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JeopardyImportant People
Nonviolent Resistance
Role of the Government
Radical Change
Success and Failure
Q $100
Q $200
Q $300
Q $400
Q $500
Q $100 Q $100Q $100 Q $100
Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200
Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300
Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400
Q $500 Q $500 Q $500 Q $500
Important Peoplefor $100
This woman refused to give up her seat on a bus in Montgomery, helping to start a bus boycott that ended segregation in transportation in the city.
Important Peoplefor $200
This governor of Arkansas refused to allow African-American students to integrate Central High School, sending in the Arkansas National Guard to stop them from entering the school.
Important Peoplefor $300
He became the national spokesperson for the Nation of Islam, before breaking off from the group and advocating his own idea of Black Nationalism.
Important Peoplefor $400
These two men formed the Black Panther Party in the 1960’s, and called for “land, bread, housing, education, clothing, justice, and peace” for African Americans.
Important Peoplefor $500
This lawyer for the NAACP successfully argued that segregation in public schools was psychologically damaging for African American students, and should be illegal in Brown v. Board of Education.
Nonviolent Resistancefor $100
This was the city in which Martin Luther King and other activists practiced nonviolent resistance by starting a successful bus boycott.
Nonviolent Resistancefor $200
The organization led by Martin Luther King Jr. that advocated nonviolent resistance and led such protests as the March on Washington.
Nonviolent Resistancefor $300
Method of protest in which college students protested segregation at lunch counters by sitting at “whites only” counters and refusing to leave.
Nonviolent Resistancefor $400
City where Bull Connor set fire hoses and police dogs on nonviolent protestors.
Nonviolent Resistancefor $500
Name for the drive to increaseVoter registration in MississippiIn 1965
Role of the Governmentfor $100
President who acted to desegregatePublic high schools in Arkansasonly after weeks of Southernresistance.
Role of the Government:for $200
President who protected activists trying to end interstate bus segregation only after activists were attacked.
Role of the Governmentfor $300
Name of the law passed afterFreedom Summer and “Bloody Sunday” in Selma
Role of the Governmentfor $400
Name of the speech given by Martin Luther King, Jr. at the March on Washington encouraging the government to pass a new Civil Rights Act
Role of the Governmentfor $500
Term for the group of students that the federal government hesitated to help integrate into Central High School
Radical Changefor $100
Name of the spokesperson for the Nation of Islam who gave the “Ballot or the Bullet” speech
Radical Changefor $200
Name of the belief that African-Americans should form their own institutions, like schools and businesses, separate from white society.
Radical Changefor $300
Political party formed by Huey Newton and Bobby Seale that called for black power
Radical Changefor $400
Head of SNCC who called for “black power” in a speech after taking over James Meredith’s march through Mississippi
Radical Changefor $500
Leader of the Nation of Islam who sanctioned Malcolm X for speaking out against President Kennedy
Success and Failurefor $100
Term describing systems that sent black students from cities to predominately white suburbs to integrate schools
Success and Failurefor $200
Name of the first African-American admitted to the University of Mississippi
Success and Failurefor $300
Term describing hiring and educational practices that give preference to ethnic minorities and women to make up for previous discrimination
Success and Failurefor $500
Name of the protest movement begun my MLK and continued by Ralph Abernathy that called for more antipoverty legislation