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Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
Click Once to BeginJEOPARDY!Claiming Their Rights:
Native Americans, Hispanic Americans, and Women
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
JEOPARDY!
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Organiza-tions
Native Americans
Hispanic Americans
Women’s Liberation
Events Miscellany
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
Young Native American activists formed this
militant group to achieve their goals by force.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
The purpose of this organization was “To take action to bring
women into full participation in the mainstream of American society now, assuming all the privileges and responsibilities
thereof in truly equal partnership with men”.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
Mexican American and Filippino American farm
workers created this organization in 1962 to gain better wages and working
conditions.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
Founded in 1971, it worked to put women in public office and supported candidates of both sexes who were
supportive of feminist issues.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
In 1946, President Truman created this organization to hear and settle all outstanding land claims that Native Americans
brought against the government.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
Native American take part in these gatherings to keep in
touch with their cultural traditions.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
This activist took part in demonstrations and acted in movies to represent native
American cultures and experiences.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
This location in South Dakota was in 1890 the site of the last
massacre of Native Americans by the U.S. Army and in 1973 the site
of an occupation by radical members of the American Indian
Movement.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
He wrote in 1934 the most significant New Deal program to
help Native Americans, the Indian Reorganization Act.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
Native American activists, citing an old law that said Indians could
settle on unused federal land, seized this former federal prison
as a protest in 1969.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
This Mexican American union organizer was a soft-spoken and
patient man who has been called a “quiet explosion.” His work
centered on the grape-growing area of Delano, CA.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
This group of Hispanic Americans have been American citizens for over 100 years, ever since the
Spanish- American War.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
Puerto Ricans, Mexican Americans, Cuban Americans, Central Americans,
and South Americans
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
She was a labor organizer and a co-founder of the United
Farm Workers; she was one of their best negotiators.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
This women's rights gathering held in 1848, upon the occasion of a visit
by Lucretia Mott famous for her orating ability. The women presented
two prepared documents, the Declaration of Sentiments and an accompanying list of resolutions. A heated debate sprang up regarding women's right to vote and Frederick Douglass argued eloquently for its
inclusion. ”
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
In this landmark decision, the United States Supreme Court ruled 7-2 that
a right to privacy under the due process clause of the 14th
Amendment extended to a woman's decision to have an abortion, but that
right must be balanced against the state's two legitimate interests in
protecting prenatal life and protecting women's health..
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
Her book “The Feminine Mystique” reignited the women’s
movement in 1963.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
She is a constitutional lawyer and a politically conservative activist
known for her opposition to modern feminism and for her successful campaign against the Equal Rights Amendment. She published book, A Choice, Not An Echo, was published in
1964.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
She, along with Congreswoamn Bella Abzug, was a political activist
and the founder of the Ms. Magazine which published article addressing
issues important to feminists.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
Begun by farmworkers in California, this became one of the
most successful consumer boycotts in U.S. history.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
This spontaneous riot against police oppression at this bar in New York
city in 1969 became a rallying cry for gay men.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
This style of protest, based on the “sit-ins” of the Civil Rights Movement, was an
early tactic in the movement to gain repect for the rights
of homosexuals.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
What was the outcome in 1982 of the push to add the Equal Rights
Amendment to the Constitution?
Daily Double!!!
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
Members of the A.I.M. occupied this governmental building in 1972 for a
week and declared it to be the Embassy of the Native American
Peoples to the U.S.
What was the significance of the button that feminists wore in the 1960s that simply stated “59¢”.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
On average, for every dollar that a man
earned in the 1960s, a woman with the same job earned 59 cents.
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
“Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or
abridged by the U.S. or by any state on account of sex.”
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD
Blue Lake in northern New Mexico has always been a sacred location this Native
American people.
Casey Hayden and Mary King, members of SNCC in 1964, spoke out for freedom from the limits of traditional female roles. What idea were they representing?
Template byBill Arcuri, WCSD