英语学习论坛

 找回密码
 立即注册
查看: 99|回复: 0

Today in History-July 2

[复制链接]

36万

主题

36万

帖子

109万

积分

论坛元老

Rank: 8Rank: 8

积分
1094809
发表于 2016-7-9 23:50:16 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
  President Johnson: "Let us close the springs of racial poison"
          1964: President Johnson signs Civil Rights Bill
          England have
          The Civil Rights Bill - one of the most important piece of legislation in
American history - has become law.
          US President Lyndon B Johnson signed the bill creating equal rights in
voting, education, public accommodations, union membership and in federally
assisted programmes - regardless of race, colour, religion or national
origin.
          The bill has caused much controversy since it was introduced last year by
President John F Kennedy.
          It was signed tonight in the White House five hours after the House of
Representatives passed it by 289 to 126 votes.
          After the signing, President Johnson shook hands with civil rights leader
Dr Martin Luther King.
          In a television address to the nation he called on US citizens to
"eliminate the lastvestigesof injustice in America".
          "Let us close the springs of racial poison," he said.
          'Monstrous oppression'
          Parts of the bill take immediate effect, including the "public
accommodations" element which means black people can no longer be excluded from
restaurants, hotels, bars, cinemas, sports stadia and other public
facilities.
          Sections on voting rights and desegregation of schools are also enforceable
from now and give the Attorney General more power to intervene where
necessary.
          The section on equal opportunity in employment will not begin to operate
for another year and will not be fully effective for five years.
          During the debate on the bill, segregationist politicians from America's
deep south expressed their disappointment and anger.
          Congressman Howard Smith of Virginia called it a "monstrous oppression of
the people".
          Civil rights activists have welcomed the new law. Roy Wilkins, secretary of
the National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People described it as
"the Magna Carta of human rights".
          He applauded the appointment of former governor of Florida Leroy Collins as
director of the new Community Relations Service, set up to deal with issues
arising from the desegregation of public facilities and institutions.
          The Civil Rights Commission has announced a campaign to implement the
law.
          And Dr King said he would be seeking commitments from businesses and
community leaders all over the south to respect the new law under a campaign
called Operation Dialogue.
          Brady and Hindley are serving life sentences for the murders
          1987: Brady to help search for Moors victims
          Artificially 1969:
          The Moors murderer Ian Brady has offered to assist police searches of
Saddleworth Moor for the first time since his conviction 21 years ago.
          In 1966 Brady and his accomplice Myra Hindley were given life sentences for
the murders of Lesley Ann Downey, John Kilbride and Edward Evans, but police
kept files open on two other missing children, Pauline Reade and Keith
Bennett.
          When news of the body found at Saddleworth yesterday reached Brady at Park
Lane Mental Hospital in Liverpool he told his solicitor that he was prepared to
return to the Manchester moors.
          Police were directed to the shallow grave at Hollin Brow Knoll by
Hindley.
          She began to co-operate with the police in November 1986 after she received
a letter from the mother of Keith Bennett who disappeared in 1964.
          Hindley had also been visited twice by the head of Manchester CID, Peter
Topping, in Cookham Wood prison, Kent.
          Under heavy police guard she returned to the moor twice last autumn as
Detective Chief Superintendent Topping and his squad of eight officers had
sealed off the area for further investigation.
          On her second visit in February Hindley confessed that she and Brady had
committed two other murders.
          Pathologists cannot confirm the identity of the body recovered yesterday
but there is a strong possibility that it is that of 16-year-old Pauline Reade,
missing since the 1960s.
          The remains were well preserved in peat and were unearthed close to where
Moors murder victim, Lesley Ann Downey, was found 23 years ago.
          Police visited the house of Pauline Reade's parents in Oldham late last
night.
          "We want to bring some peace to parents who have waited so long," said Det
Chief Supt Topping.
          Brady's assistance might finally bring that wait to an end.
          Vocabulary:
          vestige : a visible trace, evidence, or sign of something that once existed
but exists or appears no more(遗迹;痕迹)
回复

使用道具 举报

您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 立即注册

本版积分规则

小黑屋|手机版|Archiver|新都网

GMT+8, 2025-11-6 05:11 , Processed in 0.052583 second(s), 14 queries , WinCache On.

Powered by Discuz! X3.4

© 2001-2017 Comsenz Inc.

快速回复 返回顶部 返回列表