southern and western states that boomed with migration after WWII.

front 107

Employment Act of 1946

back 107

Required the federal government to promote maximum employment and purchasing power.

front 108

Taft-Hartley Act (1947)

back 108

Labor law passed over Truman's veto; outlawed closed shops, sympathy strikes, and secondary boycotts.

front 109

Dixiecrats / Strom Thurmond (1948)

back 109

Southern Democrats who bolted over Truman's civil rights platform; nominated Strom Thurmond for president.

front 110

Thomas Dewey (1948)

back 110

Republican nominee; widely expected to defeat Truman; Chicago Tribune ran premature headline 'DEWEY DEFEATS TRUMAN.'

front 111

Fair Deal

back 111

Truman's domestic program extending the New Deal; proposed national health insurance and civil rights laws.

front 112

Cold War (1947-1991)

back 112

Geopolitical and ideological rivalry between the U.S. and Soviet Union; shaped American domestic and foreign policy.

front 113

Iron Curtain

back 113

Term coined by Winston Churchill describing the division of Europe between the democratic West and Soviet-dominated East.

front 114

George Kennan

back 114

U.S. diplomat who articulated containment policy; wrote the 'Long Telegram' and 'X Article.'

front 115

Dean Acheson

back 115

Truman's Secretary of State; architect of NATO, Marshall Plan, and Korean War coalition.

front 116

Containment Policy

back 116

Core U.S. Cold War strategy to prevent Soviet expansion beyond its existing sphere.

front 117

Truman Doctrine (Mar 1947)

back 117

Truman's address requesting aid for Greece and Turkey; first formal statement of containment as U.S. foreign policy.

front 118

Marshall Plan (1948)

back 118

U.S. provided $12.4B to rebuild Western Europe; prevented desperation from driving nations toward communism.

front 119

Berlin Airlift (1948-1949)

back 119

Soviets blockaded West Berlin; U.S. and Britain supplied the city by air for 11 months.

front 120

NATO (1949)

back 120

Military alliance among U.S., Canada, and Western European nations; Article 5 states an attack on one is an attack on all.

front 121

National Security Act (1947)

back 121

Created the Department of Defense, CIA, NSC, and Joint Chiefs of Staff; foundation of the modern national security state.

front 122

NSC-68

back 122

1950 top-secret report recommending massively increasing defense spending from $13B to $50B/year.

front 123

Chinese Civil War (1949)

back 123

Communist Mao Zedong defeated Nationalist Chiang Kai-shek; Mao proclaimed People's Republic of China.

front 124

HUAC (House Un-American Activities Committee)

back 124

Congressional committee investigating alleged communist influence in government and Hollywood.

front 125

Smith Act (1940) / Dennis v. United States

back 125

Smith Act made it illegal to advocate overthrow of the government by force; upheld in Dennis (1951).

front 126

McCarran Internal Security Act (1950)

back 126

Required communist organizations to register with the government; allowed internment of suspected subversives.

front 127

Alger Hiss / Whittaker Chambers

back 127

Hiss: senior State Dept official accused of being a Soviet spy; convicted of perjury.

front 128

Rosenberg Case (1953)

back 128

Julius and Ethel Rosenberg convicted of passing atomic secrets to the Soviets; executed in 1953.

front 129

Joseph McCarthy

back 129

Republican Senator who claimed to have a list of communists in the State Dept; known for reckless smear tactics.

front 130

Korean War / UN Police Action (1950-53)

back 130

North Korea invaded South Korea; Truman committed forces under UN flag without a congressional war declaration.

front 131

38th Parallel

back 131

Latitude line dividing North and South Korea; Korea was divided here in 1945.

front 132

Modern Republicanism

back 132

Eisenhower's moderate philosophy; accepted the New Deal welfare state but sought fiscal restraint.

front 133

John Foster Dulles / Brinksmanship

back 133

Eisenhower's Secretary of State; 'Brinksmanship' = willingness to go to the 'brink of war' to force Soviet concessions.

front 134

Massive Retaliation

back 134

Eisenhower's nuclear strategy promising devastating nuclear response to Soviet aggression.

front 135

Domino Theory

back 135

Belief that if one country fell to communism, neighbors would follow; articulated by Eisenhower.

front 136

SEATO (1954)

back 136

Southeast Asia Treaty Organization; regional collective defense alliance modeled on NATO.

front 137

Suez Canal Crisis (1956)

back 137

Egypt nationalized the Suez Canal; Britain, France, and Israel invaded; marked the end of British/French imperial power.

front 138

Eisenhower Doctrine (1957)

back 138

Authorized U.S. to use military force to help any Middle Eastern nation threatened by communist aggression.

front 139

OPEC

back 139

Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries; cartel coordinating oil production and prices.

front 140

Founded 1960

back 140

Became extremely powerful during the 1973 oil embargo, quadrupling oil prices and causing global recession.

front 141

Nikita Khrushchev / Peaceful Coexistence

back 141

Soviet leader (1953-1964) who denounced Stalin's crimes and pursued 'peaceful coexistence' — Cold War competition without direct war.

front 142

Hungarian Revolt (1956)

back 142

Popular uprising against Soviet-backed government in Hungary. Rebels called for neutrality and withdrawal from the Warsaw Pact.

front 143

Sputnik (Oct 1957)

back 143

Soviet Union launched the world's first artificial satellite, shocking Americans who assumed U.S. technological superiority.

front 144

NASA (1958)

back 144

Created in response to Sputnik to coordinate U.S. space efforts. Launched first U.S. satellite (Explorer 1, 1958).

front 145

U-2 Incident (1960)

back 145

American spy plane shot down over the Soviet Union; pilot Francis Gary Powers captured. Eisenhower had denied U.S. flew spy missions.

front 146

Military-Industrial Complex

back 146

Term coined by Eisenhower in his 1961 farewell address. Warned against 'unwarranted influence' of the alliance between defense contractors and the military.

front 147

Interstate Highway Act (1956)

back 147

Authorized 41,000+ miles of interstate highways — largest U.S. public works project to that point.

front 148

Jackie Robinson (1947)

back 148

First African American to play in modern Major League Baseball (Brooklyn Dodgers). Endured intense hostility with discipline and grace.

front 149

Brown v. Board of Education (1954)

back 149

Supreme Court unanimously ruled racial segregation in public schools unconstitutional.

front 150

Earl Warren

back 150

Chief Justice (1953-1969) who led the most activist Court in U.S. history. Wrote the Brown v. Board decision.

front 151

Little Rock Crisis (1957)

back 151

Arkansas Gov. Faubus called National Guard to prevent integration of Central High School. Nine Black students faced violent mobs.

front 152

Rosa Parks / Montgomery Bus Boycott (1955-56)

back 152

Rosa Parks refused to give up her bus seat to a white man — arrested December 1, 1955.

front 153

Martin Luther King, Jr.

back 153

Baptist minister and preeminent civil rights leader. Led Montgomery boycott; founded SCLC; organized Birmingham and Selma campaigns.

front 154

Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)

back 154

Founded 1957 by MLK and Black ministers after Montgomery boycott. Emphasized nonviolent direct action.

front 155

Nonviolent Protest

back 155

Civil rights strategy inspired by Gandhi. Protesters accepted arrest and violence to demonstrate moral authority.

front 156

Sit-In Movement (1960)

back 156

February 1, 1960: four Black students sat at a whites-only Woolworth's counter in Greensboro, NC.

front 157

SNCC (Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee)

back 157

Student-led civil rights organization formed after Greensboro sit-ins (1960). Organized Freedom Rides and voter registration in Mississippi.

front 158

Civil Rights Acts of 1957 & 1960

back 158

First civil rights laws since Reconstruction. Created Civil Rights Commission and Justice Dept Civil Rights Division.

front 159

John F. Kennedy (JFK)

back 159

35th President (1961-63). Youngest elected; first Catholic. New Frontier domestic program; navigated Cuban Missile Crisis.

front 160

Bay of Pigs (Apr 1961)

back 160

CIA-trained Cuban exiles invaded Cuba to overthrow Castro — failed disastrously.

front 161

Cuban Missile Crisis (Oct 1962)

back 161

U.S. discovered Soviet nuclear missiles being installed in Cuba. 13-day standoff — closest the Cold War came to nuclear war.

front 162

Berlin Wall (1961-1989)

back 162

East Germany built a wall dividing Berlin overnight (August 13, 1961) to stop mass emigration to the West.

front 163

Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (1963)

back 163

Agreement between U.S., UK, and USSR banning nuclear tests in the atmosphere, underwater, and in space.

front 164

Flexible Response

back 164

JFK's military strategy replacing massive retaliation. Built up conventional forces to respond at multiple levels.

front 165

Lyndon Johnson (LBJ)

back 165

36th President (1963-69). Succeeded JFK. Master legislator who passed landmark Great Society laws.

front 166

Great Society

back 166

LBJ's ambitious domestic program (1964-68) to eliminate poverty and racial injustice.

front 167

War on Poverty / Michael Harrington

back 167

LBJ declared 'unconditional war on poverty' (1964). Michael Harrington's The Other America (1962) exposed persistent poverty.

front 168

Medicare / Medicaid (1965)

back 168

Medicare: federal health insurance for Americans 65+. Medicaid: joint federal-state insurance for low-income Americans.

front 169

Civil Rights Act of 1964

back 169

Landmark law banning discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.

front 170

Voting Rights Act of 1965

back 170

Banned discriminatory voting practices (literacy tests). Authorized federal oversight of elections with histories of discrimination.

front 171

March on Washington / 'I Have a Dream' (Aug 1963)

back 171

~250,000 marchers gathered at the Lincoln Memorial to demand civil rights legislation.

front 172

Black Power

back 172

A movement advocating for Black self-determination, popularized by Stokely Carmichael in 1966.

front 173

Black Panthers

back 173

A group founded in Oakland in 1966 that advocated armed self-defense and radical social programs.

front 174

Malcolm X

back 174

Nation of Islam minister advocating Black nationalism and self-defense, assassinated in 1965.

front 175

Watts Riots

back 175

Six days of riots in Los Angeles in 1965 after a police beating, resulting in 34 dead and $40 million in damage.

front 176

Kerner Commission

back 176

A 1968 report stating America was 'moving toward two societies, one black, one white — separate and unequal.'

front 177

Warren Court Key Cases

back 177

Notable cases include Gideon v. Wainwright (right to counsel) and Miranda v. Arizona (rights of suspects).

front 178

Betty Friedan

back 178

Author of The Feminine Mystique, which sparked second-wave feminism and co-founded NOW.

front 179

The Feminine Mystique

back 179

A book published in 1963 that identified suburban women's dissatisfaction as 'the problem that has no name.'

front 180

Vietnam War

back 180

Conflict involving U.S. military engagement in Vietnam, leading to significant casualties and political turmoil.

front 181

Tonkin Gulf Resolution

back 181

1964 Congressional resolution authorizing the president to use military force in Vietnam without a formal declaration of war.

front 182

Tet Offensive

back 182

A massive attack by North Vietnam and Viet Cong in January 1968 that undermined public confidence in the war.

front 183

Henry Kissinger

back 183

Nixon's NSA and Secretary of State, known for his role in détente and Vietnamization.

front 184

Kent State

back 184

Site of a 1970 incident where National Guard fired on students protesting the Vietnam War, killing four.

front 185

My Lai

back 185

A 1968 massacre where U.S. soldiers killed approximately 500 unarmed Vietnamese civilians.

front 186

Pentagon Papers

back 186

A leaked study in 1971 revealing government deception regarding the Vietnam War.

front 187

Paris Accords

back 187

A 1973 peace agreement that ended direct U.S. military involvement in Vietnam.

front 188

Détente

back 188

Nixon and Kissinger's policy aimed at relaxing Cold War tensions through diplomacy and trade.

front 189

SALT I

back 189

The first U.S.-Soviet agreement limiting nuclear weapons, signed in 1972.

front 190

Watergate

back 190

A political scandal involving a break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters and subsequent cover-up by Nixon.

front 191

United States v. Nixon

back 191

A Supreme Court case ruling that Nixon must release White House tapes, leading to his resignation.

front 192

War Powers Act

back 192

A 1973 law requiring the president to notify Congress within 48 hours of military engagement.

front 193

Stagflation

back 193

An economic condition characterized by high inflation and high unemployment occurring simultaneously.

front 194

OPEC Oil Embargo

back 194

A 1973 embargo by Arab OPEC nations that quadrupled oil prices and triggered a recession in the U.S.

front 195

New Federalism

back 195

Nixon's policy of transferring power and resources from the federal government to the states.

front 196

Gerald Ford

back 196

The only U.S. president to serve without being elected, known for pardoning Nixon.

front 197

Jimmy Carter

back 197

39th President (1977-1981) known for emphasizing human rights and facing multiple crises.

front 198

Camp David Accords

back 198

A peace agreement brokered by Carter between Egypt and Israel in 1978.

front 199

Iran Hostage Crisis

back 199

A crisis from 1979 to 1981 where 52 Americans were held hostage for 444 days.

front 200

Afghanistan Invasion

back 200

The 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, leading to U.S. sanctions and support for Afghan resistance.