APUSH Chapter 31 The Fair Deal And Containment

29 August 2022
4.7 (114 reviews)
37 test answers

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers (33)
question
baby boom
answer
Markedly higher birth rate in the years following World War II; led to the biggest demographic "bubble'' in American history.
question
Servicemen's Readjustment Act (GI Bill)
answer
Act of 1944, also known as the "GI Bill of Rights,'' which provided money for education and other benefits to military personnel returning from World War II.
question
Employment Act of 1946
answer
Act which set up a three-member Council of Economic Advisers to make appraisals of the economy with regard to employment levels and advise the president in an annual economic report, while a new congressional Joint Committee on the Economic Report would propose legislation.
question
Atomic Energy Commission
answer
Created in 1946 to supervise peacetime uses of atomic energy.
question
Taft-Hartley Act
answer
Passed over President Harry Truman's veto, the 1947 law contained a number of provisions to control labor unions, including the banning of closed shops.
question
Operation Dixie
answer
CIO's largely ineffective post-World War II campaign to unionize southern workers.
question
National Security Act
answer
Act of 1947 that authorized the reorganization of government to coordinate military branches and security agencies; created the National Security Council, the Central Intelligence Agency, and the National Military Establishment (later renamed the Department of Defense).
question
United Nations
answer
Organization of nations to maintain world peace, established in 1945 and headquartered in New York.
question
iron curtain
answer
Term coined by Winston Churchill to describe the cold war divide between western Europe and the Soviet Union's eastern European satellites.
question
containment
answer
General U.S. strategy in the cold war that called for containing Soviet expansion; originally devised in 1947 by U.S. diplomat George F. Kennan.
question
George F. Kennan
answer
Diplomat who authored the anonymous 1947 Foreign Affairs article that introduced the theory of containment.
question
Truman Doctrine
answer
President Harry S. Truman's program of post-World War II aid to European countries-particularly Greece and Turkey-in danger of being undermined by communism.
question
cold war
answer
Term for tensions, 1945-89, between the Soviet Union and the United States, the two major world powers after World War II.
question
George C. Marshall
answer
Army general during World War II who orchestrated the Allied victories over Germany and Japan, and later Secretary of State who developed the Marshall Plan in 1947, a program of massive aid for the reconstruction of Europe.
question
Marshall Plan
answer
U.S. program for the reconstruction of post-World War II Europe through massive aid to former enemy nations as well as allies; proposed by General George C. Marshall in 1947.
question
Berlin Airlift
answer
Allied air forces flew food, medicine, coal, and equipment into Berlin to counteract the Russian blockade of the city from June 1948 to May 1949.
question
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
answer
(NATO) Defensive alliance founded in 1949 by ten western European nations, the United States, and Canada to deter Soviet expansion in Europe.
question
Fair Employment Practices Committee (FEPC)
answer
Committee established by the Franklin Roosevelt administration in 1941 that offered willing employers the chance to say they were following government policy in giving jobs to black citizens; the FEPC's authority was chiefly moral, since it had no power to enforce directives.
question
Jackie Robinson
answer
Army veteran who joined the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947 and became the first black player in major league baseball.
question
Americans for Democratic Action
answer
Democratic faction, formed in 1947, that criticized President Truman but also took a firm anti-Communist stance.
question
Henry A. Wallace
answer
Secretary of Commerce under President Truman who was fired in 1946 over a disagreement in foreign policy; ran for president against Truman in 1948 on the Progressive party ticket.
question
J. Strom Thurmond
answer
South Carolina governor who ran for president against Truman in 1948 on the Dixiecrat ticket.
question
Dixiecrat party
answer
Also known as the States Rights Party, a group of Deep South delegates who walked out of the 1948 Democratic National Convention in protest of the party's support for civil rights legislation.
question
Progressive party
answer
Created when former president Theodore Roosevelt broke away from the Republican party to run for president again in 1912; the party supported progressive reforms similar to the Democrats but stopped short of seeking to eliminate trusts.
question
Fair Deal
answer
Domestic reform proposals of the second Truman administration (1949-53); included civil rights legislation and repeal of the Taft-Hartley Act, but only extensions of some New Deal programs were enacted.
question
Point Four
answer
A plan for technical assistance to underdeveloped parts of the world that was the fourth part of President Truman's anti-Communist foreign policy, which included the United Nations, the Marshall Plan, and NATO; it was never put into effect.
question
NSC-68
answer
A top secret document produced by the National Security Council that called for rebuilding conventional military forces to provide options other than nuclear war.
question
Douglas MacArthur
answer
Popular general who aggressively directed American forces during the Korean War and clashed with President Truman, who removed him from command in 1951.
question
Inchon
answer
Port city for Seoul, Korea, where General MacArthur landed a American force to the North Korean rear on September 15, 1950, a brilliant ploy that pushed the North Koreans back across the border.
question
Second Red Scare
answer
Post-World War II Red Scare focused on the fear of Communists in U.S. government positions; peaked during the Korean War and declined soon thereafter, when the U.S. Senate censured Joseph McCarthy, who had been a major instigator of the hysteria.
question
House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC)
answer
Formed in 1938 to investigate subversives in the government; best-known investigations were of Hollywood notables and of former State Department official Alger Hiss, who was accused in 1948 of espionage and Communist party membership.
question
Alger Hiss
answer
President of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace who served in several government departments; Hiss was accused by Whittaker Chambers, a former Soviet agent, of leaking secret government documents and was convicted of perjury in 1950.
question
Whittaker Chambers
answer
A former Soviet agent who accused Alger Hiss in 1948 of giving him secret government documents; later become an editor of Time magazine.
question
Richard Nixon
answer
California congressman who rose to national prominence for pursuing the case against Alger Hiss and exploiting an anti-Communist stance to win election to the Senate in 1950; later elected president in 1969.
question
Julius and Ethel Rosenberg
answer
Couple convicted of transmitting atomic secrets to the Russians and executed on June 19, 1953.
question
Joseph R. McCarthy
answer
Republican senator from Wisconsin who accusing the State Department of being infested with Communists and was a major instigator of the Red Scare, McCarthy was later censured by the Senate.
question
McCarran Internal Security Act
answer
1950 Act passed over President Harry S. Truman's veto which required registration of American Communist party members, denied them passports, and allowed them to be detained as suspected subversives.