CANADA & THE COLD WAR Crossword
Across
- 3. Canada given its influence was not a superpower but ‘this’
- 4. These are government-funded projects like roads and bridges
- 8. This was a Canadian PM who helped create UN peacekeeping and the new flag
- 9. This was a second radar defense line across central Canada
- 13. This was a North American air defence command used to monitor and defend against potential Soviet attacks
- 14. Built in the 1950s this is a highway connecting provinces across Canada
- 16. This is a list of basic rights for all people around the world
- 21. With the exception of the FLQ crisis this Act which allows he government to take emergency powers was only used during WW1 and WW2
- 24. This was a military alliance of communist countries
- 26. This is a system where people vote for their government
- 27. This is a system where the government controls everything and there is no private property
- 30. These are the First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples of Canada
- 31. This was a PM who supported Canadian rights and passed the Bill of Rights
- 37. At the height of the FLQ crisis this 1970 crisis involved kidnappings by the FLQ
- 39. This organization includes a group of independent countries working for peace and cooperation
- 43. This leader of the USSR during the Cold War was a threat to America especially during the Cuban Missile Crisis
- 45. This maritime province entered Confederation in 1949
- 47. This was a war between North (communist) and South Korea; Canada supported the South
- 48. These were popular wide skirts worn by teenage girls
- 49. This was a law that changed many rules at once (including legalizing some personal freedoms such as the right to access contraception and to access abortions)
- 50. This was a new, energetic style of music popular with youth
Down
- 1. The new Canadian flag adopted in 1965 bears this iconic symbol
- 2. These symbols of peace appear on the UN flag UN General Assembly – all member countries meet to discuss issues
- 5. Air and water pollution and damage caused by industry and cities became ‘these’ in the 1950s
- 6. This was a near nuclear war between the U.S. and USSR
- 7. These are songs that speak out against war or injustice
- 10. These jackets were often worn by rebellious youth who embodied the rock n’ roll spirit
- 11. This was a phrase said by Trudeau when asked about using military power during the FLQ crisis
- 12. This was a radar line in southern Canada
- 15. This PM of Canada was a social justice crusader known for major reforms and strong leadership
- 17. This was a U.S. president during the Cuban Missile Crisis
- 18. Otherwise known as cars these became more common as families could afford them
- 19. This was a famous American singer who toured through Vancouver in 1957 and helped popularize rock music
- 20. These were radar stations in the Arctic to detect Soviet attacks
- 22. This was a study that promoted women’s equality
- 23. This was a1969 proposal to remove special legal status of Indigenous peoples (widely opposed)
- 25. This was a Canadian bill which would become laws protecting basic rights and freedoms (1960)
- 28. This was a war between North and South Vietnam; widely protested
- 29. This is a small group within the UN that makes decisions about peace and security
- 32. This was a conflict over control of the Suez Canal; Canada helped keep peace
- 33. This U.S. president increased involvement in Vietnam
- 34. These rebellious youth rejected traditional values and promoted peace
- 35. The Omnibus Bill of 1969 legalized ‘this’ between consenting adults
- 36. These were women who stayed home to care for family and house
- 38. This was a very powerful country after WW2 (like the U.S. or USSR)
- 40. This was the divide between Western (democratic) and Eastern (communist) Europe during the Cold War
- 41. This technology brought a new form of entertainment and news in homes
- 42. This is a military alliance of Western countries
- 44. This was a crisis involving actions by a Quebec separatist group using violence
- 46. This is a person born during the population boom after WWII (1946–1965)