The correct answer would be letter "B". The objective of Pan-Africanism was to strenghten bonds of solidarity between people of African descent. They shared the belief that all people of African descent, all over the world, have their fates intertwined and share a common destiny.
About a nickel.
The oldest statistical data I can locate doesn't have information earlier than 1913, but in 1913 the average loaf of bread was shown at 5.6 cents. This was as reported in <em>Historical Statistics of the United States: Colonial Times to 1970 (volume 2),</em> as published by the <span>U.S. Department of Commerce.</span>
Or, as another example, the Denver post reported that in 1912 Hurlbut's--which was then a grocery store in Denver--advertised "<span>six loaves of 'homemade' bread for 25 cents," which would work out as a special price less than 5 cents per loaf for the store's bakery bread. (Source: "A Titanic Difference in the Cost of Living 100 Years Later, <em>The Denver Post, </em>March 16, 2012.)</span>
The black power movement of the 1960's was much different than the goals set out by Martin Luther King Jr. Instead of focusing on integration, the black power movement focused on gaining power in political society without the help of white citizens. Members of this movement, like Malcolm X, felt that whenever white citizens got involved in marches or nonviolent protest, it weakened the movement.
Also, instead of nonviolent disobedience, members of the black power movement were in favor of self-defense. They felt that black citizens had the right to fight back if prompted with a violent situation or physical abuse.