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37 CHAPTER The Cold War Begins, 1945–1952 The next two chapters present the story of the great postwar “baby boom” generation (i.e., people born between 1945 and 1960). This generation was very much influenced and conditioned by the generally strong economy and by the major social and cultural changes described here. Perhaps less directly, their world was molded by the nuclear arms race and the perilous “Cold War” with the Soviet Union. 1. Unit Introduction (pp. 856–857) The authors here summarize the formative forces for the generation born after World War II. Explain what they mean in the first paragraph when they say that the “two themes of promise and menace mingled uneasily throughout the nearly five decades of the Cold War era… .” *** What is the difference between “Russia” and the “Soviet Union”? (1) Promise: (2) Menace: (3) “Russia”/“Soviet Union”: 2. Adjustment to Peacetime (pp. 858–860) The authors describe the shock to both production and price levels as the economy converted back from emergency wartime production and had to absorb large numbers of returning soldiers. Postwar Republican efforts to slow down the New Deal–inspired march of unionization came to a head in 1947 with the passage of the __________ - ______________ Act restricting union activities. Congress passed the “GI Bill of ___________,” which helped educate some _____ million veterans and lent them money through the ___________________ Administration (VA) so they could settle down in their own houses. *** Did the government pass this law primarily because it felt an obligation to those who had fought the war? If not, what other motivations might have been involved? The authors say that this act produced big economic benefits for the country. Do you think that taxpayers should pay for free higher education as they do in some other countries? (1) Motivation: (2) Free higher education: 3. Postwar Economic Boom (pp. 860–864) The authors list several causes of the sustained economic boom that lasted basically from 1950 to 1970. What do they mean by the following factors? (1) World War II itself: (2) “Permanent war economy” (charts, p. 861): (3) Cheap energy: (4) Productivity gains: (5) “Sunbelt” and mobility: 4. Suburbs and Baby Boom (pp. 864-866, 868–869) a. A depression and war-weary middle-class population happily moved to the suburbs and began making babies in the postwar years. As you read the section on “The Suburbanites,” list some of the pros and cons of the lifestyle described. (1) Pros: (2) Cons: b. The authors refer to the “baby boom” from 1945 to 1960 as a “pig passing through a python.” This caused a boom in elementary school construction in the 1950s, then rock music in the 1960s and 1970s. The baby boom generation is now firmly in middle age. *** If you had some extra cash, what types of businesses might you invest in today that will benefit from the “Baby Boom Bulge” over the next twenty years? 5. Harry S Truman (pp. 866–867) In this short section, the authors pass judgment on Truman, a man from a relatively plain Missouri background whose fate it was to be thrust into the presidency at a time in which some momentous decisions had to be made. *** From what they say here, do you guess that the authors will be positive or negative on Truman’s performance in office? Why? What clues do they give? 6. Yalta Sets the Stage (pp. 867, 870) In the absence of a formal peace conference (like Versailles after World War I), the wartime meeting at the Russian resort of Yalta in February 19_____ among Roosevelt, ___________________, and ___________________ takes on huge importance. At Yalta, a new _______________ Nations organization was agreed upon. Stalin promised free postwar elections for Eastern European countries such as __________, but Russian forces were occupying these countries on their march toward Berlin and there was little the West could do to keep Stalin from eventually breaking this promise. In return for a share of the goodies at the peace table, Stalin promised to help the United States defeat Japan within _____ months of the final victory over Germany. (Remember from the last chapter the argument of some that the prospect of Russia thus enhancing its postwar position in Asia MAY have influenced the American decision to drop the A-bomb when it did.) 7. U.S. vs. USSR (pp. 870–871) List a few of the ways that the authors, in their even-handed analysis, say that both the differences and similarities between the United States and the USSR led to an almost inevitable conflict. (1) Differences and suspicions: (2) Similarities: 8. Cold War Begins (pp. 871–879) a. A new postwar international framework, this time with full U.S. participation, was established when the International ____________________ Fund (IMF) and the ___________ Bank were established at the _________________ Woods Conference in 1944. Replacing the old League, a new _______________ Nations was established in San Francisco a year later. The U.N. had a number of successes but missed a golden opportunity to control the massive dangers of atomic power when the _________________ Plan was never approved. Twenty-two top Nazis were tried and convicted at ________________ after the war. *** If war involves mass killing by definition, do you think it’s fair to hold trials for “war crimes”? If so, can you think of any acts by the United States during its various wars that might justify prosecution? b. After the war, both Germany and its capital _________ were each divided into four supposedly temporary “zones of occupation” to be administered by the “Big Four”—the United States, the USSR, ______________, and _______________. These evolved into two separate countries, _________ Germany, tied to the Soviets, and ____________ Germany, tied to the western powers. In 1948, Stalin imposed a blockade, trying to starve the western powers out of their sectors of Berlin, located deep inside the eastern sector. The United States responded with a gigantic ________________ designed to keep the Berlin supply line open. Stalin finally called off the blockade in May 19___. By 1947, the broad strategy of “containing” Soviet expansionism, first developed by Soviet specialist George F. ___________, had become accepted in America. Following potential communist takeovers in Greece and ________________, this strategy became formalized in what came to be known as the ________________ Doctrine, an open-ended American commitment to support “free peoples” resisting communist takeovers. *** What do you see as the strengths as well as the potential dangers of this American “holy-war” against communism? (1) Strengths: (2) Potential dangers: c. To keep communism out of Western Europe, Truman won approval in 1948 for the ______________ Plan, which would eventually funnel $_____ billion into the successful reconstruction of Western Europe. It would also set the stage for the eventual creation of the European ___________________ (EC) which is now unifying European countries. In 1947, the National _____________ Act reorganized and unified the military in the face of the Soviet challenge and created a new National _____________ Council (NSC) and Central _________________ Agency (CIA). In a major break with the nation’s isolationist past, Congress in 1949 approved joining the North ______________ ______________ Organization (NATO), a defensive alliance of western European nations. Japanese reconstruction proceeded quickly and efficiently under the command of U.S. General Douglas ______________ and with the cooperation of the Japanese. In China, however, Communist forces under Mao ____________ in 1949 forced the Nationalist government under Generalissimo Jiang __________ to leave the mainland and set up on the island of ___________. This development, together with the first Soviet explosion of an ___________ bomb in 1949, further heightened American anxieties. A massive and fantastically dangerous nuclear arms race ensued, beginning with the first explosion of an American ______________ bomb in 1952. 9. Cold War at Home (pp. 879–883) a. There is now no doubt that the Soviets did support a variety of “front” organizations in the United States (as well as the open American Communist Party) and had a few spies planted within U.S. agencies. However, the frantic anti-Communist hysteria of the late 1940s and early 1950s was largely reprehensible. _________________ oaths were required of teachers and government employees, and many good careers were ruined. Future president Richard M. ______________ came to prominence as a lowly congressman when he successfully pursued diplomat Alger __________. Worst of all was the intimidation of Senator Joseph R. _____________, who started by accusing State Department employees of Red ties and expanded from there. This hysterical period quieted down a bit after the 1953 execution of Julius and Ethel ______________ on charges of delivering atomic secrets to the Soviets. *** What actions, if any, by people working to change or overthrow the U.S. government do you think should be illegal? b. The 1948 election pitted the incumbent Democratic President ___________ against Republican New York Governor Thomas E. _______________. Truman’s party was divided on the right by ultraconservative J. Strom _________________ and on the left by Henry A. ________________. Though apparently the loser, Truman’s feisty style won him another term. 10. Korea (pp. 883–885) a. This major war, which killed as many Americans as Vietnam, gets only a two-page treatment here. Remember the concessions given to Stalin at Yalta in return for his agreement to help with the final defeat of Japan. As a result of this, Russia occupied the northern half of the Korean peninsula and the United States the southern half. Two separate antagonistic countries evolved. In June of 1950, the North Koreans crossed the ____th parallel in an attempt to defeat the South and unify the country. Why do the authors say on p. 883 that this invasion provided proof to Truman of the fundamental premise of the “containment doctrine”? b. Code-named “______-68,” the administration used this crisis as an excuse for a massive military buildup. Implementing his “containment” policy, Truman obtained a U.N. Security Council resolution (in the absence of the Soviet representative) condemning the invasion. He then sent in U.S. forces under General ___________________. These forces made a surprise invasion behind enemy lines at ____________ in September 1950, and drove north to the Chinese border, whereupon Chinese troops entered the war, crossing the ________ River and forcing the Americans back to a long stalemate around the 38th parallel dividing line. Because General ________________ publicly demanded the right to widen the war by attacking parts of China, he was removed from office by President __________________ in 1951. *** Do you agree with MacArthur that he was being asked to fight a war “with one hand tied behind his back”? Do you agree with Truman that, despite his popularity and success, MacArthur should have been removed from command? Why or why not? (1) MacArthur’s complaint: (2) MacArthur’s removal: CHAPTER 37 TERM SHEET The Cold War Begins Pages 858–860 Gross national product (GNP) Taft-Hartley Act (1947) Employment Act (1946) Council of Economic Advisers GI Bill of Rights (1944) VA loans Pages 860–864 Dr. Benjamin Spock “Sunbelt” Pages 864–866, 868–869 Suburbs Federal Housing Administration (FHA) “Levittown” “White flight” “Baby boom” Pages 866–867 Harry S Truman Pages 867, 870 Yalta Conference (February 1945) “Big Three” Pages 871–879 Bretton Woods (1944) International Monetary Fund (IMF) IBRD (World Bank) United Nations (1945) Security Council Big five powers Baruch Plan Nuremberg trials (1945–1946) Hermann Goering German occupation zones “Iron curtain” Berlin blockade (1948) Berlin airlift (1948–1949) “Containment” doctrine George F. Kennan Truman Doctrine (1947) European Community (EC) Marshall Plan (1947) Recognition of Israel (1948) National Security Act (1947) Pentagon NSC CIA “Voice of America” (1948) Selective service system (1948) NATO (1949) Japanese occupation Gen. Douglas MacArthur Jiang Jieshi Mao Zedong Communist China (1949) Dean Acheson Soviet A-bomb (1949) H-bomb Pages 879–883 Loyalty oaths House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC) Richard M. Nixon Alger Hiss (1948) Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy McCarran Internal Security Bill (1950) Julius and Ethel Rosenberg 1948 election Thomas E. Dewey Strom Thurmond Henry A. Wallace Truman’s “Point Four” Program “Fair Deal” Program Pages 883–885 Korea/38th parallel North Korean attack (1950) NSC-68 U.N. “police action” MacArthur’s Inchon landing (1950) Yalu River MacArthur firing (1951) 38 CHAPTER The Eisenhower Era, 1952–1960 1. Ike, Nixon, and Korea (pp. 887–890) a. In 1952, grandfatherly war-hero General Dwight D. __________________ and his anticommunist running mate Richard M. ____________ ran on the __________________ Party ticket and defeated Democrat Adlai E. ________________. Nixon’s famous “____________ speech” illustrates the advent of television as a potent force in politics. *** What do you see as the pros and cons of television in the democratic political process? (1) Pros: (2) Cons: b. Eisenhower’s first priority was to end the war in ___________. However, it wasn’t until mid-19____ that an armistice was finally signed ending that three-year conflict, which had killed some ____________ Americans—almost the same number who would eventually die in Vietnam. This settlement returned the dividing line between North and South Korea to its original ____ parallel—where it remains today. 2. McCarthy’s “Witch-Hunt” (pp. 890–891) a. To understand the Cold War and anticommunist sentiments, it’s important to review a few terms. The United States has basically a “capitalist” economic system and a “democratic” political system. “Communists” believe in a “socialist” economic system with a political system dominated by one party that supposedly best represents the will of the common worker. To review these conceptual differences, fill in the chart below: Enter “G” for government, “I” for individuals or corporations, or “C” for Communist Party Democratic Capitalism Communistic Socialism (1) Who owns the “means of production”? _________ _________ (2) Who makes most significant economic decisions? _________ _________ (3) Who chooses the government leaders? _________ _________ (As you can see, these economic and political systems are diametrically opposed in most important respects. The real conflict, though, comes from the fact that Americans suspected the USSR—with a certain amount of justification—of trying, often by underhanded means, to export its system worldwide. Of course, the Soviets, in turn, suspected—again with some justification—that the Americans were also committed to exporting their system globally.) b. Joseph R. McCarthy was a little known junior senator from ______________ when, in 19____, he began holding hearings based on charges never proven that there were a large number of communists in the _________ Department. McCarthy eventually overextended himself in 1954 when, through the power of television, it became clear that his charges of communism in the United States _________ had no basis in fact. Is it legal or illegal in the United States to be a “communist” or “communist sympathizer?” *** If it’s not illegal, how could McCarthy ruin a person’s career just by naming a person and bringing that person before his committee? (1) Legality: (2) Source of McCarthy’s power: 3. Early Civil Rights Movement (pp. 891–897) a. The first four paragraphs of this section paint a brief but chilling picture of life in the segregated south. *** What was your reaction after reading these paragraphs? What, if anything, surprised you in this account? b. Look over the section on “The Great African-American Migration” to the cities of the North and the West during and after the World War II. What does NAACP leader Walter White mean when he says that the war “immeasurably magnified the Negro’s awareness of the disparity between the American profession and practice of democracy”? c. The 1955–1956 bus boycott in __________________, Alabama, sparked by the refusal of Rosa _____________ to sit in the back of the bus, was led by a young, then unknown local minister named ______________ ______________ __________, Jr. With little support from either the executive or the legislative branches of government, the NAACP switched its strategy for forcing change in the South to the _____________ branch. In the landmark 19____ case of _______________ v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas, the Supreme Court, under Chief Justice Earl _________________, finally overturned the “separate but _____________” concept allowed by the 1896 ______________ v. Ferguson ruling. The court ruled that separate facilities in public schools were “inherently unequal” (and thus in violation of the “Equal Protection of the Laws” clause of the Fourteenth Amendment) and that the country’s public schools must be desegregated “with all deliberate speed.” Massive resistance developed in the Deep South to the implementation of this ruling. *** If—theoretically—separate facilities are the same for both races, what was the logic of the Court in declaring them “inherently unequal”? d. Eisenhower refused to lead on civil rights matters, but in 19____ he was forced to act when Governor Orval ____________ of ____________________ moved to prevent nine black students from entering ______________ High School in ____________ Rock. Eisenhower’s decision to enforce a Supreme Court ruling with which he disagreed brought about the first intervention of federal troops in southern affairs since Reconstruction. In 1957, Martin Luther King, Jr., followed up his Montgomery success by organizing the _______________ _______________ _________________ __________________ (“SCLC”). In 1960 a grassroots, student-led “_____________” movement was launched at a lunch counter in ________________, North Carolina. This movement spawned a new organization called the ______________ ____________________ ________________ _______________ (“SNCC”). Compare and contrast these two major civil rights organizations. (1) SLCC: (2) SNCC: 4. Ike at Home (pp. 897–899) Eisenhower modified some New Deal programs but left the big ones alone. He even launched the massive _______________ highway system. What do the authors say were some of the effects, pro and con, of this system that we take for granted today? 5. Dulles and Cold War Policy (pp. 899–902) a. What was the concept of “massive retaliation” favored by Secretary of State __________ ______________ Dulles? *** What do you think of this policy as a deterrent to potential Soviet aggression? (1) Concept of “massive retaliation”: (2) Your view: b. *** In Vietnam, why do you think that the United States, despite its general support for popular sovereignty and self-determination, financed _____ percent of the costs incurred by the ____________ in trying to reclaim their Vietnamese colony after World War II? c. The French were defeated at ____________________ in 1954. A conference was then held in ________________, which agreed to split Vietnam into two countries temporarily at the ____ parallel, with unifying elections to be held in two years. The United States then supported the corrupt but anticommunist regime of Ngo Dinh __________ in the South. *** Despite its support for democracy, why do you think the United States didn’t want the agreed 1956 elections held in Vietnam? d. Cold war tensions continued when the Soviets matched NATO with their own ____________ Pact in 1955 and crushed a nationalist rebellion in ______________________ in 1956. In the Middle East, the American CIA brazenly interfered in Iranian affairs by installing the pro-western ________ of Iran in 1953. However Eisenhower refused to support the British and French during the __________ crisis of 1956. *** After reviewing this section on American policy toward the Middle East, what do you think was (and to a large extent still is) the main objective of American policy (anticommunism, nationalism, economic interests, etc.) in that region? 6. Ike’s Second Term (pp. 902–905) a. Eisenhower was easily re-elected in 1956 against his Democratic rival Adlai _________________. In 1957, the Soviets launched the world’s first satellite, called ________________, setting off competition to build more missiles. The authors say that the United States was well advanced across a broad scientific front but that “the Soviets had gone all out for rocketry.” *** What feature of communism do you think might allow an economically weaker country like the Soviet Union to make rapid progress in a few narrow specialties? b. With both sides building more and bigger bombs, Soviet leader Nikita _______________ created another crisis in 1958 by threatening to take over the Western sectors of ___________ (the old German capital). After a goodwill visit to America in 1959, he and Eisenhower were to have met again in Paris in 1960—a meeting that was canceled after America was caught spying over Russia with a ______ (type) spy plane. c. America today has extensive relations with communist countries such as China and Vietnam, but not with its close neighbor Cuba. Protesting against the expropriation of American property after the 1959 Cuban revolution led by Dr. Fidel ______________, the United States cut economic and diplomatic ties, forcing the Cubans to rely even more heavily on their newfound friends in Moscow. *** Do you have any thoughts on whether this policy of isolating Cuba was good when it was enacted and whether it is still appropriate today? (1) Then: (2) Now: 7. Transition in 1960 (pp. 905–907) In the election of 1960, young Senator John F. _____________ narrowly defeated VP Richard M. ______________. This was the first election in which TV debates played a prominent role and the first to be won by a _______________ (religious faith). The authors criticize Eisenhower for not using his great popularity to further the cause of civil rights. However, they are generally positive on his leadership, pointing out the great general prosperity of the 1950s and the fact that he kept the country out of a major conflict at the height of Cold War tensions. Note though, that this peace was accompanied by a huge and unprecedented peacetime military buildup. In the box on p. 908, Eisenhower, in his farewell address, warns the country to beware of the new “military-industrial complex.” *** What was this “complex” and why might Eisenhower have been worried about its growing influence? (1) “Military-industrial complex”: (2) Growing influence: 8. Economic Trends (pp. 908–910) The authors here describe the construction boom in the suburbs; transformative technology advances in transistors, computers, and air travel; and the transformation of the economy from a manufacturing to a service base. Employment opportunities for women surged at a time when middle-class women were influenced by a new “cult of domesticity”—an ideal challenged by Betty _______________ in her 1963 book The Feminine _________________. *** How has the expected role of middle-class women changed between the 1950s and today? (1) 1950s: (2) Today: 9. The Consumer Culture (pp. 911–915) a. The authors describe the 1950s as a generally prosperous period when people moved to the suburbs, raised their baby-boomer children, and spent a lot on leisure time activities and mass-produced, standardized, and heavily advertised products. List some of the examples cited in the book to show new developments in each of the following areas. Consumer credit: Mass communications: Eating out: Popular music: Recreation/sports: Movie stars: b. Read about the “Life of the Mind.” Which listed books or plays have you read or seen? CHAPTER 38 TERM SHEET The Eisenhower Era Pages 887–890 Dwight D. Eisenhower Adlai E. Stevenson Richard M. Nixon “Checkers” speech (1952) Korean armistice (1952) Pages 890–891 Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy Gen. George Marshall Army-McCarthy hearings (1954) Pages 891 –897 Jim Crow laws Emmett Till (1955) Gunnar Myrdal Jackie Robinson NAACP Executive Order 8802 (1941) Walter White Thurgood Marshall Rosa Parks (1955) Montgomery bus boycott Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. Earl Warren Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas (1954) “Declaration of Constitutional Principals” (1956) Orval Faubus Little Rock Central High (1957) Southern Christian Leadership Conference (1957) Greensboro “sit-ins” (1960) Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (1960) Pages 897–899 Bracero program “Operation Wetback” (1954) “Indian New Deal” (1934) Interstate Highway Act (1956) AF of L and CIO merger (1955) Pages 899–902 John Foster Dulles Strategic Air Command (SAC) “Massive retaliation” Nikita Khrushchev Geneva summit (1955) Hungarian uprising (1956) Ho Chi Minh Dienbienphu (1954) Geneva Conference (1954) Ngo Dinh Diem Warsaw Pact (1955) Shah of Iran (1953) Suez crisis (1956) Eisenhower Doctrine (1957) OPEC (1960) Pages 902–905 James R. Hoffa Landrum-Griffin Act (1959) Sputnik (1957) Intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) “Missile gap” National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) National Defense and Education Act (1958) Lebanon intervention (1958) “Spirit of Camp David” (1959) U-2 spy plane (1960) Guatemalan intervention (1954) Fulgencio Batista Fidel Castro (1959) Pages 905–907 Richard Nixon “Kitchen debate” Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. John F. Kennedy Lyndon B. Johnson “New Frontier” Nixon-Kennedy TV debates (1960) Twenty-second Amendment (1951) Admission of Alaska and Hawaii (1959) Pages 908–910 Betty Friedan Pages 911–915 Television Billy Graham, Oral Roberts, Fulton Sheen Elvis Presley Marilyn Monroe Social critics: David Riesman William H. Whyte, Jr. Sloan Wilson John Kenneth Galbraith Daniel Bell C. Wright Mills Novelists: Ernest Hemingway John Steinbeck Norman Mailer James Jones Joseph Heller Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. John Updike John Cheever Louis Auchincloss Gore Vidal Poets: Ezra Pound Wallace Stevens William Carlos Williams Theodore Roethke Robert Lowell Sylvia Plath Anne Sexton John Berryman Playwrights: Tennessee Williams Arthur Miller Lorraine Hansberry Edward Albee Black/southern authors: Richard Wright Ralph Ellison James Baldwin LeRoi Jones William Faulkner Walker Percy Eudora Welty Robert Penn Warren Flannery O’Connor William Styron Jewish writers: J. D. Salinger Bernard Malamud Philip Roth Saul Bellow E. L. Doctorow