Correlations
Out of Many: A History of the American People, Revised 3rd Edition, AP* Edition ©2003
John Mack Faragher, Mari Jo Buhle, Daniel Czitrom, Susan H. Armitage
Correlated with AP* History—United States, May 2002, 2003
ST = Student textbook pages
IR = Instructor's Resource pages
- Discovery and Settlement of the New World, 1492–1650
- Europe in the sixteenth century
ST: 28–30, 43–46
IR: 14–16, 23
- Spanish, English, and French exploration
ST: 30–42, 45–46
IR: 15–17, 18–20, 22, 24–26
- First English settlements
- Jamestown
ST: 24–27, 54–58
IR: 32
- Plymouth
ST: 58–64
IR: 32, 43
- Spanish and French settlements and long-term influence
ST: 49–54, 108–112, 232–233, 294–296
IR: 14–15, 31–32, 66
- American Indians
ST: xviii, 1–27, 45–46, 49–51, 104–107, 119
IR: 1–13, 18, 59, 61, 66
- America and the British Empire, 1650–1754
- Chesapeake country
ST: 54–58, 115–116
IR: 32, 35
- Growth of New England
ST: 58–64
IR: 32, 35
- Restoration colonies
ST: 64–66, 113–115
IR: 32, 35
- Mercantilism; the Dominion of New England
ST: 58–64, 94–97, 112–113
IR: 35, 38
- Origins of slavery
ST: 73–102, 294–296
IR: 48–58
- Colonial Society in the Mid-Eighteenth Century
- Social structure
- Family
ST: 116–117, 119–121
IR: 33, 60, 63–64
- Farm and town life; the economy
ST: 116–119, 121–123
IR: 50, 60, 63–64
- Culture
- Great Awakening
ST: 126–129
IR: 61
- The American mind
ST: 123–126
IR: 33, 60
- "Folkways"
ST: 116–117, 125
IR: 60
- New immigrants
ST: 118–119, 222–227
IR: 59
- Road to Revolution, 1754–1775
- Anglo-French rivalries and Seven Years' War
ST: 135–141, 159
IR: 72, 76
- Imperial reorganization of 1763
- Stamp Act
ST: 132, 141–145, 151, 159, 165
IR: 73, 79
- Declaratory Act
ST: 145, 151, 159
IR: 76
- Townshend Acts
ST: 145–151, 159
IR: 73, 76
- Boston Tea Party
ST: 150–151, 159
IR: 74
- Philosophy of the American Revolution
ST: 141–152, 157–158
IR: 72, 88
- The American Revolution, 1775–1783
- Continental Congress
ST: 133–134, 152–153, 155–158
IR: 72, 74
- Declaration of Independence
ST: 158–159, 190, A1–A2
IR: 74
- The war
- French alliance
ST: 170–171
IR: 86
- War and society; Loyalists
ST: 167–168, 189
IR: 86
- War economy
ST: 176–179, 187–188
IR: 86
- Articles of Confederation
ST: 175–177, 191, 196–197
IR: 86, 105
- Peace of Paris
ST: 177
IR: 86
- Creating state governments
- Political organization
ST: 182–184, 188–189
IR: 87
- Social reform: women, slavery
ST: 184–188
IR: 87S
- Constitution and New Republic, 1776–1800
- Philadelphia Convention: drafting the Constitution
ST: 193, 196–198, 218, A3–A7
IR: 102, 105, 107–109, 111–112
- Federalists versus Anti-Federalists
ST: 194–195, 198–200, 218
IR: 102
- Bill of Rights
ST: 200, 218, A7–A8
IR: 102
- Washington's presidency
- Hamilton's financial program
ST: 202–203, 218
IR: 102, 113
- Foreign and domestic difficulties
ST: 203–208, 218
IR: 102–103
- Beginnings of political parties
ST: 208–209, 218
IR: 103
- John Adams' presidency
- Alien and Sedition Acts
ST: 210–211, 215, 218
IR: 103
- XYZ Affair
ST: 209–210, 218
IR: 103
- Election of 1800
ST: 211–213, 218
IR: 103
- The Age of Jefferson, 1800–1816
- Jefferson's presidency
- Louisiana Purchase
ST: 222–230, 239–241, 244, 258–259
IR: 123, 126, 133
- Burr conspiracy
ST: 211–212
- The Supreme Court under John Marshall
ST: 239, 276, 281
IR: 126, 129–130, 145–148
- Neutral rights, impressment, embargo
ST: 242
IR: 123–124
- Madison
ST: 242–243
IR: 124
- War of 1812
- Causes
ST: 247–248
IR: 124, 134
- Invasion of Canada
ST: 248
IR: 124
- Hartford Convention
ST: 248–249
IR: 124
- Conduct of the war
ST: 249
IR: 124
- Treaty of Ghent
ST: 249
IR: 124
- New Orleans
ST: 249
IR: 123, 124
- Nationalism and Economic Expansion
- James Monroe; Era of Good Feelings
ST: 253–254, 258
IR: 124
- Panic of 1819
ST: 256, 258
IR: 125
- Settlement of the West
ST: 180–181, 204–205, 233–234, 245, 250–252, 259, 277
IR: 124
- Missouri Compromise
ST: 256–258, 425
IR: 125, 135
- Foreign affairs: Canada, Florida, the Monroe Doctrine
ST: 254–256, 258
IR: 124
- Election of 1824; End of Virginia dynasty
ST: 262–269
IR: 140
- Economic revolution
- Early railroads and canals
ST: 271–276, 277–279, 291, 348
IR: 140
- Expansion of business
- Beginnings of factory system
ST: 235–237, 327–338
IR: 177, 180
- Early labor movement; women
ST: 324–326, 338–342
IR: 177, 180, 185
- Social mobility; extremes of wealth
ST: 342
IR: 178
- The cotton revolution in the South
ST: 94, 235, 252, 342
IR: 159
- Commercial agriculture
ST: 276–277
IR: 140
- Sectionalism
- The South
- Cotton Kingdom
ST: 297–334
IR: 159–160
- Southern trade and industry
ST: 297–301
IR: 160
- Southern society and culture
- Gradations of white society
ST: 301–302, 311–315, 320–321
IR: 161
- Nature of slavery: "peculiar institution"
ST: 302–311, 314–320
IR: 159–160, 162–163, 167
- The mind of the South
ST: 313, 317–318
IR: 160
- The North
- Northeast industry
- Labor
ST: 300–301, 324–342, 348, 362–364, 378
IR: 178, 187
- Immigration
ST: 355, 380–385
IR: 186
- Urban slums
ST: 354–360
IR: 186
- Northwest agriculture
ST: 276–277
IR: 244
- Westward expansion
- Advance of agricultural frontier
ST: 250–252
IR: 244
- Significance of the frontier
ST: 117–119, 392, 597
IR: 271
- Life on the frontier; squatters
ST: 137, 252, 376, 520–528, 530–531
IR: 244
- Removal of the American Indians
ST: 243–247, 280–282, 391–392, 520
IR: 141
- Age of Jackson, 1828–1848
- Democracy and the "common man"
- Expansion of suffrage
ST: 262–263, 267–268
IR: 129
- Rotation in office
ST: 269–270
IR: 130
- Second party system
- Democratic Party
ST: 285–287, 291
IR: 140, 141, 143
- Whig Party
ST: 285–287, 291
IR: 140, 141, 143
- Internal improvements and states' rights: the Maysville Road veto
ST: 271, 291
IR: 142
- The Nullification Crisis
- Tariff issue
ST: 279–280, 291
IR: 141, 142, 149
- The Union: Calhoun and Jackson
ST: 280, 291
IR: 141, 142, 149
- The Bank War: Jackson and Biddle
ST: 282–283, 291
IR: 141
- Martin Van Buren
- Independent treasury system
ST: 283–284, 291
IR: 141
- Panic of 1837
ST: 284–285, 291, 368
IR: 141
- Territorial Expansion and Sectional Crisis
- Manifest Destiny and mission
ST: 392–394
IR: 197, 198
- Texas annexation, the Oregon boundary, and California
ST: 386–403, 406–410, 414
IR: 196–197
- James K. Polk and the Mexican War; slavery and the Wilmot Proviso
ST: 403–406, 411–413, 415, 439
IR: 197
- Later expansionist efforts
ST: 410–412, 415
IR: 198
- Creating an American Culture
- Cultural nationalism
ST: 287–291
IR: 141, 154, 187
- Education reform/professionalism
ST: 365–367, 571
IR: 187, 197
- Religion; revivalism
ST: 343–344
IR: 197
- Utopian experiments: Mormons, Oneida Community
ST: 369–371, 523–524
IR: 187, 191, 197
- Transcendentalists
ST: 347–348
IR: 178–179
- National literature, art, architecture
ST: 287–291
IR: 141, 154, 187
- Reform crusades
- Feminism; roles of women in the nineteenth century
ST: 351–353, 375–378
IR: 185, 187–188, 197
- Abolitionism
ST: 371–375
IR: 187–188, 197
- Temperance
ST: 367–369
IR: 187, 197
- Criminals and the insane
ST: 368–369
IR: 187, 197
- The 1850s: Decade of Crisis
- Compromise of 1850
ST: 424–426, 439, 445
IR: 207
- Fugitive Slave Act and Uncle Tom's Cabin
ST: 420–422, 426–428, 439
IR: 207
- Kansas-Nebraska Act and realignment of parties
- Demise of the Whig Party
ST: 429–432, 439, 445
IR: 207, 209
- Emergence of the Republican Party
ST: 432–434, 445
IR: 207–208, 209
- Dred Scott decision and Lecompton crisis
ST: 434–437, 439, 445
IR: 208, 213
- Lincoln-Douglas debates, 1858
ST: 418–419
IR: 206
- John Brown's raid
ST: 437–439
IR: 208, 210
- The election of 1860; Abraham Lincoln
ST: 438–440, 443–445, 455–456
IR: 208
- The secession crisis
ST: 440–442, 445
IR: 208
- Civil War
- The Union
- Mobilization and finance
ST: 450–452
IR: 218, 219
- Civil liberties
ST: 455
- Election of 1864
ST: 475–476
IR: 221
- The South
- Confederate constitution
ST: 442–443
- Mobilization and finance
ST: 453–455, 458
IR: 220
- States' rights and the Confederacy
ST: 442–443, 459, 472
IR: 220
- Foreign affairs and diplomacy
ST: 457–458
IR: 219
- Military strategy, campaign, and battles
ST: 459–464, 467–469, 472–477
IR: 219, 220, 224
- The abolition of slavery
- Confiscation Acts
ST: 464
- Emancipation Proclamation
ST: 464–467, 478
IR: 220
- Freedmen's Bureau
ST: 474, 486, 488, 494–495, 510
IR: 222
- Thirteenth Amendment
ST: 465, 486, 491, 510, A8
IR: 220
- Effects of war on society
- Inflation and public debt
ST: 470–471
IR: 221
- Role of women
ST: 468–470
IR: 221–222, 223
- Devastation of the South
ST: 471–472, 484–485
IR: 229
- Changing labor patterns
ST: 470–471, 494–497
IR: 230–231
- Reconstruction to 1877
- Presidential plans: Lincoln and Johnson
ST: 485–487
IR: 230
- Radical (congressional) plans
- Civil rights and the Fourteenth Amendment
ST: 487–489, 491, 510, A8
- Military reconstruction
ST: 489–490
IR: 230
- Impeachment of Johnson
ST: 489–490, 510
IR: 230
- African-American suffrage; the Fifteenth Amendment
ST: 490–491, 510, A8
IR: 230
- Southern state governments: problems, achievements, weaknesses
ST: 498–502
IR: 231
- Compromise of 1877 and the end of Reconstruction
ST: 508–510
IR: 231, 232, 239
- New South and the Last West
- Politics in the New South
- The Redeemers
ST: 498–502
IR: 231
- White and African Americans in the New South
ST: 492–494, 496–498
IR: 23, 231
- Subordination of freed slaves: Jim Crow
ST: 492–493, 500, 565–566, 596, 853
IR: 232, 277
- Southern economy; colonial status of the South
- Sharecropping
ST: 494–497, 502–504, 565–566
IR: 231
- Industrial stirrings
ST: 564–567
IR: 259
- Cattle kingdom
- Open-range ranching
ST: 526–528
IR: 244
- Day of the cowboy
ST: 513–515, 526–527
IR: 244, 249
- Building of the Western railroad
ST: 504–506, 521
- Subordination of American Indians: dispersal of tribes
ST: 513–520, 539–544
IR: 244
- Farming the plains; problems in agriculture
ST: 529–536
IR: 244–245
- Mining bonanza
ST: 520–523, 543–544
IR: 244
- Industrialization and Corporate Consolidation
- Industrial growth: railroads, iron, coal, electricity, steel, oil, banks
ST: 547–554
IR: 257
- Laissez-faire conservatism
- Gospel of Wealth
ST: 554–555, 574
- Myth of "self-made man"
ST: 554–555
IR: 258
- Social Darwinism; survival of the fittest
ST: 555, 612, 619, 709
IR: 258
- Social critics and dissenters
ST: 567, 579–580, 587, 589–590, 605
IR: 258
- Effects of technological development on worker/work-place
ST: 555–557
IR: 258–259
- Union movement
- Knights of Labor and American Federation of Labor
ST: 557–559, 574
IR: 258
- Haymarket, Homestead, and Pullman
ST: 558–559, 574, 590–592, 605
IR: 258
- Urban Society
- Lure of the city
ST: 546–549, 555
IR: 258–259
- Immigration
ST: 559–562, 623–625, A18
IR: 258, 261
- City problems
- Slums
ST: 562–564, 625–626
IR: 258
- Machine politics
ST: 364–365, 583–585, 615–616
IR: 270
- Awakening conscience; reforms
- Social legislation
ST: 613
- Settlement houses: Jane Addams and Lillian Wald
ST: 610–614, 625, 639, 651
IR: 285–286
- Structural reforms in government
ST: 616–617
IR: 270
- Intellectual and Cultural Movements
- Education
- Colleges and universities
ST: 571–572, 574
IR: 259
- Scientific advances
ST: 550–551, 574
IR: 257–258
- Professionalism and the social sciences
ST: 571–572, 612, 614, 619–620, 622
- Realism in literature and art
ST: 622, 639
IR: 261
- Mass culture
- Use of leisure
ST: 568, 572–575
IR: 259
- Publishing and journalism
ST: 617–619, 684–685
- National Politics, 1877–1896: The Gilded Age
- A conservative presidency
ST: 583
- Issues
- Tariff controversy
ST: 582–583, 605
- Railroad regulation
ST: 582–583, 605
IR: 270, 275
- Trusts
ST: 553–554, 605
IR: 275–276, 288
- Agrarian discontent
ST: 585–589, 605
IR: 271
- Crisis of 1890s
- Populism
ST: 589–590, 593–595, 597, 605
IR: 271, 280
- Silver question
ST: 593–594
IR: 271
- Election of 1896: McKinley versus Bryan
ST: 594–595, 605
- Foreign Policy, 1865–1914
- Seward and the purchase of Alaska
ST: 599
IR: 271
- The new imperialism
- Blaine and Latin America
ST: 597–599
IR: 271
- International Darwinism: missionaries, politicians, naval expansionists
ST: 597–599
IR: 271
- Spanish-American War
- Cuban independence
ST: 601–603, 605
IR: 271, 273, 281, 282
- Debate on Philippines
ST: 603–606
IR: 272
- The Far East: John Hay and the Open Door
ST: 646
IR: 271
- Theodore Roosevelt
- The Panama Canal
ST: 645, 670
IR: 299
- The Roosevelt Corollary
ST: 645, 670
IR: 299
- Far East
ST: 646, 670
IR: 299
- Taft and Dollar Diplomacy
ST: 646–647
IR: 299
- Wilson and Moral Diplomacy
ST: 648–649
IR: 299
- Progressive Era
- Origins of Progressivism
- Progressive attitudes and motives
ST: 612–614, 619–620
IR: 286
- Muckrakers
ST: 617–619, 639
IR: 286, 290
- Social Gospel
ST: 592–593, 612
IR: 286
- Municipal, state, and national reforms
- Political: suffrage
ST: 615–617
IR: 286
- Social and economic: regulation
ST: 620–623, 638–639, 661–663
IR: 286, 292–293
- Socialism: alternatives
ST: 592, 628–629, 631, 637, 639, 669
IR: 288
- Black America
- Washington, Du Bois, and Garvey
ST: 632–633, 639, 701, 868
IR: 287–288
- Urban migration
ST: 664–665, 671, 700
IR: 287–288
- Civil rights organizations
ST: 632–633
IR: 287–288, 300
- Women's role: family, work, unionization, and suffrage
ST: 490–492, 614–615, 630–632, 639, 659–661
IR: 287
- Roosevelt's Square Deal
- Managing the trusts
ST: 633–634
IR: 288, 292
- Conservation
ST: 634–636, 639
IR: 288
- Taft
- Pinchot-Ballinger controversy
ST: 634–636
IR: 299
- Payne-Aldrich tariff
ST: 636
IR: 299
- Wilson's New Freedom
- Tariffs
ST: 638
IR: 288
- Banking reform
ST: 638–639
IR: 288
- The First World War
- Problems of neutrality
- Submarines
ST: 650–652, 670
IR: 299
- Economic ties
ST: 650
IR: 299
- Psychological and ethnic ties
ST: 650
IR: 299
- Preparedness and pacifism
ST: 650–653
IR: 299
- Mobilization
- Fighting the war
ST: 642, 654–657, 670
IR: 308
- Financing the war
ST: 657–658
- War boards
ST: 657, 670
- Propaganda, public opinion, civil liberties
ST: 642–644, 653, 663–664
IR: 299
- Wilson's Fourteen Points
- Treaty of Versailles
ST: 666–667, 670
IR: 301
- Ratification fight
ST: 667–668, 670
IR: 301
- Postwar mobilization
- Red scare
ST: 663–664, 668–670
IR: 300
- Labor strife
ST: 665–666, 670
IR: 300, 304
- New Era: The 1920s
- Republican governments
- Business creed
ST: 676–677, 690
IR: 313
- Harding scandals
ST: 689
IR: 315
- Economic development
- Prosperity and wealth
ST: 676–677
IR: 313–314
- Farm and labor problems
ST: 678, 681–682
IR: 314
- New culture
- Consumerism: automobile, radio, movies
ST: 673–675, 682–687, 704
IR: 314
- Women, the family
ST: 683, 687–688, 696–698
IR: 315–316
- Modern religion
ST: 695–696, 704
IR: 315
- Literature of alienation
ST: 701–702
IR: 316
- Jazz age
ST: 673, 686–687, 704
IR: 314
- Harlem Renaissance
ST: 700–701
IR: 316, 317
- Conflict of cultures
- Prohibition, bootlegging
ST: 692–693, 704–705, A9
IR: 315
- Nativism
ST: 693–694, 704–705
IR: 315
- Ku Klux Klan
ST: 483, 490, 500–501, 694–695, 704–705
IR: 315
- Religious fundamentalism versus modernists
ST: 695–696, 704–705
IR: 315
- Myth of isolation
- Replacing the League of Nations
ST: 690–691
- Business and diplomacy
ST: 691–692
IR: 315
- Depression, 1929–1933
- Wall Street crash
ST: 717–718, 745
IR: 325
- Depression economy
ST: 718–721
IR: 325
- Moods of despair
- Agrarian unrest
ST: 719, 722
IR: 325
- Bonus march
ST: 722, 745
IR: 325
- Hoover-Stimson diplomacy; Japan
ST: 656, 751
- New Deal
- Franklin D. Roosevelt
- Background, ideas
ST: 722–723
IR: 325
- Philosophy of New Deal
ST: 722
IR: 325
- 100 Days; "alphabet agencies"
ST: 724–726, 745
IR: 325
- Second New Deal
ST: 727–729, 745
IR: 325
- Critics, left and right
ST: 726–727, 745
IR: 325
- Rise of CIO; labor strikes
ST: 714–716, 729, 745
IR: 325–326
- Supreme Court fight
ST: 741–742, 745
IR: 327, 332
- Recession of 1938
ST: 744–745
IR: 327
- American people in the Depression
- Social values, women, ethnic groups
ST: 708–713, 735–743, 745
IR: 326, 327
- Indian Reorganization Act
ST: 734–735, 745
- The racial issue
ST: 743–745
IR: 327
- Diplomacy in the 1930s
- Good Neighbor Policy: Montivideo, Buenos Aires
ST: 599–600
IR: 337–338
- London Economic Conference
ST: 599
IR: 337–338
- Disarmament
ST: 599
IR: 338
- Isolationism: neutrality legislation
ST: 752
IR: 338
- Aggressors: Japan, Italy, and Germany
ST: 751–752, 781
IR: 338
- Appeasement
ST: 751–752, 781
IR: 338
- Rearmament; Blitzkrieg; Lend-Lease
ST: 752–754, 781
IR: 338
- Atlantic Charter
ST: 754, 790
IR: 338
- Pearl Harbor
ST: 755, 781
IR: 338
- The Second World War
- Organizing for war
- Mobilizing production
ST: 756–760, 781
IR: 338
- Propaganda
ST: 748, 759, 765–766
IR: 339
- Internment of Japanese Americans
ST: 762–763, 781
IR: 338, 342
- The war in Europe, Africa, and the Mediterranean; D Day
ST: 771–776, 781
IR: 339, 346
- The war in the Pacific: Hiroshima, Nagasaki
ST: 749–750, 776–778, 780–782
IR: 339, 340, 345
- Diplomacy
- War aims
ST: 778
IR: 340, 352
- War-time conferences: Teheran, Yalta, Potsdam
ST: 779–781
IR: 340
- Postwar atmosphere; the United Nations
ST: 789–790
IR: 352, 359
- Truman and the Cold War
- Postwar domestic adjustments
ST: 778–789, 796–798, 800–801, 805–808, 813
IR: 353
- The Taft-Hartley Act
ST: 798, 813
- Civil rights and the election of 1948
ST: 798–799, 813
IR: 353
- Containment in Europe and the Middle East
- Truman Doctrine
ST: 791–792, 813
IR: 352
- Marshall Plan
ST: 792–793, 813
IR: 352
- Berlin crisis
ST: 793–795, 813
IR: 352
- NATO
ST: 792–795, 813
IR: 352
- Revolution in China
ST: 795–796, 813
IR: 354
- Limited war: Korea, MacArthur
ST: 809–811, 813
IR: 354
- Eisenhower and Modern Republicanism
- Domestic frustrations; McCarthyism
ST: 786–787, 801–805, 812
IR: 353, 355
- Civil rights movement
- The Warren Court and Brown v. Board of Education
ST: 848–855, 866
IR: 373, 377, 378–380
- Montgomery bus boycott
ST: 855–857, 866
IR: 373
- Greensboro sit-in
ST: 857–858, 866
IR: 373
- John Foster Dulles's foreign policy
- Crisis in Southeast Asia
ST: 837–838
IR: 366
- Massive retaliation
ST: 833
IR: 366
- Nationalism in Southeast Asia, the Middle East, Latin America
ST: 835–838
IR: 365
- Khruschev and Berlin
ST: 834–835, 844
IR: 365
- American people: homogenized society
- Prosperity: economic consolidation
ST: 805–807, 819–826
IR: 365
- Consumer culture
ST: 817–819, 826–833
IR: 365
- Consensus of values
ST: 825, 832–833
IR: 365
- Space race
ST: 822–823, 835, 841
IR: 367
- Kennedy's New Frontier; Johnson's Great Society
- New domestic programs
- Tax cut
ST: 840–841
IR: 366
- War on poverty
ST: 888–892
IR: 390
- Affirmative Action
ST: 926–928, 941
IR: 402
- Civil rights and civil liberties
- African Americans: Political, cultural, and economic roles
ST: 848–871
IR: 373, 374, 375
- The leadership of Martin Luther King, Jr.
ST: 850, 856–859, 861–863, 870–871, 893–894
IR: 374
- Resurgence of feminism
ST: 823, 845, 898–899
IR: 391
- The New Left and the Counterculture
ST: 878–880, 883–887, 895–903
IR: 390–391
- Emergence of the Republican party in the South
ST: 903
IR: 392
- The Supreme Court and the Miranda decision
ST: 854–855
IR: 405
- Foreign policy
- Bay of Pigs
ST: 842–843
IR: 366
- Cuban missile crisis
ST: 843–844
IR: 366
- Vietnam quagmire
ST: 842, 881–883
IR: 366, 390
- Nixon
- Election of 1968
ST: 878, 894–895, 903–904, 909
IR: 391
- Nixon-Kissinger foreign policy
- Vietnam: escalation and pullout
ST: 904–905, 909
IR: 392, 395
- China: restoring relations
ST: 905–906, 909
IR: 392
- Soviet Union: détente
ST: 906
IR: 402
- New Federalism
ST: 906–907
IR: 392
- Supreme Court and Roe v. Wade
ST: 933–934, 941
IR: 404
- Watergate crisis and resignation
ST: 907–910
IR: 392
- The United States since 1974
- The New Right and the conservative social agenda
ST: 931–934
- Ford and Rockefeller
ST: 922–923
IR: 399–400
- Carter
- Deregulation
ST: 924
IR: 400
- Energy and inflation
ST: 916–919, 924
- Camp David Accords
ST: 937–938, 941
IR: 402
- Iranian hostage crisis
ST: 939–941
IR: 402
- Reagan
- Tax cuts and budget deficits
ST: 949–952, 983
IR: 411
- Defense buildup
ST: 950, 983
IR: 411
- New disarmament treaties
ST: 953, 955–956
IR: 411
- Foreign crises: the Persian Gulf and Central America
ST: 938–940, 954–958, 972–973, 983
IR: 411
- Society
- Old and new urban problems
ST: 927–931
IR: 400
- Asian and Hispanic immigrants
ST: 871–878, 970–971, 981–983, 986–991
IR: 391, 412
- Resurgent fundamentalism
ST: 931–932, 934
IR: 401
- African Americans and local, state, and national politics
ST: 926–927, 953, 975–976, 983
IR: 391