Critical to John F. Kennedy's victory in the election of 1960 was his A) success in televised debates against Richard Nixon. B) charge that Republicans had over stimulated the economy. C) rejection of U.S. participation in the Cold War. D) disavowal of his religious beliefs. E) stance as a war hawk. A) success in televised debates against Richard Nixon. John F. Kennedy's domestic program was known as the A) Great Society. B) New Deal. C) Fair Deal. D) New Frontier E) Age of Camelot. D) New Frontier. The loser of the presidential election of 1960 was A) Richard Nixon. B) George McGovern. C) John F. Kennedy. D) Lyndon Johnson. E) Hubert Humphrey. A) Richard Nixon. Which of the following regions was NOT a foreign policy crisis for John F. Kennedy? A) Southeast Asia B) Berlin C) Mexico D) Cuba E) Soviet Union C) Mexico In contrast to Eisenhower, Kennedy's staff was heavily populated with A) career military men. B) high-ranking business executives. C) women executives. D) academics and intellectuals. E) immigrants and minorities. D) academics and intellectuals. The man selected to serve as secretary of defense by John F. Kennedy was A) Robert McNamara. B) Arthur Radford. C) Dean Rusk. D) William Westmoreland. E) Henry Kissinger. A) Robert McNamara John F. Kennedy's plan to balance out nuclear capability with conventional military strength was known as A) the New Look. B) the New Deal. C) flexible response. D) massive retaliation. E) total coverage. C) flexible response. The Soviet leader with whom both Dwight Eisenhower and John Kennedy had to deal was A) Nikita Khrushchev. B) Leonid Brezhnev. C) Gamel Nasser. D) Mikhail Gorbachev. E) Yuri Andropov. A) Nikita Khrushchev. The building of the Berlin War in 1961 A) was a Soviet defensive measure. B) demonstrated East Germany's control of Berlin. C) was a joint effort by the United States and the Soviet Union. D) caused few problems for the Kennedy administration. E) was meant to keep East Germans from migrating to the West. E) was meant to keep East Germans from migrating to the West. Under John F. Kennedy, the United States government A) decided to support the Ho Chi Minh government. B) reduced American involvement in Vietnam. C) increased the number of military advisers in Vietnam. D) maintained levels of support in Vietnam roughly equal to those established by Eisenhower. E) began large-scale military operations in Southeast Asia. C) increased the number of military advisers in Vietnam. The ________ was Kennedy's most obvious foreign policy disaster. A) Bay of Pigs invasion B) Cuban Missile Crisis C) Vietnam War D) Berlin Crisis of 1961 E) Monroe Affair A) Bay of Pigs invasion American foreign policy hawks believed that the outcome of the Cuban Missile Crisis A) justified a policy of nuclear superiority. B) proved that the Soviet Union was no real threat to the United States. C) indicated the need for a secret invasion of Cuba. D) supported their view of Kennedy's expertise in foreign policy. E) allowed a new policy of nuclear disarmament. A) justified a policy of nuclear superiority Which of the following was NOT a consequence of the Cuban Missile Crisis? A) a de-escalation of the U.S.-Soviet arms race B) the Soviet-American hotline C) new negotiations regarding a reduction in nuclear testing D) a new maturity in John F. Kennedy's foreign policy E) a conviction that the Soviets only understood the language of force A) a de-escalation of the U.S.-Soviet arms race Which one of the following Cabinet officials in the Kennedy administration is incorrectly matched with his office. A) Robert McNamara/Secretary of Defense B) Dean Rusk/Secretary of State C) Stuart Udall/Secretary of the Interior D) Arthur Goldberg/Secretary of Commerce E) Abraham Ribicoff/Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare D) Arthur Goldberg/Secretary of Commerce President Kennedy's most controversial Cabinet appointment involved his choice for A) secretary of state. B) attorney general. C) secretary of defense. D) secretary of transportation. E) secretary of the interior. B) attorney general Kennedy's greatest domestic obstacle while president was A) the U.S. Congress. B) the Joint Chiefs of Staff. C) his lack of experience in domestic affairs. D) his lack of concern for domestic affairs. E) his affiliation with the Catholic church. A) the U.S. Congress. President Kennedy became extremely frustrated when leaders of the ________ industry decided to raise prices. A) oil industry B) coal industry C) steel industry D) iron ore industry E) aeronautics industry C) steel industry John F. Kennedy played down civil rights legislation because he A) feared alienating Southern Democrats. B) was secretly a racist. C) did not want to offend conservative African-American leaders. D) did not really see the need for it. E) was advised to do so by leading cabinet members. A) feared alienating Southern Democrats. Which of the following individuals was an African American appointed to a prominent post in the federal government during the Kennedy administration? A) Robert Weaver B) Thurgood Marshall C) A. Philip Randolph D) both A and B E) both B and C D) both A and B Which one of the following groups sponsored the "freedom rides"? A) Southern Christian Leadership Conference B) Congress of Racial Equality C) Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee D) Fair Employment Practices Committee E) National Association for the Advancement of Colored People B) Congress of Racial Equality The ________ was the most important stimulus for social change in the early 1960s. A) Supreme Court B) House of Representatives C) presidency D) Senate E) televised reporting of civil rights abuses A) Supreme Court The most far-reaching decisions of the Warren Court involved A) business regulation. B) abortion. C) legislative reapportionment. D) the rights of victims. E) racial equality. C) legislative reapportionment. The 1962 Supreme Court decision banning school prayer was A) Gideon v. Wainwright. B) Yates v. United States. C) Baker v. Carr. D) Miranda v. Arizona. E) Engle v. Vitale. E) Engle v. Vitale. Without the support of Republican Senator ________, civil rights legislation would probably have been filibustered to death in the Senate. A) Everett Dirksen B) Strom Thurmond C) J. William Fulbright D) Harry Byrd E) Russell Long A) Everett Dirksen The Civil Rights Act of 1964 A) outlawed racial segregation in public facilities. B) outlawed racial discrimination in employment. C) protected the voting rights of African Americans. D) included gender as an unacceptable basis for discrimination in hiring. E) all of the above. E) all of the above. The ________ established the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. A) Fair Employment Practices Act B) Civil Rights Act of 1964 C) Equal Opportunity Act D) Taft-Hartley Act E) Civil Rights Act of 1957 B) Civil Rights Act of 1964 Lyndon Johnson's War on Poverty was influenced by Michael Harrington's book, A) How the Other Half Lives. B) Silent Spring. C) The Best and the Brightest. D) The Other America. E) Down and Out in America. D) The Other America. Lyndon Johnson's domestic program was called the A) Fair Deal. B) New Frontier. C) Great Society. D) New Deal. E) War on Poverty. C) Great Society In the election of 1964, President Lyndon Johnson easily defeated A) Robert Taft. B) Richard Nixon. C) George McGovern. D) Nelson Rockefeller. E) Barry Goldwater. E) Barry Goldwater. In his program of health care, President Lyndon Johnson secured A) free health care for all Americans. B) establishment of the Medicare program for the elderly. C) federal health care initiatives. D) a restriction on health benefits for welfare recipients. E) a free prescription drug program. B) establishment of the Medicare program for the elderly The foreign policy of Lyndon Johnson A) took a back seat to his domestic concerns. B) was dramatically different from that of Kennedy. C) was, in many respects, simply a continuation of Kennedy's policies. D) indicated his opposition to the Cold War. E) was isolationist by nature. C) was, in many respects, simply a continuation of Kennedy's policies. In 1965, President Lyndon Johnson sent American soldiers to ________ in order to prevent a Communist takeover there. A) Cuba B) Argentina C) the Dominican Republic D) Lebanon E) Madagascar C) the Dominican Republic A major critic of Lyndon Johnson's foreign policies was A) William Fulbright. B) Walter Rostow. C) Robert McNamara. D) Daniel Ortega. E) William Westmoreland. A) William Fulbright. Lyndon Johnson's political downfall resulted primarily from A) his Latin American policy. B) his obsession with the Vietnam War. C) the failure of his Great Society. D) his refusal to be a Cold Warrior. E) his advocacy of welfare programs. B) his obsession with the Vietnam War Lyndon Johnson sought the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution A) as a blank check for military escalation in Vietnam. B) to jump-start the U.S. economy. C) to place the blame for the war in Vietnam on the shoulders of North Vietnam. D) to pacify the leadership of South Vietnam. E) to demonstrate to the North Vietnamese, and his political opponents, his determination to take a tough stance in Vietnam. E) to demonstrate to the North Vietnamese, and his political opponents, his determination to take a tough stance in Vietnam In the long run, the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution can be evaluated as A) a costly victory for Lyndon Johnson. B) a relatively minor event in the long history of war in Vietnam. C) a significant and positive victory for Lyndon Johnson. D) significantly elevating Lyndon Johnson's standing with Congress. E) a dismal failure for the Johnson administration. A) a costly victory for Lyndon Johnson American bombing of North Vietnam A) proved an effective strategy in limiting North Vietnam's participation in the war. B) destroyed North Vietnam's major port facilities at Haiphong. C) demoralized the North Vietnamese people. D) generally failed to accomplish anything. E) impeded communist supply lines. D) generally failed to accomplish anything As a solution to the increasingly hopeless situation in South Vietnam in 1965, Johnson's key advisers urged A) a massive invasion of North Vietnam. B) American withdrawal from the war. C) a naval blockade of North Vietnam. D) American air strikes against North Vietnam. E) nuclear destruction of North Vietnam. D) American air strikes against North Vietnam Lyndon Johnson's advisor who opposed the Vietnam War was A) J. William Fulbright. B) George Ball. C) Sam Rayburn. D) William Westmoreland. E) Ralph Nader. B) George Ball Lyndon Johnson must bear great responsibility for the American problems in the Vietnam War because he A) failed to confront the American people with the stark truth of the war B) was the first president to commit U.S. military personnel to Vietnam. C) was the first U.S. leader to commit American financial resources to fighting the Communists in Vietnam. D) was more committed to the implementation of containment policy than his predecessors had been. E) took funding away from the war effort to prop up his Great Society programs. A) failed to confront the American people with the stark truth of the war In general, American tactics in the Vietnam War A) proved the advantage of high technology in wartime. B) were ill-suited for the type of war being fought. C) were efficient, if not always successful. D) were not a major factor in the American loss. E) saved thousands of American lives. B) were ill-suited for the type of war being fought. In Vietnam, American military strategists counted heavily on A) superior American military tactics. B) the benefits of massive American firepower C) the United States' ability to resupply its forces in the field. D) their soldiers' familiarity with guerrilla warfare. E) an overwhelming number of American troops. B) the benefits of massive American firepower The main premise of General William Westmoreland's strategy in Vietnam was to A) wage a war of attrition against the Communists. B) fight a limited war. C) rely heavily on U.S. naval forces against the Viet Cong. D) keep the war contained in South Vietnam. E) fight a defensive war. A) wage a war of attrition against the Communists The most prominent student protest organization was the A) Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. B) Students for a Democratic Society. C) Yippie movement. D) Southern Christian Leadership Conference. E) Young Republicans. B) Students for a Democratic Society The first sign of student rebellion came in the fall of 1964 at A) Columbia University. B) the University of California at Berkeley. C) Harvard University. D) Texas A & M University. E) Kent State University. B) the University of California at Berkeley. A former Harvard psychology professor who encouraged young people to experiment with drugs was A) Jackson Pollock. B) Abby Hoffman. C) Stokely Carmichael. D) Timothy Leary. E) Bob Dylan. D) Timothy Leary. Civil rights leader ________ advocated "black power." A) Martin Luther King, Jr. B) Malcolm X C) Stokely Carmichael D) Huey Newton E) H. Rap Brown C) Stokely Carmichael The American experience in the Tet Offensive led Lyndon Johnson to A) use napalm bombing. B) dramatically increase American involvement in Vietnam. C) consider using tactical nuclear weapons in the war. D) step up American bombing of North Vietnam. E) begin an effort to open peace negotiations with the Communists. E) begin an effort to open peace negotiations with the Communists For the United States, the turning point of the Vietnam War was the A) Tet Offensive. B) battle of Khe Sanh. C) battle of Dien Bien Phu. D) siege of Hue. E) battle of Da Nang. A) Tet Offensive Each of the following sought the presidency in 1968 EXCEPT A) Hubert Humphrey. B) Robert Kennedy. C) Martin Luther King, Jr. D) Eugene McCarthy. E) George Wallace. C) Martin Luther King, Jr