Domestic Policies

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Across
  1. 4. The ___ Inn Riots of 1969 were a turning point in the gay, trans, and lesbian rights movement.
  2. 6. This is a type of power. The name of the movement that was opposed to the nonviolence movement.
  3. 7. Ralph ____ launched the consumer protection movement.
  4. 8. He organized the Southern Christian Leadership Conference a Civil rights movement in the South
  5. 9. 1948, President _____ ordered an end to segregation and discrimination in the armed forces.
  6. 12. Black and White protesters who traveled on buses across the South to protest bus segregation
  7. 16. A ___ Ceiling was the idea that women only ever climbed to mid level jobs and couldn’t get higher than that.
  8. 17. This president had to take control over the National Guard and use it to enforce the integration of schools
  9. 18. ______ vs Board of Education, made the decision to that “separate facilities were inherently unequal”
  10. 19. The book “___ Spring” talked about the damage that humans can do to the environment and the dangers of DDT.
Down
  1. 1. He was the first African American justice on the US Supreme Court
  2. 2. this president created domestic programs called New Frontier. He supported the Space Program.
  3. 3. This tax was one method used to keep african americans from being able vote
  4. 4. Plessy v. Ferguson legalized this in 1896
  5. 5. The last name of a women who refused to give up her seat for a white man in protest in the civil rights movement
  6. 10. This president’s domestic programs were called Great Society. He had a lot of programs designed to help the poor.
  7. 11. The right guaranteed in the 9th amendment that the Supreme Court stated gave women the right to terminate a pregnancy. This case was Roe V Wade.
  8. 13. The president signed the Immigration Act of 1986 which tightened borders and cracked down on employers who were hiring undocumented workers.
  9. 14. A non violent method of protest to protest segregation and draw attention to the civil rights movement. African Americans sat in white-only sections of establishments and refused to leave even when abused.
  10. 15. To refuse to purchase or partake in an event or item because of political opposition