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APUSH Final Review (XIV-XXX)

APUSH Final Review (XIV-XXX). Things to Know. Need to Know. G.I. Bill helped returning WWII veterans buy houses, go to school. Taft Hartley Act made closed shops illegal. HUAC House Committee on Un-American activities investigated Communist influence. Alger Hiss Case spy case.

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APUSH Final Review (XIV-XXX)

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  1. APUSH Final Review (XIV-XXX)

  2. Things to Know

  3. Need to Know • G.I. Bill • helped returning WWII veterans buy houses, go to school

  4. Taft Hartley Act • made closed shops illegal

  5. HUAC • House Committee on Un-American activities • investigated Communist influence

  6. Alger Hiss Case • spy case

  7. Rosenbergs • U.S. citizens found guilty of espionage

  8. Joseph McCarthy • led anti-communist “witch hunts”

  9. AFL-CIO • collection of union members • very powerful

  10. Gideon v. Wainwright • right to a lawyer if can’t provide one yourself

  11. Office of Economic Opportunity • part of war on poverty in Johnson’s Great Society

  12. War on Poverty • see last one

  13. Medicare

  14. Immigration Act of 1965 • dramatically increased immigration (Asia, Latin America)

  15. Woodstock • 3 day rock concert (New York)

  16. hippies • counter-culture

  17. EPA • Environmental Protection Agency • reduce pollution, protect environment

  18. Kent State shootings • Ohio college, protest gets out of hand, National Guard kills 4 students

  19. Chicago Democratic Convention (1968) • best known for huge anti-war protests • police called in, seen on tv (police riot)

  20. Reaganomics • economic policies of Reagan • supply side economics (tax cuts) • “trickle down” theory

  21. Clinton Twelve (Tennessee) • first integration of a school in Tenn.

  22. Strom Thurmond • “Dixiecrat” • ran for president on segregation platform

  23. Bull Connor • police chief of Birmingham • used fire hoses, dogs on civil rights marchers

  24. George Wallace • governor of Alabama • anti-Civil Rights

  25. Diane Nash • Civil Rights leader • sit ins, founder of SNCC

  26. Rosa Parks • Montgomery Bus Boycott

  27. MLK • nonviolence approach to civil rights

  28. Civil Rights Act of 1964 • banned employment discrimination • created EEOC

  29. Voting Rights Act of 1965 • helped end formal and informal barriers to african american suffrage • literacy tests

  30. black power • call for African Americans to unite

  31. Stokely Carmichael • coined term Black Power

  32. Black Panthers • militant black political organization • urged violent resistance

  33. Freedom Riders • took bus trips to protest illegal bus segregation

  34. Little Rock Nine • integrated Central High School, national guard called in to prevent trouble

  35. Black Muslims (Nation of Islam) • radical movement for black power • started by Elijah Muhammad • encouraged separation from whites

  36. Elijah Muhammad • see last slide

  37. Malcolm X • radical civil rights leader (separatist) • “by any means necessary” • later changed views

  38. sit ins • attempts to integrate lunch counters

  39. Montgomery Bus Boycott • Rosa Parks

  40. March on Washington • huge march in support of a civil rights bill

  41. Watergate • scandal involving break in at Democratic national committee headquarters

  42. Richard Nixon • center of Watergate scandal

  43. Woodward and Bernstein • newspaper reporters who uncovered the Watergate scandal

  44. “Deep Throat” • Wood/Bern’s source for Watergate

  45. NOW • women’s rights organization

  46. Betty Friedan • The Feminine Mystique • feminist

  47. Gloria Steinem • feminist leader • founded Ms. magazine

  48. Roe v. Wade • right to an abortion

  49. Cesar Chavez • organized immigrant farm workers

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