AMSCO United States History 2015 Edition, Chapter 27 The Eisenhower Years, 1952-1960
13554109745 | Dwight Eisenhower | The United States general who supervised the invasion of Normandy and the defeat of Nazi Germany. In the election of 1952 he became the the 34th President of the United States. (p. 579) | 0 | |
13554109709 | Adlai Stevenson | An Illinois governor and the Democratic presidential nominee in 1952 and 1956. He lost both elections to Dwight Eisenhower and Richard Nixon. (p. 580) | 1 | |
13554109746 | Richard Nixon | He was vice president under Dwight Eisenhower. In 19868, he would become the 37th President of the United States, but in 1974 he resigned in disgrace after the Watergate scandal. (p. 580) | 2 | |
13554109747 | modern Republicanism | President Eisenhower's term for his balanced and moderate approach to governing. Claiming he was liberal toward people but conservative about spending money. He helped balance the federal budget and lowered taxes without destroying existing social programs. (p. 580) | 3 | |
13554109710 | Dept. of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) | In 1953, President Eisenhower consolidated welfare programs under this new department, run by Oveta Culp Hobby, the first woman in a Republican cabinet. (p. 580) | 4 | |
13554109749 | Highway Act; interstate highway system | The most permanent legacy of the Eisenhower administration was this act passed in 1956. It created 42,000 miles of highway linking every major city in the nation. (p. 580) | 5 | |
13554109750 | John Foster Dulles | In the Eisenhower administration, he was the Secretary of State that pursued a policy of pushing the USSR and China to the brink of war. However, Eisenhower prevented him from carrying his ideas the extreme. (p. 581) | 6 | |
13554109751 | brinksmanship | The principle of pushing Communist nations to the brink of war, thinking they would back down because of American nuclear superiority. (p. 581) | 7 | |
13554109752 | massive retaliation | This was Eisenhower's policy, it advocated the full use of American nuclear weapons to counteract even a Soviet ground attack in Europe. (p. 582) | 8 | |
13554109711 | decolonization | After World War II, dozens of European colonies in Asia and Africa became independent countries. (p. 582) | 9 | |
13554109753 | Third World | Term applied to a group of developing countries that often lacked stable political and economic institutions. Their need for foreign aid often made them pawns of the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cold War. (p. 582) | 10 | |
13554109755 | Iranian overthrow | In 1953, the CIA helped overthrow this government and established a monarch ruler with close ties to the U.S. He provided favorable oil prices and purchased American military arms. (p. 582) | 11 | |
13554109713 | Korean armistice | In July 1953, China and North Korea agreed to an armistice that would divide Korea into North Korea and South Korea near the 38th parallel. (p. 583) | 12 | |
13554109756 | Indochina | In the early 1950s, France was fighting to retake control of their colony in southeastern Asia. The French were defeated in 1954 and they agreed to give up Indochina, which was divided into the nations of Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam. (p. 583) | 13 | |
13554109757 | Ho Chi Minh | The North Vietnam Communist dictator who fought the French until 1954, and South Vietnam until 1975. (p. 583) | 14 | |
13554109758 | Geneva Conference | A 1954 conference between many countries that agreed to end hostilities and restore peace in French Indochina and Vietnam. (p. 583) | 15 | |
13554109760 | domino theory | The political theory that if one nation comes under Communist control then neighboring nations will also fall to Communist control. (p. 583) | 16 | |
13554109714 | State of Israel | In 1948, after a civil war in the British mandate territory of Palestine left the land divided between the Israelis and the Palestinians, this nation was founded. The United Nations oversaw the process and many neighboring countries fought against the creating of this Jewish state. (p. 584) | 17 | |
13554109763 | Eisenhower Doctrine | This 1957 doctrine, pledged United States economic and military aid to any Middle Eastern country threatened by Communism. (p. 584) | 18 | |
13554109764 | Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) | In 1960, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, Iran, and Venezuela formed this organization of oil-producing nations. (p. 584) | 19 | |
13554109767 | Nikita Khrushchev | The ruler of the USSR from 1958-1964. He reduced government control of Soviet citizens and sought peaceful coexistence with the West. (p. 585) | 20 | |
13554109768 | peaceful coexistence | In early 1956, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev, gave a speech in which he denounced the crimes of Joseph Stalin and supported "peaceful coexistence" with the West. (p. 585) | 21 | |
13554109770 | Warsaw Pact | This 1945 agreement formed formed an alliance of the Eastern European countries including the USSR, Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, and Romania. (p. 586) | 22 | |
13554109771 | Sputnik | In 1957, the Soviet Union shocked the United States by launching the first space satellites into orbit around the earth. Fears of nuclear war were intensified since the missiles that launched the satellites could also deliver nuclear warheads anywhere in the world within minutes. (p. 586) | 23 | |
13554109773 | U-2 incident | In 1960, the Soviet military used a guided missile to shoot down an American U-2 spy plane over Soviet territory, revealing a formerly secret American tactic of the Cold War. (p. 586) | 24 | |
13554109774 | Cuba, Fidel Castro | A bearded socialist leader who overthrew a dictator in 1959 and established a Marxist socialist state in Cuba, only 90 miles from the United States. He nationalized American-owned businesses and the U.S. cut off trade with the country. (p. 587) | 25 | |
13554109775 | military-industrial complex | In his farewell address, President Eisenhower warned the nation to "guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence... by the military-industrial complex". (p. 587) | 26 | |
13554109776 | Jackie Robinson | The first African American player in major league baseball. His actions helped to bring about other opportunities for African Americans. (p. 588) | 27 | |
13554109777 | NAACP | The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People tried to protect the constitutional right of African Americans. (p. 588) | 28 | |
13554109778 | desegregation | The action of incorporating a racial or religious group into a community. (p. 588) | 29 | |
13554109779 | Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka | In May 1954, the Supreme Court agreed with Thurgood Marshal and ruled that "separate facilities are inherently unequal" and unconstitutional, and that school segregation should end immediately. (p. 588) | 30 | |
13554109780 | Earl Warren | Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, who presided over the Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka case, which overturned Plessy v. Ferguson. (p. 588) | 31 | |
13554109718 | Southern Manifesto | After the Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka Supreme Court decision, 101 members of Congress signed this manifesto condemning the Supreme Court for a "clear abuse of judicial power". (p. 588) | 32 | |
13554109781 | Little Rock Crisis | In 1957, Governor Faubus used the Arkansas National Guard to prevent nine black students from entering Little Rock Central High School. President Eisenhower sent federal troops to ensure the black students could attend class. (p. 589) | 33 | |
13554109719 | Rosa Parks | In 1955, in Montgomery, Alabama, a middle aged black woman refused to give up her seat on a bus, which led to her arrest for violating segregation laws. This triggered an African American protest of boycotting the city buses. (p. 589) | 34 | |
13554109720 | Montgomery bus boycott | Rosa Park sparked a massive Afican American protest of the Montgomery, Alabama buses. (p. 589) | 35 | |
13554109721 | Martin Luther King Jr. | The minister of a Baptist church in Montgomery, Alabama, and a civil rights leader. (p. 589) | 36 | |
13554109722 | Civil Rights acts of 1957, 1960 | The first civil rights laws since Reconstruction, they formed the Civil Rights Commission and provided some protection for the voting rights of blacks. (p. 590) | 37 | |
13554109723 | Civil Rights Commission | Created by civil rights laws of 1957 and 1960. (p. 590) | 38 | |
13554109724 | Southern Christian Leadership Conference | In 1957, Martin Luther King Jr. organized ministers and churches to create this civil rights organization. (p. 590) | 39 | |
13554109725 | nonviolent protest | To call attention to the injustice of segregated facilities students would deliberately invite arrest by sitting in restricted areas. (p. 590) | 40 | |
13554109726 | sit-in movement | In February 1960, African American college students in Greensboro, North Carolina created this protest after they were refused service at a segregated Woolworth's lunch counter. (p. 590) | 41 | |
13554109727 | Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee | In 1960, an organization that called attention to the sit-in movement. (p. 590) | 42 | |
13554109728 | immigration issues | In the 1950s, Congress dropped the bans on Chinese and other Asian immigrants and eliminated race as barrier to naturalization. (p. 590) | 43 | |
13554109734 | rock and roll | Teenagers loved this popular music which was available as inexpensive records during the 1950s. (p. 591) | 44 | |
13554109735 | consumer culture | In the 1950s, consensus and conformity were hallmarks of the American culture. Television, advertising, and the middle-class move to the suburbs, contributed to this culture. (p. 590) | 45 | |
13554109737 | credit cards | A new method of payment in the 1950s. (p. 591) | 46 | |
13554109738 | conglomerates | In the 1950s, large businesses with diversified holdings began to dominate industries such as food processing, hotels, transportation, insurance, and banking. (p. 591) | 47 | |
13554109742 | The Catcher in the Rye | A 1950s book by J. D. Salinger, it provided a classic commentary on phoniness as viewed by a troubled teenager. (p. 592) | 48 | |
13554109744 | beatniks | A group of rebellious writer and intellectuals led by Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg. They advocated spontaneity, use of drugs, and rebellion against societal standards. (p. 592) | 49 |