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. |