Term
| Schultz v. Wheaton Glass Co. (1970) |
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Definition
| ruled that jobs held by men & women need to be "substantially equal" but not "identical" to fall under Equal Pay Act. An employer can no longer change the job titles of women workers in order to pay them less. |
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Term
| San Diego State College & SUNY-Buffalo (1970) |
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Definition
| offer first Women's Studies Programs in US |
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Term
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Definition
$0.59 for every $1 earned by men *non-white women earn even less, although gap is closing |
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Term
Women's health book first published as newsprint booklet for $0.35 *now full book version used in some classes (1970) |
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Definition
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Term
| Women's groups began to focus on _____ & the creation of _______. |
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Definition
| battered women's issues & shelters |
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Definition
| song which became anthem for women's liberation movement |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
| Phillips v. Martin Marietta Corporation (1971) |
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Definition
| outlaws practice of private employers refusing to hire women with pre-school children |
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Term
| "Most women's magazines simply try to mold women into bigger and better consumers" (1972) |
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Definition
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Term
| Made the face of the women's liberation movement because she is pretty and most supporters are dyke-ish (1972) |
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Definition
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Term
| first black woman to run for US Presidency nomination (1972) |
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Definition
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Term
| wrote "Unbossed & Unbought" (1972) |
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Definition
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Term
| President that signed Title IV (1972) |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
| no more discrimination on the basis of sex for an education program or activity receiving federal funding |
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Term
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Definition
ruled that women have right to abort fetus during 1st trimester of pregnancy *canceled anti-abortion laws in 46 states |
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Term
| Pittsburgh Press v. Pittsburgh Commission Human Relations (1973) |
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Definition
| bans sex-segregated "help wanted" advertising as violation of Title VII |
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Term
| Cleveland Board of Education v. La Fleur (1974) |
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Definition
| determined it is illegal to force pregnant women to take maternity leave on the assumption they are incapable of working in their physical condition |
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Term
| Congress outlawed discrimination of _____ & _____ on the basis of sex. (1974) |
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Definition
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Term
| Hundreds of colleges now offer women's studies programs. 230 centers on college campuses now provide ________. (1974) |
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Definition
| support services for women |
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Term
| Time Person of the Year award goes to _____. (1975) |
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Definition
| American Women to celebrate the success of the women's movement. |
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Term
| Taylor v. Louisiana (1975) |
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Definition
| denies states the right to exclude women from juries |
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Term
| The first marital rape law is enacted in _______, making it illegal for a husband to rape his wife. (1976) |
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Definition
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Term
| _________ first starts appearing on drug store shelves. (1978) |
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Definition
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Term
| One reason why a grand celebration of America’s bicentennial seemed inappropriate in 1976. |
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Definition
| Watergate led to distrust of the government |
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Term
| ___________ emerged as a national (and global) political issue in the 1970s. |
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Definition
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Term
| Who are the "Plumbers" in Watergate and what did they do? |
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Definition
| Guys working for Nixon. Wiretapping, making enemy list, etc. |
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Term
| FBI most wanted for involvement with the Weathermen Underground. |
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Definition
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Term
| A head leader of the Weathermen |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
*revolutionary party formed for the overthrow of the US government *allied with the "Black Liberation Movement" and other radical movements |
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Term
| Ford lost re-election due mainly to _____. |
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Definition
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Term
| Who started the madman theory? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
| attempting to make hostile communist countries think the US President was a loose-cannon so that they would avoid provoking him. |
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Term
| leaked 7,000 FBI documents |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
| first black mayor of mayor city (Atlanta)? |
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Definition
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Term
| Mayor said was necessary for Atlanta airport expansion |
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Definition
| full participation & teamwork |
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Term
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Definition
| amount of black workers required to deem as full participation |
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Term
| in charge of affirmative action policies and granting city work permits |
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Definition
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Term
| parent of a Boston school child and member of the Boston NAACP |
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Definition
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Term
| What did Ruth Batson say an education meant to the black community? |
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Definition
giving their children a chance "fight for their lives" |
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Term
| Strategy(s) employed by the black community in the 1960s to secure a quality education for their children |
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Definition
| boycotts & parent-ran schools |
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Term
| Strategy(s) employed by the black community in the 1970s to secure a quality education for their children |
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Definition
| federal lawsuit to put black kids in white schools |
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Term
| deputy mayor of Boston that stated, "The business, financial, and religious communities took a walk in the 1970s leaving politicians and parents as the only people that cared about the issue" of quality education across the board. |
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Definition
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Term
| Result of the business, financial, and religious communities' walk from the education issue in Boston (1970s) |
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Definition
protests and complaints from parents & politicians *pitted the communities against each other |
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Term
| Had the Boston community stepped up in the education movement (1970s) how would the situation have been different? |
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Definition
| would have received support and encouragement |
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Term
| What did Ruth Batson call the absence of support and the lack of encouragement from state and city level officials? |
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Definition
| complete official neglect (CON) |
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Term
| During the 1st two years of integration in Boston how many white students left the school system? |
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Definition
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Term
| What happened in 1977 when Louis Day Hicks lost her run for the Boston School Committee? |
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Definition
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Term
| Who won Louis Hicks' seat on the Boston School Committee? |
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Definition
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Term
| Why did Maynard Jackson say that being the 1st black mayor is "something you wish on your enemy (tongue in cheek)"? |
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Definition
high expectations & anxiety pressure from whites |
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Term
| What did Maynard Jackson do as mayor in terms of changing political and economic status quo? |
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Definition
| hired minorities & women, made affirmative action a city policy |
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Term
| Why did the business community dislike Emma Darnell? |
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Definition
| she was a smart, black female |
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Term
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Definition
Special Assistant to President Nixon's "Eyes & Ears" |
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Term
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Definition
Counsel to President Conducted White House Inquiry |
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Term
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Definition
Acting FBI Director Conducted Watergate investigation and fed findings to Dean |
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Term
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Definition
Director of CIA refused to allow Nixon & Haldeman to use CIA as "National Security" to cover burglaries |
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Term
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Definition
Nixon's Chief of Staff $750,000 secret fund |
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Term
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Definition
| committee to re-elect the President |
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Term
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Definition
director of Nixon's '72 campaign (CREEP) former Attorney General authorized Gemstone payments |
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Definition
Deputy Director of CREEP original leader of Plumbers |
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Term
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Definition
ex-FBI creator of Gemstone counsel to CREEP Hunt's supervisor |
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Term
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Definition
ex-Secretary of Commerce treasurer for CREEP $350,000+ secret fund |
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Term
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Definition
Chief Domestic Policy Advisor Created/authorized "Plumbers" under "Gemstone" |
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Term
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Definition
"Special Investigation Unit" assumed leadership of Plumbers |
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Term
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Definition
ex-CIA CREEP Security Chief led "Cubans"/"Plumbers" under Liddy |
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Term
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Definition
worked for Cubans/Plumbers ex-CIA Security Coordinator for CREEP |
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Term
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Definition
ex-NYC Police $ "Bagman" paid Hunt and other Cubans to keep them quiet |
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