Both families expressed their views on the background of marriage. Myrlie has not yet graduated from college, and Medgar's younger brother Charles is not satisfied with Medgar's chosen partner in life, but they do not have much. When Myrlie and Medgar had their first child, a boy, he was named Darnell Kenyatta Evers. (Evers-Williams, Marable, 36). Medgar finally completed his work degree in the spring and acquired his bachelor's degree in May 1952. After that, Medega took over the position of an insurance salesman of Magnolia Mutual Insurance Company owned by Howard.
Since the civil rights era, the phenomenon of apartheid has steadily declined in various parts of the United States. However, isolation of school-age children was surprising behind this progress. In communities where they live, black-and-white children - and the poor and non - poor - are more isolated by the American population than adults. From the analysis of Professor Paul Jargowsky of Rutgers University, the chart shows "difference index" between white and black, white and Hispanic, and between the poor and the non-poor in the United States. The index measures the range of the two groups. Separate from each other - The score of 0 indicates the total score, the total score is 1. This figure shows that the distinction between black and white in kindergartens and kindergartens in the US is particularly high compared to the population outside school age. The same can be said about the separation of poor and non-poor children.
For the younger generation, the age of civil rights seems to be a distant world. But the civil rights struggle - and corresponding political party coordination - did not happen 50 years ago. If we want to move forward, understanding this history is absolutely essential to understanding how we will reach today's situation. In the summer of 1964, the Race Equality Meeting (CORE) and the Student Nonviolence Coordination Committee (SNCC) held a voter registration event called Freedom Summer. It aims to increase the voter registration in the State of Mississippi, the state adopting the voter control strategy.
You may ask: "Is there a civil rights law in 1960?" Yes, certainly. This is very important, but in the era of Jim Crow it can be understood only through a system of deprivation by complex voters. The 1960 Civil Rights Act helped to prove the practice of voter registration for racial discrimination and provided evidence to help pass the voting rights law in 1965. This article explains its method and reason. The civil rights law in 1957 and 1960 was the first batch of federal civil rights law that passed since the reconstruction. The bill in 1957 was originally thought of as a better implementation of the amendments of Article 14 and Article 15 and was severely resisted by the white white Separatist Senator. During months of hearings and discussions, including the longest obstructive bill in the Senate's history, this bill is actually a matter of forcing the apartheid school abolition in the south, or for identifying black voting rights I was deprived of the federal mechanism.