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Title: Exploring American History Unit X Modern America


1
Exploring American HistoryUnit X Modern America
  • Chapter 30 Searching for Order
  • Section 2 America in the 1970s

2
FACTS about this decade.
  • Population 204,879,000 Unemployed in 1970
    4,088,000 National Debt 382 billion Average
    salary 7,564 Food prices milk, 33 cents a
    qt. bread, 24 cents a loaf round steak, 1.30 a
    pound Life Expectancy Male, 67.1 Female, 74.8
  • Watergate forced a president to resign or be
    impeached.
  • SALT I, the first series of Strategic Arms
    Limitation Talks, extended from November 1969 to
    May 1972. During that period the United States
    and the Soviet Union negotiated the first
    agreements to place limits and restraints on some
    of their central and most important armaments.

3
Education
  • Social movements, particularly the anti-war
    movement, were highly visible on college and
    university campuses.
  • The Kent State massacre was the most devastating
    event, with four students gunned down by Ohio
    National Guardsmen attempting to stem the
    anti-war demonstrations.
  • Mandatory busing to achieve racial school
    integration, particularly in Boston and other
    Northeastern cities, often led to violence and a
    disruption of the educational process.
  • On a positive educational note, Congress
    guaranteed equal educational access to the
    handicapped with the Education of All Handicapped
    Children Act of 1975.
  • Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Bd. of Ed.
    (1971)- busing can be used as a tool to
    desegregate schools

4
Fads
  • Mood rings, lava lamps, Rubik's cube, Sea
    Monkeys, smiley face stickers, and pet rocks all
    captured the imagination of Americans during this
    decade. The wildest fad surely was streaking nude
    through very public places! Families vacationed
    in station wagons and everyone wanted an RV.

5
Fashion
  • The men sported shoulder length hair.
  • Non-traditional clothing became the rage,
    including bellbottom pants, hip huggers, colorful
    patches, hot pants, platform shoes, earth shoes,
    clogs, T-shirts, and gypsy dresses. Knits and
    denims were the fabrics of choice.
  • Leisure suits for men became commonplace, and
    women were fashionable in everything from
    ankle-length grandmother dresses to hot pants and
    micro-miniskirts.
  • The movie Annie Hall (1977) even inspired a
    fashion trend with women sporting traditional
    men's clothing such as derby hats, tweed jackets,
    and neckties worn with baggy pants or skirts.

6
The movies
  • The Seventies was the decade of the big comeback
    for the movies. After years of box office erosion
    caused by the popularity of television, a
    combination of blockbuster movies and new
    technologies such as Panavision and Dolby sound
    brought the masses back to the movies. The sci-fi
    adventure and spectacular special effects of
    George Lucas's Star Wars made it one of the
    highest grossing films ever.
  • Other memorable movies were the disaster movies,
    Towering Inferno, Earthquake, Poseidon Adventure,
    and Airport. Sylvester Stallone's Rocky
    reaffirmed the American dream and gave people a
    hero with a "little guy comes out on top" plot.
    The Godfather spawned multiple sequels. There
    also was the terror of Steven Spielberg's Jaws,
    the chilling Exorcist, and the moving Kramer vs.
    Kramer. There was a definite public yearning for
    simpler, more innocent times as evidenced by the
    popularity of the movies, American Graffiti and
    Grease, which both presented a romanticized view
    of the Fifties. Saturday Night Fever with John
    Travolta fueled the "disco fever" already
    sweeping the music and dance club scenes and the
    nation's experience in the Vietnam War and its
    aftermath influenced the themes of several
    movies, including Coming Home, The Deer Hunter,
    and Apocalypse Now.

7
Television and the movies
  • Television came of age in the Seventies as topics
    once considered taboo were broached on the
    airwaves for the first time. Leading the way was
    the humorous social satire of All in the Family
    which had plots on many controversial issues such
    as abortion, race, and homosexuality. Saturday
    Night Live also satirized topics and people once
    thought of as off limits for such treatment, such
    as sex and religion. Nothing was considered
    sacred.
  • Television satellite news broadcasts from the
    frontlines of the conflict in Vietnam continued
    to bring the horrors of war into the homes of
    millions of Americans and intensified anti-war
    sentiment in the country. The immensely popular
    TV miniseries Roots fostered an interest in
    genealogy, a greater appreciation of whites for
    the plight of blacks, and an increased interest
    in African American history. Happy Days, which
    followed the lives of a group of fifties-era
    teenagers, was TV's primary nod to nostalgia,
    while The Brady Bunch comically presented the
    contemporary family. The relatively new publicly
    funded Corporation for Public Broadcasting gained
    viewers and stature with such fare as Sesame
    Street for children, and live broadcasts of the
    Senate Watergate hearings.

8
Technology
  • The floppy disc appeared in 1970, and the next
    year Intel introduced the microprocessor, the
    "computer on a chip."
  • Apollo 17, the last manned craft to the moon,
    brought back 250 samples of rock and soil.
    Unmanned space probes explored the moon, Jupiter,
    Mars, Saturn, Uranus, and Venus.
  • The U.S. Apollo 18 and the USSR's Soyuz 19 linked
    up in space to conduct joint experiments.
  • Atari produced the first low-priced integrated
    circuit TV games, and the videocassette recorder
    (VCR) changed home entertainment forever. J
  • Jumbo jets revolutionized commercial flight,
    doubling passenger capacity and increasing flight
    range to 6,000 miles.
  • The neutron bomb, which destroys living beings
    but leaves buildings intact, was developed.
  • In medicine, ultrasound diagnostic techniques
    were developed. The sites of DNA production on
    genes were discovered, and the fledging research
    in genetic engineering was halted pending
    development of safer techniques. The first test
    tube baby was born, developed from an
    artificially inseminated egg implanted in the
    mother's womb.

9
Music
  • This decade saw the breakup of the Beatles and
    the death of Elvis Presley, robbing rock of two
    major influences.
  • Pop music splintered into a multitude of styles
    soft-rock, hard rock, country rock, folk rock,
    punk rock, shock rock - and
  • The dance craze of the decade, disco!
  • Among the top names in popular music were
    Aerosmith, the Bee Gees, David Bowie, Jackson
    Browne, Alice Cooper, Eagles, Electric Light
    Orchestra, Emerson, Lake Palmer, Fleetwood Mac,
    Billy Joel, Elton John, Led Zeppelin, John
    Lennon, Pink Floyd, Bob Seger, Bruce Springsteen,
    Rod Stewart,Three Dog Night, and The Who.
  • "Easy listening" regained popularity with groups
    such as the Carpenters, and Bob Marley gained a
    huge core of fans in the U.S. performing Jamaican
    reggae music.

10
The end of the Vietnam War
  • The U.S. had always had
  • a definite reason to fight a war
  • Declared war on its enemies
  • a plan or strategy for fighting and winning
  • Signed a peace treaty that ended the war.
  • 1969-1973 most powerful- second march on
    Washington and My Lai Massacre
  • 1970- Bombing of Cambodia, Kent State and the
    Pentagon Papers.
  • War Hawks, Doves, Draft evasion.
  • Vietnamization and Domino Theory
  • Cease Fire- January 1973
  • Cease fire in Vietnam
  • People of South Vietnam to choose own government.
  • Release of all American POWs.
  • Rest of U.S. troops to withdrawn in 60 days
  • 150,000 North Vietnamese troops to remain in
    South Vietnam

11
Oil Embargo
  • October 17, 1973, when Arab members of the
    Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
    (OPEC), in the midst of the Yom Kippur War,
    announced that they would no longer ship
    petroleum to nations that had supported Israel in
    its conflict with Egyptthat is, to the United
    States and its allies in Western Europe.
  • At around the same time, OPEC-member states
    agreed to use their leverage over the world
    price-setting mechanism for oil to quadruple
    world oil prices

12
Environment
  • What is Love Canal? Simply put, it is an
    incomplete canal, or just a trench, built in
    western New York state in the 1890s. From the
    1930s through the 1950s, it was used as a
    chemical waste dump. The surrounding land was
    then sold and used for residential purposes, and
    soon people began complaining about strange odors
    and possible health problems. Since the late
    1970s, many studies have been done to ascertain
    whether any health problems can be traced to the
    waste dumped into Love Canal.
  • Three Mile Island Nuclear Plant is just outside
    Harrisburg, Penn.
  • A failed valve, and a miss reading by a worker
    caused the reactor to be exposed and radiation to
    escape. No deaths or illnesses. 1/2 hour away
    from a meltdown.

13
Patty Hearst and the SLA
  • SLA was an American paramilitary group and was a
    proponent of radical ideology. Members of the
    group were accused and convicted of committing
    murders, bank robberies, and acts of violence
    between 1973 and 1975. Even though they never had
    more than 13 members, they became the top ongoing
    media story during their underground fugitive
    period. More than anything else, this was
    generated by their spectacular kidnapping of
    wealthy media heiress Patty Hearst, making them
    household names. On Feb. 4, 1974, the SLA carried
    out its most notorious crime the kidnapping of
    19-year-old newspaper heiress Patricia Campbell
    Hearst, the granddaughter of publisher William
    Randolph Hearst and an art history major at
    Berkeley, it was a national media event.
  • A SLA communiqué to a local newspaper said the
    group had "served an arrest warrant" on Hearst,
    daughter of the "corporate enemy of the people.
  • SLA's first demand that every poor person in
    California be given 70 in free food. The
    estimated cost of such a food distribution would
    be 400 million. Instead a food donation program
    was set that provided 2 million in food.
  • The SLA robbed a Hibernia Bank branch in San
    Francisco. Two surveillance cameras captured
    Hearst carrying a carbine and shouting orders at
    terrified bank customers. Two bystanders were
    shot during the robbery, which netted the SLA
    10,692. Urban Guerilla or Brainwashed? It seemed
    to all that she had become more and more
    sympathetic with the aims of the SLA and
    eventually joined the group, taking part in their
    illegal activities, including bank robberies.
  • When she went on trial for bank robbery, she
    claimed the SLA had brainwashed her into
    believing the FBI would kill her if she tried to
    return to her parents. A jury rejected Hearst's
    claim and she spent two years in prison before
    President Carter commuted her sentence.

14
Jim Jones and the Peoples Temple.
  • The charismatic leader of Jonestown, was Jim
    Jones, a preacher who set up the Peoples Temple
    in San Francisco and ultimately moved his
    followers to a more clandestine site in Guyana.
  • While Jones was preaching in San Francisco, he
    helped out many local and even national campaigns
    and was seen as a healer which much power in the
    community.
  • However, once he had all of his members in
    Jonestown, his personality changed. Away from the
    constraints of American soil, Jonestown and its
    members became very cultish.
  • In 1978, 913 followers of Jim Jones and the
    Peoples Temple committed a mass suicide in
    northern Guyana at a site called, Jonestown.
    After making all 276 children at Jonestown drink
    the punch, all the adults proceeded. In the end,
    after Jones apparently killed himself with a
    gunshot to the head.

15
America in the 1970s
  • The Big Idea
  • Americans faced major challenges both at home and
    around the world in the 1970s.
  • Main Ideas
  • American society debated key social issues during
    the 1970s.
  • Jimmy Carter was elected president in 1976.
  • Carter had successes as well as failures in
    foreign policy during his administration.

16
Main Idea 1 American society debated key social
issues during the 1970s.
  • The American population was changing in the
    1970s.
  • Most immigrants came from Latin America and Asia.
  • Birth rate declined
  • By 1970, Americans 65 and older became one of the
    fastest growing population groups.
  • America faced new challenges in finding ways to
    balance the views of all Americans.
  • The Equal Rights Amendment caused national
    debate, but failed.
  • 1972 law known as Title IX banned discrimination
    on basis of sex in federally funded educational
    programs.
  • In 1973 the Supreme Court legalized abortion in
    Roe v. Wade.

17
Issues of the 1970s
  • Affirmative Action
  • Americans debated affirmative action, the
    practice of giving special consideration to
    nonwhites or women to make up for past
    discrimination.
  • Supporters argued it was needed to improve
    educational and job opportunities for minorities
    and women.
  • Opponents insisted that any race- or gender-based
    preferences were unfair.
  • Environment
  • Biologist Rachel Carson brought attention to
    environmental issues such as pollution in the
    1970s.
  • April 22, 1970, was the first celebration of
    Earth Day.
  • Congress passed new laws to limit the release of
    pollutants.
  • The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) was
    established in 1970 to enforce environmental
    legislation.
  • Debates on balancing business and environmental
    concerns.

18
Main Idea 2Jimmy Carter was elected president
in 1976.
  • Democratic nominee Jimmy Carter defeated
    Republican nominee Gerald Ford in a close 1976
    election.
  • Carter faced many challenges.
  • Economy sluggish, high unemployment and inflation
  • High oil prices
  • Had a difficult time convincing Congress to
    support his proposals
  • Carter hoped to use nuclear energy to help solve
    energy crisis.
  • Accident at Three Mile Island nuclear power plant
    caused new worries about safety of nuclear
    energy.
  • No new reactors would be built until the
    mid-1980s.

19
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20
Environment
  • What is Love Canal? Simply put, it is an
    incomplete canal, or just a trench, built in
    western New York state in the 1890s. From the
    1930s through the 1950s, it was used as a
    chemical waste dump. The surrounding land was
    then sold and used for residential purposes, and
    soon people began complaining about strange odors
    and possible health problems. Since the late
    1970s, many studies have been done to ascertain
    whether any health problems can be traced to the
    waste dumped into Love Canal.
  • Three Mile Island Nuclear Plant is just outside
    Harrisburg, Penn.
  • A failed valve, and a miss reading by a worker
    caused the reactor to be exposed and radiation to
    escape. No deaths or illnesses. 1/2 hour away
    from a meltdown.

21
President Jimmy Carter
  • 39th President- 1977-1981 - Democrat
  • Who was Jimmy Carter?
  • Foreign Problems
  • Human Rights
  • Russians SALT II
  • Panama Canal Treaties (2)
  • Developed Nations and Underdeveloped Nations
  • Middle East- Arabs (PLO) v. Israel
  • Camp David Accords - Peace Treaty 1976
  • Hostages in Iran
  • Nicaragua and the Sandanistas
  • Soviets Invade Afghanistan and the Olympic
    Boycott.

22
Main Idea 3Carter had successes as well as
failures in foreign policy during his
administration.
  • Carter favored policies that promoted human
    rights the basic rights and freedoms of all
    people.
  • Reduced U.S. aid to former allies that committed
    human rights violations
  • Worked to pressure South African government into
    ending apartheid, a system of laws requiring
    racial segregation
  • Called for sanctions, or economic penalties, to
    encourage reform

23
Carters Foreign Policy
  • Human Rights
  • Basic ideas outlined in the United Nations
    Declaration of Human Rights
  • Carter expected friends and enemies alike to
    uphold the highest standards in the treatment of
    their citizens.
  • Soviet Relations
  • Carter wrote to Brezhnev about his concerns with
    Soviet human rights issues.
  • Brezhnev politely said that each country should
    mind their own business.
  • Concluded SALT II talks in 1979 that limited
    nuclear weapons
  • Recognizing China
  • Formally recognized the government of the
    Communist Peoples Republic of China
  • Ended recognition of the Republic of China on
    Taiwan

24
Latin America and the Soviet Union
  • Policy in Latin America
  • In 1977 Carter signed treaties that would
    transfer control of Panama Canal to Panama by the
    year 2000.
  • Relations with the Soviet Union
  • Détente broke down when Carter criticized the
    Soviet Union for committing human rights abuses.
  • When the Soviets invaded Afghanistan in 1979,
    Carter broke off arms talks and refused to allow
    athletes to participate in 1980 Summer Olympics
    in Moscow.

25
Panama Canal Treaties
  • Why-
  • The U.S. had been in control of Canal since 1903
    and could be forever.
  • Riots in Panama demanding control of canal, the
    biggest industry in Panama.
  • Panamanian Dictator Omar Torrijos threatened to
    blow up the canal if the U.S. didn't get out.
  • 1st Treaty
  • U.S. hands over Canal to Panama on Dec. 31, 1999
  • 2nd Treaty
  • Canal to be neutral waterway
  • U.S. has permanent right to protect and defend
    that neutrality.

26
Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan- 1979
  • U.S. embargoes grain sales and technology, and
    culture exchanges to USSR.
  • U.S. and 61 other nations boycott the 1980 Summer
    Olympics in Moscow
  • The Soviet stay in Afghanistan until April 14,
    1988- Soviet Vietnam.

27
Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan- 1979- 515 min.
28
The Middle East
  • Carter worked to ease tensions in the Middle
    East.
  • In 1978, he helped Egypt and Israel reach a peace
    agreement in the Camp David Accords.
  • In 1979, rebels overthrew the shah, or king, of
    Iran and established an Islamic fundamentalist
    dictatorship.
  • On November 4, 1979, a group of Iranian students
    attacked the U.S. embassy in Tehran, the capital
    of Iran, and seized about 90 hostages.
  • The Iran hostage crisis lasted for more than a
    year.
  • After a failed rescue attempt in 1980, many
    Americans lost confidence in Carters leadership.

29
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30
Camp David Accords
  • Camp David Accords- 1977
  • Anwar Sadat- new President of Egypt- wants peace
    with Israel.
  • Prime Minister Menachem Begin of Israel
  • President Jimmy Carter of U.S.A
  • All three meet at Camp David, the presidential
    retreat.
  • Sept. 17. 1978 peace agreement reached.
  • Other Arab nation objected and said Egypt acts
    alone. Arabs put a economic boycott on Egypt.

31
Iran and the United States
  • Shah of Iran
  • Improved education
  • Womens rights
  • Improved public health
  • U.S. ally
  • but was a dictator, corrupt, and used torture to
    westernize
  • Islamic revolution
  • Overthrew the Shah. Shah goes to US for Cancer
    treatment
  • Ayatollah Khomeini- New Fanatical Muslim leader
    of Iran
  • Fundamental Islam
  • U.S. Embassy in Teheran
  • Our interest were oil based.
  • Islamic fundamentalist mob invades embassy and
    siezed the Americans there.
  • Demand return of Shah and unfreeze Iranian assets
  • Carter refuses the demands
  • Hostage Crisis- 52 for 444 days

Kathryn L. Koob, 42 - Embassy Cultural Officer
one of two female hostages.
32
Iran and the United States - 530 min.
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