A | B |
GI Bill of Rights | provided educational and job training benefits to returning veterans |
suburbs | communities surrounding cities |
Harry S Truman | became president after the death of Roosevelt |
Jackie Robinson | became the first African American to play major league baseball |
Dixiecrats | states' rights party that nominated Strom Thurmond for president in 1948 |
Fair Deal | Trumans domestic economic program |
Dwight D. Eisenhower | elected president in 1952 as a Republican |
Richard Nixon | Eisenhower's vice-president |
conglomerate | a corporation made up of smaller, unrelated companies |
franchise | company that offers similar products or services at several locations |
baby boom | post WWII population explosion |
Dr. Jonas Salk | developed a polio vaccine |
Norman Rockwell | artist; master of realistic detail of the 1950s |
Interstate Highway System | patterned after the Autobahn in Germany, this made long distance commuting possible |
consumerism | buying material goods |
planned obsolesence | marketing strategy of purposely designing products that will become obsolete |
Federal Communications Commission | government agency that regulates and licenses television, radio, telephone and other communications industries |
mass media | means of communications to reach large audiences |
beat movement | expressed the social and literary nonconformity of artists, poets and writers |
rock 'n' roll | promoted by Alan Freed, a blend of blues, country and pop |
jazz | music characterized by improvisation |
urban renewal | called for tearing down rundown neighborhoods and building new homes for inner city residents |
braceros | Mexican guest workers |
termination policy | eliminated federal econominc support and the reservation system for Native Americansq |