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DRUG WAR JEOPARDY: ROUND 1. Directions. Divide participants into two teams to compete. Person in charge of game (Moderator) should print out copy of the Answer Key (slide 53). Select “Slide Show”, then “View Show”. Start on slide #3 (the main board).
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DRUG WAR JEOPARDY: ROUND 1
Directions • Divide participants into two teams to compete. • Person in charge of game (Moderator) should print out copy of the Answer Key (slide 53). • Select “Slide Show”, then “View Show”. • Start on slide #3 (the main board). • Decide which team will go first (Team 1). • Team 1 will select a category and point value (Turn). • Click on point value of the selected box: You will be sent to the question (white lettering). • Team 1 will answer the question in the form of a question (example: “What is the Drug War?”). Moderator will check Answer Key to verify answer. • If Team 1’s answer is correct, points will go to Team 1, and Team 1’s turn will continue. Team 1’s turn will continue until they answer a question incorrectly. If answer given by Team 1 is incorrect, Team 2 has chance to answer question and get points. • If Team 2 answers correctly, points will be given and Team 2 will have the next turn. • Once answer is given by Team 1 correctly or by both teams, Click once on question slide to view answer (black lettering). • After viewing the answer, click on HOME (picture in lower right corner) to go back to main board. • Continue counting points until all questions have been asked. The team with the most points at the end of the game wins!
This former Republican U.S. President was the first to declare a “War on Drugs.”
In 1930, he was appointed as the first commissioner of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, making him America’s first “drug czar.”
He is the current “drug czar,” and believes that student drug testing is the “silver bullet” solution to our nation’s drug problems.
This Indiana congressman is the author of the HEA Aid Elimination Penalty, the law that takes financial aid away from students with drug convictions.
This drug warrior once claimed: "Students for Sensible Drug Policy is a militant fringe of the drug legalization movement. As parents, we would treat membership in SSDP as firmly as we would treat drug use. Stop the behavior and resign from the group or pay your own tuition."
This Jefferson Airplane song about Alice and Wonderland ends with the declaration: “Feed your head!”
Despite their claims to the contrary, this Beatles song is widely believed to be about LSD.
This Grammy award winning singer and guitarist sang, “If your day is gone and you want to ride on: Cocaine.”
This Neil Young song bout heroin includes the line: “Every junkie’s like a setting sun.”
This three-piece jazz trio serves on the VIP Advisory Board of the Marijuana Policy Project.
Alcohol Prohibition in the U.S. was enacted during this year.
The U.S. came to its senses and repealed Alcohol Prohibition during this year.
In this year, President Richard M. Nixon announced the commencement of the “War on Drugs.”
This decade was when an ordinance was passed in San Francisco to prohibit the smoking of opium in opium dens.
This was the year that the Controlled Substances Act was passed into law, which, among other things, classified marijuana as a Schedule 1 drug.
This amendment to the U.S. Constitution prohibited the possession of alcohol.
As of 2007, this is the number of U.S. states that effectively protect people from arrest for using marijuana to treat medical conditions.
This act in 1937 levied a tax equaling roughly one dollar on anyone who dealt commercially in marijuana.
This law made the non-medical use of cocaine and morphine illegal.
These 1973 New York laws are among the harshest mandatory minimum sentencing schemes in the nation.
This former Republican governor of the state of New Mexico serves on SSDP’s national board of directors.