B. - Rapid City Area Schools

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Chapter Introduction
Section 1: The Nixon
Administration
Section 2: The Watergate
Scandal
Section 3: Ford and Carter
Section 4: New Approaches to
Civil Rights
Section 5: Environmentalism
Visual Summary
What Stops Government
Abuse of Power?
The Watergate scandal forced
Richard Nixon to become the first
president to resign from office. The
legacy of Watergate, together with
the Vietnam War and the economic
downturn of the late 1970s, caused
many people to distrust the
government and worry about the
nation’s future.
• How do you think Watergate
affected people’s attitudes toward
government?
• Do you think Nixon should have
been punished for his role in the
scandal?
The Nixon
Administration
How did Nixon’s
presidency change the
country and its position in
the world?
The Watergate Scandal
What were the causes and
effects of the Watergate
scandal?
Ford and Carter
How did Ford and Carter
respond to energy and
economic challenges?
New Approaches to
Civil Rights
What were the goals of the
African Americans, Native
Americans, and Americans
with disabilities when they
organized?
Environmentalism
What conditions did the
environmental agreement
address?
Big Ideas
Individual Action One of President Nixon’s most
dramatic accomplishments was changing the United
States’s relationship with the People’s Republic of
China and the Soviet Union.
Content Vocabulary
• revenue sharing
• détente
• impound
• summit
Academic Vocabulary
• welfare
• liberal
People and Events to Identify
• Southern strategy
• New Federalism
• Henry Kissinger
• Vietnamization
• SALT I
Should the president focus more on
domestic affairs or foreign affairs?
A. Domestic
B. Foreign
A. A
B. B
0%
A
0%
B
Appealing to Middle America
Nixon won the 1968 election by
appealing to a “silent majority” of
Americans.
Appealing to Middle America (cont.)
• Republican Richard Nixon won the 1968
presidential election against Democrat Hubert
Humphrey and independent George Wallace.
• One of the keys to Nixon’s victory was his
surprisingly strong showing in the South.
• He met with powerful South Carolina senator
Strom Thurmond and won his backing by
promising several things.
Appealing to Middle America (cont.)
• Following his victory, Nixon set out to attract
even more Southerners to the Republican
Party, an effort that became known as the
Southern strategy.
• Nixon had promised to uphold law and order
in his campaign.
Appealing to Middle America (cont.)
• He took the following actions:
– He specifically targeted the nation’s antiwar
protesters.
– He attacked the Supreme Court rulings that
expanded the rights of accused criminals.
– He replaced Chief Justice Warren
with Warren Burger, a respected
conservative judge.
Appealing to Middle America (cont.)
• Nixon had campaigned promising to reduce the
size of the federal government by dismantling
several federal programs and giving more
control to state and local governments, which
he called as New Federalism.
• Under this program, Congress passed a series
of revenue-sharing bills that granted federal
funds to state and local agencies to use.
• He sought to close down many of the programs
of Johnson’s Great Society.
Appealing to Middle America (cont.)
• He also sought to increase the power of the
executive branch.
• When Congress appropriated money for
programs he opposed, Nixon impounded
the funds.
• The Supreme Court eventually declared this
practice unconstitutional.
Appealing to Middle America (cont.)
• In 1969, Nixon proposed replacing the Aid to
Families with Dependent Children (AFDC)
with the Family Assistance Plan.
• Although the program won approval in the
House in 1970, it was defeated in the Senate.
To gain Strom Thurmond’s support, Nixon
made the following promises EXCEPT
A. To appoint only conservatives
to the federal courts
0%
D
0%
C
D. To oppose court ordered busing
B
C. To close down the programs
of Johnson’s Great Society
A. A
B. B
0%
C. 0%C
D. D
A
B. To name a Southerner
to the Supreme Court
Nixon’s Foreign Policy
With the support of national security
adviser Henry Kissinger, Nixon forged
better relationships with China and the
Soviet Union.
Nixon’s Foreign Policy (cont.)
• In a move that would greatly influence his
foreign policy, Nixon chose as his national
security adviser Henry Kissinger.
• Both Nixon and Kissinger believed that a
gradual withdrawal from Vietnam, while
simultaneously training South Vietnamese to
defend themselves, would work best.
• This policy of Vietnamization extended
globally in what came to be called the Nixon
Doctrine.
Nixon’s Foreign Policy (cont.)
• Both Nixon and Kissinger wanted to continue to
contain communism, but they believed that
engagement and negotiation with Communists
offered a better way for the United States to
achieve its international goals.
• They developed a new approach called
détente between the United States and its two
major Communist rivals, the Soviet Union and
China.
Nixon’s Foreign Policy (cont.)
• After a series of highly secret negotiations
between Kissinger and Chinese leaders, Nixon
announced that he would visit China in 1972.
• During the historic trip, the leaders of both
nations agreed to establish “more normal”
relations between their countries.
• Shortly after the public learned of American
negotiations with China, the Soviets
proposed an American-Soviet summit to be
held in May 1972.
Nixon’s Foreign Policy (cont.)
• The two superpowers signed the first
Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty, or SALT I,
a plan to limit nuclear arms that the two
nations had been working on for years.
The Nuclear Arms Race
What did Nixon do to reverse the United State’s
refusal to recognize the Communists as legitimate
rulers?
C. Visited China
0%
B
A
E. All of the above
0%
0%
C
D. A and B
0%
A
B
C
D
E
0%
E
B. Withdrew the Seventh Fleet
from defending Taiwan
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
D
A. Lifted trade and travel
restriction
Big Ideas
Government and Society The Watergate scandal
intensified lingering distrust of government that had
arisen during the Vietnam War.
Content Vocabulary
• executive privilege
• special prosecutor
Academic Vocabulary
• incident
• challenger
People and Events to Identify
• Sam J. Ervin
• John Dean
• Federal Campaign Act Amendments
Have there been any presidential scandals
in your lifetime?
A. Yes
B. No
A. A
B. B
0%
A
0%
B
The Roots of Watergate
Tactics used by Nixon’s supporters to
try to ensure his reelection in 1972 led
to the Watergate scandal.
The Roots of Watergate (cont.)
• The Watergate scandal began when the Nixon
administration tried to cover up its involvement
in the break-in at the Democratic National
Committee headquarters, along with other
illegal actions.
• Many scholars believe the roots of the
Watergate scandal lay in Nixon’s character
and the atmosphere that he and his advisers
created in the White House.
The Roots of Watergate (cont.)
• As part of their efforts to help the president
win reelection, Nixon’s advisers ordered five
men to break into the headquarters and steal
any sensitive campaign information.
• They were also to place wiretaps on the office
telephones.
• The media discovered that one of the burglars,
James McCord, was not only an ex-CIA official
but also a member of the Committee for the
Re-election of the President (CRP).
The Roots of Watergate (cont.)
• Reports also surfaced that the burglars had
been paid to execute the break-in from a secret
CRP fund controlled by the White House.
• Meanwhile, few people paid much attention
to the scandal during the 1972 campaign,
and Nixon won by a landslide.
Who did Nixon run against in the 1972
election?
A. George Wallace
B. George McGovern
C. Hubert Humphrey
D. Gerald Ford
0%
A
A.
B.
C.
0%
D.
B
A
B
C
0%
D
C
0%
D
The Cover-Up Unravels
The president’s refusal to cooperate
with Congress only focused attention
on his possible involvement.
The Cover-Up Unravels (cont.)
• Under relentless prodding from federal judge
John J. Sirica, McCord agreed to testify before
the newly created Senate Select Committee on
Presidential Campaign Activities.
• Sam J. Ervin was chairman of the committee.
• A parade of White House and campaign
officials exposed one illegality after another.
The Cover-Up Unravels (cont.)
• Foremost among the officials was counsel to
the president John Dean.
• Dean testified that former Attorney General
John Mitchell had ordered the Watergate
break-in and that Nixon had played an active
role in attempting to cover up any White
House involvement.
• The Senate committee tried to determine
who was telling the truth for the next month.
The Cover-Up Unravels (cont.)
• A White House aid revealed that Nixon had
ordered a taping system installed in the
White House to record all conversations.
• Nixon refused to hand over the tapes,
pleading executive privilege.
• Special prosecutor Archibald Cox took
Nixon to court to force him to give up the
recordings.
The Cover-Up Unravels (cont.)
• Nixon ordered Attorney General Elliot
Richardson to fire Cox, but Richardson
resigned.
• Richardson’s deputy also resigned.
• Nixon’s solicitor general, Robert Bork, finally
fired Cox.
The Cover-Up Unravels (cont.)
• The vice president, Spiro Agnew, was forced
to resign after investigators learned that he
had taken bribes as governor and vice
president.
• In July, the Supreme Court ruled that the
president had to turn over the tapes, and
Nixon complied.
• Several days later, the House Judiciary
Committee voted to impeach Nixon.
The Cover-Up Unravels (cont.)
• On August 9, 1974, Nixon resigned his office
in disgrace.
• Gerald Ford took the oath of office.
• The Watergate crisis led to new laws
intended to limit the power of the executive
branch:
− the Federal Campaign Act Amendments
The Cover-Up Unravels (cont.)
− the Ethics in Government Act
− the FBI Domestic Security Investigation
Guidelines Act
Nixon was impeached for the following reasons
EXCEPT
A. Stealing money from the
government
0%
D
C
D. Defying the authority
of Congress
B
C. Misusing federal agencies
to violate the rights of citizens
A. A
B. B
C. C
0%
0%
0%
D. D
A
B. Obstructing justice in the
Watergate cover-up
Big Ideas
Economics and Society A weakening economy and
growing energy crisis marred the terms of Presidents
Ford and Carter.
Content Vocabulary
• inflation
• embargo
• stagflation
Academic Vocabulary
• theory
• deregulation
People and Events to Identify
• OPEC
• Helsinki Accords
• Department of Energy
• Camp David Accords
Should a president have previous
experience in Washington?
A. Yes
B. No
A. A
B. B
0%
A
0%
B
The Economic Crisis of the 1970s
In the 1970s Americans had to face a
slowing economy and an end to
plentiful, cheap energy.
The Economic Crisis of the 1970s (cont.)
• The nation’s economic troubles began in the
mid-1960s when President Johnson
increased federal deficit spending to fund
both the Vietnam War and the Great Society
Programs, without raising taxes.
• This spending spurred inflation.
• In 1973, the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) decided to
use oil as a political weapon.
The Economic Crisis of the 1970s (cont.)
• OPEC announced that its members would
place an embargo on petroleum to countries
that supported Israel.
• The embargo ended in a few months, but oil
prices continued to rise, which led to a
recession.
• Another economic problem was the decline
of manufacturing.
Price of Gasoline, 1970–1990
The Economic Crisis of the 1970s (cont.)
• Nixon faced a new economic problem,
“stagflation,” in the early 1970s.
• Economists did not think inflation and
recession could occur at the same time, so
they were not sure which fiscal policy to
pursue.
• Nixon’s attempts to help the economy met with
little success.
Why did many U.S. factories close in the
early 1970s?
A. They were unable to compete with
Japanese and German factories.
0%
D
C
D. Too many accidents led to lawsuits
that forced factories to close.
B
C. Not enough people wanted to
work in factories.
A. A
B. B
0% C.
0% C0%
D. D
A
B. Americans stopped buying
as many products, so
demand decreased.
Ford and Carter Battle the
Economic Crisis
When Gerald Ford failed to solve the
nation’s problems, Americans turned to
political outsider Jimmy Carter to lead
the nation.
Ford and Carter Battle the
Economic Crisis (cont.)
• By 1975, the American economy was in the
worst recession since the Great Depression,
with unemployment at nearly 9%.
• None of President Ford’s plans revived the
economy.
• In foreign policy, Ford continued Nixon’s
general strategy.
Ford and Carter Battle the
Economic Crisis (cont.)
• In August 1975, he met with leaders of
NATO and the Warsaw Pact to sign the
Helsinki Accords.
• In the election of 1976, Jimmy Carter
narrowly defeated Ford.
• In the end, none of Carter’s efforts to fix the
economy succeeded either.
The Election of 1976
Ford and Carter Battle the
Economic Crisis (cont.)
• He felt the nation’s most serious problem
was its dependence on foreign oil.
• He proposed a national energy program to
conserve oil and to promote the use of coal
and renewable energy sources such as
solar power.
• He also convinced Congress to create the
Department of Energy.
Ford and Carter Battle the
Economic Crisis (cont.)
• He agreed to support deregulation of the oil
industry but insisted on a “windfall profits
tax” to prevent oil companies from
overcharging consumers.
• In the summer of 1979, instability in the Middle
East produced a second major fuel shortage
and deepened the nation’s economic problems.
Ford and Carter Battle the
Economic Crisis (cont.)
• By 1979, public opinion polls showed that
Carter’s popularity had dropped lower than
President Nixon’s during Watergate.
Why did Carter have so much difficulty in
solving the nation’s economic problems?
D. A and B
E. B and C
0%
B
A
0%
A
B
C
D
E
0%
0%
0%
E
C. A lack of understanding of
economics
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
D
B. Inability to work with Congress
C
A. Inexperience with Washington
Carter’s Foreign Policy
Carter attempted to reestablish the
United States as a moral force for good
on the international stage but had few
successes.
Carter’s Foreign Policy (cont.)
• A man of strong religious beliefs, Carter
argued that the U.S. must try to be “right and
honest and truthful and decent” in dealing
with other nations.
• In 1978, the Senate ratified two Panama
Canal treaties, which transferred control of
the canal to Panama on December 31, 1999.
• He also singled out the Soviet Union as a
violator of human rights.
Carter’s Foreign Policy (cont.)
• Under the Carter administration, détente
eroded further.
• It was in the Middle East that President
Carter met both his greatest foreign policy
triumph and his greatest failure.
• In 1978, Carter helped broker a historic
peace treaty, known as the Camp David
Accords, between Israel and Egypt.
Carter’s Foreign Policy (cont.)
• After the Shah was forced to flee Iran, an
Islamic republic was declared.
• Led by religious leader Ayatollah Khomeini,
the new regime distrusted the U.S. because
of their support of the Shah.
Carter’s Foreign Policy (cont.)
• Revolutionaries took 52 Americans hostage
from the American embassy.
• The Carter administration tried
unsuccessfully to negotiate for the hostages’
release.
• On January 20, 1981, the day Carter left
office, Iran released the Americans, ending
444 days in captivity.
How did Carter respond to Soviet troops invading
the Central Asian nation of Afghanistan in
December 1979?
A
D. A and B
E. A and C
0%
B
0%
0%
A
B
C
D
E
0%
0%
E
C. Boycotting the Summer Olympic
Games in Moscow
D
B. Sending American troops to
stop the fighting
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
C
A. Imposing an embargo on the
sale of grain
Big Ideas
Struggles for Rights African Americans, Native
Americans, and people with disabilities organized to
fight discrimination and gain access to better education
and jobs.
Content Vocabulary
• busing
• affirmative action
Academic Vocabulary
• criteria
• appropriate
People and Events to Identify
• Allan Bakke
• Jesse Jackson
• Congressional Black Caucus
• Shirley Chisholm
• American Indian Movement (AIM)
• Section 504
Do you feel that busing is the best
way to integrate schools?
A. Yes
B. No
A. A
B. B
0%
A
0%
B
African Americans Seek
Greater Opportunity
During the 1960s and 1970s, African
Americans built on the civil rights
achievements of the 1950s to advance
their social, political, and legal status.
African Americans Seek
Greater Opportunity (cont.)
• In the 1970s, African Americans began to
push harder for improvements in public
education and access to good schools.
• Many schools remained segregated, not by
law, but because whites and African
Americans lived in different neighborhoods.
African Americans Seek
Greater Opportunity (cont.)
• State courts began ordering local
governments to bus children to schools
outside their neighborhoods to achieve
greater racial balance—known an busing.
• Civil rights leaders also began advocating
affirmative action as a new way to solve
economic and educational discrimination.
African Americans Seek
Greater Opportunity (cont.)
• Affirmative action programs did not go
unchallenged.
• In 1978, in University of California Regents v.
Bakke, the Supreme Court ruled that the
university had violated Allan Bakke’s civil
rights by turning him down in favor of a
minority.
African Americans Seek
Greater Opportunity (cont.)
• They ruled that schools had an interest in
maintaining a diverse student body but could
not reserve certain slots for minority
students.
African Americans Seek
Greater Opportunity (cont.)
• New political leaders emerged in the African
American community in the 1970s, such as:
– Jesse Jackson
– Louis Farrakhan
– Shirley Chisholm
– L. Douglas Wilder
– Andrew Young
– David Dinkins
• In 1971, African American members of Congress
organized the Congressional Black Caucus to
more clearly represent their concerns.
Which of the following leaders
organized the Million Man March?
A. Andrew Young
B. Louis Farrakhan
C. L. Douglas Wilder
D. David Dinkins
0%
A
A.
B.
0%
C.
D.
B
A
B
0%
C
D
C
0%
D
Native Americans Raise Their Voices
The most impoverished minority group
in America, Native Americans, began
organizing for civil rights.
Native Americans Raise Their Voices (cont.)
• In 1961, more than 400 members of 67
Native American groups gathered in Chicago
and issued a manifesto, known as the
Declaration of Indian Purpose.
• Congress passed the Indian Civil Rights Act
in 1968.
• The American Indian Movement (AIM)
believed that government efforts were too
modest.
Native Americans Raise Their Voices (cont.)
• By the mid-1970s, Native Americans had
begun to achieve some of their goals.
– In 1975, Congress passed the Indian
Self-Determination and Educational
Assistance Act.
– More Native Americans moved into policymaking positions at the Bureau of Indian
Affairs.
– Native Americans won several court cases
involving land and water rights.
In 1970, the life expectancy for Native
Americans was almost seven years
below the national average.
A. True
B. False
A. A
B. B
0%
B
A
0%
The Disability Rights Movement
During the 1970s, people with
disabilities fought for greater rights
and access to education and jobs.
The Disability Rights Movement (cont.)
• People with disabilities looked to the federal
government to protect their civil rights.
• The passage of the Architectural Barriers Act
in 1968 was one victory.
• The Rehabilitation Act of 1973 was even
more significant, especially Section 504.
The Disability Rights Movement (cont.)
• In 1966, Congress created the Bureau for
the Education of the Handicapped.
• In 1975, the Education for All Handicapped
Children Act required that all students with
disabilities receive a free, appropriate
education.
• In 1990, Congress enacted the Americans
with Disabilities Act.
Mainstreaming is a result of which act?
A. Education for All
Handicapped Children Act
0%
0%
0%
D
0%
A
D. Rehabilitation Act of 1973
A
B
C
D
C
C. Architectural Barriers Act
A.
B.
C.
D.
B
B. Americans with
Disabilities Act
Big Ideas
Group Action Increased awareness of environmental
issues inspired a grassroots campaign to protect nature.
Content Vocabulary
• smog
• fossil fuel
Academic Vocabulary
• intensify
• alternative
People and Events to Identify
• Rachel Carson
• Environmental Protection Agency
• Love Canal
• Three Mile Island
Do you feel that the government does
enough to protect the environment?
A. Yes
B. No
A. A
B. B
0%
A
0%
B
The Origins of Environmentalism
Concerns about the effects of a deadly
pesticide, the visible signs of pollution
in American cities, and an influential
book inspired a movement to protect
the environment.
The Origins of Environmentalism (cont.)
• Rachel Carson helped trigger the new
environmental movement.
• Her 1962 book, Silent Spring, assailed the
increasing use of pesticides, particularly DDT.
• People not only read her book but noticed
changes in the environment, such as smog
and other types of pollution.
The Origins of Environmentalism (cont.)
• Many observers point to April 1970 as the
unofficial beginning of the environmentalist
movement.
• The Audubon Society, the Sierra Club, and
the Wilderness Society grew rapidly in
membership and political influence.
Why is April 1970 marked as the unofficial
beginning of the environmentalist movement?
A. The government recognized
environmental issues as a
problem.
0%
D
C
D. The Audubon Society was
founded.
B
C. The Natural Resources Defense
Council was created.
A. A
B. B
C. C
0%
0%
0%
D. D
A
B. The first Earth Day
celebration was held.
The Environmental Movement Blossoms
Pressure from citizens and activist
groups led Congress to pass major
environmental legislation.
The Environmental Movement Blossoms
(cont.)
• In 1970, President Nixon signed the National
Environmental Policy Act, which created the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
• The Clean Air Act also became law in 1970.
• The Clean Water Act and the Endangered
Species Act were also passed.
The Environmental Movement Blossoms
(cont.)
• The residents of Love Canal, New York
noticed high incidences of health problems
in their community and learned that their
community sat atop a decades-old toxic
waste dump.
• In 1978, the state permanently relocated
more than 200 families.
• In 1980, Carter declared the site a federal
disaster area and moved over 600 remaining
families.
The Environmental Movement Blossoms
(cont.)
• After a small leak at a Three Mile Island, a
nuclear facility outside Harrisburg, PA, many
people doubted the safety of nuclear energy.
• Supporters of nuclear energy hailed it as a
cleaner and less expensive alternative to
fossil fuels.
In the years since the Three Mile Island accident,
the following have occurred EXCEPT
A. Sixty nuclear power plants have
shut down.
0%
D
A
B
C0%
D
C
D. Many people have doubted
the safety of nuclear energy.
B
C. All nuclear power plants have
been shut down.
A.
B.
C.0%
0%
D.
A
B. No new facilities have been
built since 1973.
An Era of Challenges
Major Domestic Issues of the 1970s
• A nation is divided and angry over
the Vietnam War.
• An energy crisis is triggered by
OPEC’s raising of oil prices.
• A stagnant economy exists with
both inflation and high
unemployment.
An Era of Challenges
Major Domestic Issues of the 1970s
• Ongoing racial problems occur in
major cities.
• Growing awareness of
environmental problems including
air and water pollution, toxic
waste (at Love Canal and
other sites), the overuse of
pesticides, plus a crisis with
the nuclear power
plant at Three Mile Island.
An Era of Challenges
Major Foreign Policy Issues of the 1970s
• Cold War tensions continue with the
Soviet Union and China.
• The Soviet Union invades
Afghanistan.
• War between Israel and its Arab
neighbors breaks out in 1973,
and ongoing violence occurs
in the Middle East.
• A revolution in Iran leads to the
taking of American hostages.
New Policies and Activism
Responding to Domestic Issues
• Nixon attempts to win over Southern
conservatives, but his administration’s
determination to win leads to the
Watergate cover-up and Nixon’s
subsequent resignation.
• Ford’s WIN campaign fails to overcome inflation.
• Carter urges Americans to conserve energy, creates
the Department of Energy, and asks Congress to pass
legislation deregulating the oil industry.
New Policies and Activism
Responding to Domestic Issues
• Civil rights leaders propose affirmative
action policies to reduce
discrimination; the Supreme Court
upholds some types of affirmative
action in the Bakke case.
• Busing begins in northern cities to integrate schools.
• Environmentalist movement begins; Nixon creates
the EPA.
New Policies and Activism
Responding to Foreign Policy Issues
• Nixon and Kissinger introduce the
policy of détente and begin talks with
both the USSR and China.
• Carter mediates negotiations between
Israel and Egypt leading to the first
Arab-Israeli peace treaty.
• The United States imposes a grain embargo on the
USSR for invading Afghanistan and boycotts the
Moscow Olympics.
New Policies and Activism
Responding to Foreign Policy Issues
• The hostage crisis with Iran drags on
for more than a year; an American
rescue attempt fails, and the hostages
are not released until Carter
leaves office.
Chapter Transparencies Menu
Why It Matters
Cause-and-Effect Transparency
Unit Time Line Transparency
Select a transparency to view.
ANSWER: No.
Nixon would still
have won the
majority of
electoral votes.
revenue sharing
federal tax money that is distributed
among the states
impound
to take possession of
détente
a policy that attempts to relax or ease
tensions between nations
summit
a meeting of heads of government
welfare
aid in the form of money or
necessities for those in need,
especially disadvantaged
social groups
liberal
a person who generally believes the
government should take an active
role in the economy and in social
programs but should not dictate social
behavior
executive privilege
principle stating that communications
of the executive branch should
remain confidential to protect national
security
special prosecutor
a lawyer from outside the government
appointed by an attorney general or
Congress to investigate a government
official for misconduct while in office
incident
occurrence of a happening or
situation that is a separate unit of
experience
challenger
one who enters a competition
inflation
the loss of value of money
embargo
a government ban on trade with other
countries
stagflation
persistent inflation combined with
stagnant consumer demand and
relatively high unemployment
theory
a hypothesis meant for argument or
investigation
deregulation
the act or process of removing
restrictions or regulations
busing
a policy of transporting children to
schools outside their neighborhoods
to achieve greater racial balance
affirmative action
an active effort to improve
employment or educational
opportunities for minorities
criteria
standards on which a judgment or
action may be based
appropriate
to allocate funds for spending
smog
fog made heavier and darker by
smoke and chemical fumes
fossil fuel
a fuel formed in the earth from
decayed plant or animal remains
intensify
to become more frequent and
powerful
alternative
existing or functioning outside the
established cultural, social, or
economic system
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Click the History Online button to access online textbook features.
Click the Reference Atlas button to access the Interactive Reference Atlas.
Click the Exit button or press the Escape key [Esc] to end the chapter slide show.
Click the Help button to access this screen.
Links to Presentation Plus! features such as Maps in Motion, Graphs in Motion,
Charts in Motion, Concepts in Motion, and figures from your textbook are located at
the bottom of relevant screens.
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