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