One of President Bush's domestic programs, No Child Left Behind
a. was an anti-poverty program for inner city children.
b. ensured school lunches for low-income children.
c. imposed penalties on schools that failed to meet federal performance standards.
d. provided tutoring to ensure struggling students met testing guidelines.
e. sought to elevate troubled schools to the level of the best schools in their district.
c
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How did the Versailles peace treaties create new sources of instability in the postwar world order?
What will be an ideal response?
Loyalty was the foundation of the lord-vassal relationship in both Europe and Japan.
Answer the following statement true (T) or false (F)
What conflict in values emerged as America went through its market revolution?
A. Personal lifestyles prized by northerners, who were more religious, differed from those of southerners, who were more materialistic-a distinction that national market networks made obvious. B. Although Americans professed to believe in equality, the national market economy coupled with American materialistic pursuits led to ever greater inequalities in wealth. C. Most farmers clung to the ideal of a semisubsistence way of life, despite the relentless reach of commercial networks. D. Americans had long enjoyed living in settled and stable communities, but transportation improvements led to much greater geographic mobility.
The National Association of Manufacturers
a. supported the idea of a "Second Bill of Rights." b. believed that expanded domestic programs would destroy private free-enterprise. c. supported President Truman. d. supported bills to expand public housing. e. advocated stronger environmental laws.