Environmental
Civil Disobedience
Radical
Native Americans and Hispanics
Women
100

This federal agency was developed under Nixon to protect the citizens from pollution

EPA

100

This Chicago organization retained its civil disobedient roots, focusing on lunch sit-ins and Freedom Rides

Congress on Racial Equality (C.O.R.E.)

100

This organization recruited heavily in prisons, converting people to what many argue is a bastardized version of the Muslim faith - one that espoused racial divide and a call to action based on that belief. 

Nation of Islam 
100

This organization was focused on reclaiming Native American rights but had rejected civil disobedience due to the failed attempt of using it decades earlier. 

American Indian Movement 

100

This promoter of the moral majority was a Catholic woman who insisted that equal pay for women would be the downfall for women. 

Phyllis Schlafly

200

This was a neighborhood built over an old chemical dumping ground where a disproportionate number of inhabitants caught cancer 

Love Canal 

200

These were the people who would sit white and black protestors together on a bus to protest segregation laws. 

Freedom Riders 

200

This organization staged 2nd amendment exercises to prove the hypocrisy of how rights are protected in America. They became increasingly violent over time, causing the group to split into more factions 

Black Panthers 

200

This organization focused on farm-hand labor rights, recognizing that much of it protected Hispanic laborers. 

United Farm Workers 
200

This editor of Ms. magazine promoted feminism with the pen. 

Gloria Steinham

300

This was the site of a small nuclear disaster when radiation leaked into the neighborhoods nearby. It led to America moving away from the cleanest form of energy (atomic) and back towards coal. 

Three Mile Island 

300

This was a strategy made famous in Montgomery, when Black workers, particularly servants, refused to use the city bus service until it was fully integrated. 

Bus Boycott 

300

This supporter of Black separatism was assassinated, possibly by members of his former "Muslim" organization after stating on national television that the leader of it fueled cop on Black violence as a way to swoop in looking like heroes during the aftermath. 

Malcolm X 

300

He was the main face for Hispanic farmworkers, leading a famous grape boycott. 

Cesar Chavez

300

Betty Friedan wrote this book that argued that the "traditional" household was an idealized myth that never matched the general lives and behaviors of the majority of the country.

The Feminine Mystique

400

Carter promoted the use of this new energy by partially energizing the White House with it as an alternative to coal. 

solar

400

Perhaps the most famous site for protests, This Alabama city was known for its use of dogs and violence against peaceful demonstrators 

Selma

400

This leader argued for Black Power (Black people spending in Black businesses and electing Black leadership) as an alternative to integration protests 

Stokely Carmichael

400

This was a famous movement of Hispanic and Native-Hispanic residents who sought to reclaim private property stolen from their ancestors (after Mexican American War) by increasing their own representation in government.

Chicano Movement 

400

This Mississippian sharecropper's pursuit for justice scared LBJ so much that he held a press conference while she spoke at the Democratic National Convention as a way to hide her message of oppression. 

Fannie Lou Hamer

500

This was the book that revealed to the public the dangers of DDT and other chemicals that runoff into fresh water sources 

Silent Spring

500

This is the name for the event when civil rights, in 1964, took voter enrollment efforts in Hattiesburg. 

Freedom Summer 

500
One of the most radical groups, this organization would assassinate police 

Black Liberation Army

500

Native Americans confronted the federal government at this famous site of an old massacre as a way to raise awareness for Native rights. 

Wounded Knee 

500

This failed amendment was supposed to offer constitutional protections that the Equal Pay Act never accomplished for women. 

Equal Rights Amendment