Focus on the award: not being afraid of your prison (1960-1961) shows the importance of students in the civil rights movement. The first part of the episode shows a black college student who sits in Nashville and refuses to leave the lunch counter until it is delivered. When these students were arrested, other black dwellers began boycotting to eat other places and began shopping and bus protests. They also refused bail and filled Nashville's prison. During lunch opposition, angry thugs attacked student protesters with ridicule, physical intimidation and arrest.
During the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s, the Student Nonviolence Coordination Committee (SNCC) was established to coordinate protest actions. Sit-in shows that the civil rights movement's strategy has shifted from non-violent citizens' disobedience to early success from a court-based approach. By pointing out how to eliminate blacks from the Caucasian Caucasian Law School, the National Association for the Advancement of Color People (NAACP) decided to fight apartheid. In 1950, Texas established an independent law school for blacks, unlike white schools. Both types of schools have the same number of teachers and books, but the court has judged that this is not enough. The intangible aspect of legal quality makes the black school inferior. The court stopped the "single but equality" blow.
By the end of the 1960's, students gathered records of civil rights activities over ten years. Meanwhile their behaviorism was not merely symbolic. Definitely, if not essential, general inertia promoted the civil rights movement beyond the struggle of the 1950s. Especially the behaviorism of students in the 1960s diversified sports, made it vibrant and popular. This movement is philosophically expanding to include not only political and economic empowerment but also broader human rights struggle. Indeed, many young activists believe that the true success and permanent legacy of this sport is to sow what they call "the beloved community". There is a doubt as to the origin of "beloved community", but seems to have earned money during the free summer of 1964.