时间:2019-02-13 作者:英语课 分类:名人认知系列 Who Was


英语课

Even with the right to vote, even with the right to sit anywhere on a bus or eat in any restaurant, black people were struggling. Too many did not have jobs. And those with jobs weren’t making enough to live decently 1. They lived in homes with no heat and leaky pipes. Many people were sick and did not have money to see a doctor.

Black people were angry. They were frustrated 2. Some were tired of listening to Martin. Change wasn’t coming fast enough. People who had followed Malcolm X, who was killed in 1965, were forming groups to carry on his message of fighting back with violence. Groups such as the Black Panther Party emerged 3. These groups talked about black pride.

In August 1965, a riot 4 broke out in a Los Angeles neighborhood called Watts 5. Angry mobs 6 of black people ran through the streets. They threw rocks and bottles. They shattered 7 store windows. They stole. They set fires. Many people were killed andinjured. The rioting 8 went on for six days. Finally, the U.S. Army was called in to stop the violence.

WATTS RIOTS 9

On AUGUST 11, 1965, A BLACK MAN NAMED MARQUETTE FRYE WAS PULLED OVER WHILE DRIVING On A CALIFORNIA HIGHWAY. A POLICE OFFICER LATER SAID HE WAS DRIVING DANGEROUSLY.

AS THE POLICE QUESTIONED FRYE AND HIS BROTHER, A GROUP OF PEOPLE GATHERED. THEY WERE ANGRY. SOME PEOPLE BEGAN TO SHOUT AT THE OFFICERS. THEY SAID THE FRYE BROTHERS WERE ONLY PULLED OVER BECAUSE THEY WERE BLACK. SOME PEOPLE THREW ROCKS.

WHEN FRYE AND HIS BROTHER WERE ARRESTED, THE CROWD GREW ANGRIER AND BEGAN RIOTING. THE RIOT LASTED FOR SIX DAYS.

In WATTS, PEOPLE FELT DESPERATE AND HOPELESS. THEY FELT LIKE VICTIMS.

Martin understood people’s frustration 10. But he said, “When people are voiceless, they will have temper tantrums like a little child who has not been paid attention to. And riots are massive 11 temper tantrums from a neglected and voiceless people.”

In response, one of the angry rioters said to Martin, “We know that a riot is not the answer, but we’ve been down here suffering for a long time and nobody cared. Now at least they know we’re here. A riot may not be the way, but it is a way.”

The root of the problem was poverty. People were sick of being poor. So Martin turned his attention to employment—getting better jobs. On July 26, 1965, he led a march to Chicago City Hall.

Chicago was the second largest city in the United States. More than one million blacks lived there. Some people called Chicago “the Birmingham of the North.” Most blacks living in Chicago were poor. They had low-paying jobs or no jobs at all. People lived in old, rundown houses. Although there were laws against segregation 12, white-owned buildings would not rent apartments to blacks.

In 1966, the Kings moved to Chicago. They were used to living in comfortable houses. But Martin thought it was important for his family to know the way too many blacks in the United States lived. They paid ninety dollars a month for a rundown, four-room apartment. A much nicer, five-room apartment in a white neighborhood cost only eighty dollars a month!

After a while, Martin’s children began to have temper tantrums. At first, Martin couldn’t understand why. But then he realized that they were misbehaving because they had nowhere to play. There was no park nearby where they could run around. Martin began to understand what being dirt-poor felt like.

Martin led many marches in Chicago that summer. Although Martin’s marchers were not violent, they were met by violence. Bricks and bottles were thrown at them. People yelled 13 at them. Still, none of the protestors fought back.

Martin Luther King, Jr., marched to Chicago City Hall. He posted a list of demands on the door for Mayor Richard J. Daley to read. The demands included an end to police violence and an end to job and housing discrimination.

There was no answer from Mayor Daley. So the marches continued.

Jesse Jackson, a young member of the SCLC, planned a march through a neighborhood called Cicero. Seventy thousand white people lived there. Mayor Daley and the police knew that a march through Cicero would end in violence. So, finally, the mayor told Martin Luther King, Jr., to call off the march. The demands would be met.

So, in good faith, Martin and the leaders of the SCLC agreed. As for Mayor Daley, he went back on his promise. Nothing changed in Chicago. Where would Martin Luther King, Jr., go from here?



adv. 正派地,体面地,大方地,有礼地
  • The children do not know how to behave themselves decently. 小孩子不懂如何举止得体。
  • The new servant was decently dressed. 新来的佣人衣着得体。
adj.挫败的,失意的,泄气的v.使不成功( frustrate的过去式和过去分词 );挫败;使受挫折;令人沮丧
  • It's very easy to get frustrated in this job. 这个工作很容易令人懊恼。
  • The bad weather frustrated all our hopes of going out. 恶劣的天气破坏了我们出行的愿望。 来自《简明英汉词典》
vi. 浮现, (由某种状态)脱出, (事实)显现出来
  • They emerged from the church into the bright daylight. 他们走出教堂来到明亮的日光下。
  • The swimmer emerged from the lake. 游泳者从湖水中浮出来。
n.暴(骚)乱,(色彩等)极度丰富;vi.聚众闹事
  • They had to call the police in order to put down the riot.他们只得叫来警察以平定骚乱。
  • Flowers of all sorts are blooming in a riot of colour.百花盛开,万紫千红。
(电力计量单位)瓦,瓦特( watt的名词复数 )
  • My lamp uses 60 watts; my toaster uses 600 watts. 我的灯用60瓦,我的烤面包器用600瓦。
  • My lamp uses 40 watts. 我的灯40瓦。
v.聚众包围( mob的第三人称单数 );聚众闹事
  • There was a raid on a bank by armed mobs yesterday. 昨天发生了一起武装暴徒抢劫银行的事件。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • The following day mobs seized the Parliament building. 第二天暴徒占领了议会大厦。 来自《简明英汉词典》
破碎的; 极度疲劳的
  • He dropped the vase and it shattered into pieces on the floor. 他失手把花瓶掉到地板上摔碎了。
  • The experience left her feeling absolutely shattered. 她在这次经历之后,感到彻底垮了。
暴乱,骚乱
  • There were ugly scenes in the streets last night as rioting continued. 昨晚暴乱持续之际,街上险象环生。
  • They are rioting in the streets. 他们在街上闹事。
n.挫折,失败,失效,落空
  • He had to fight back tears of frustration.他不得不强忍住失意的泪水。
  • He beat his hands on the steering wheel in frustration.他沮丧地用手打了几下方向盘。
adj.巨大的,大规模的,大量的,大范围的
  • A massive sea search has failed to find any survivors.经过大规模的海上搜救仍未找到幸存者。
  • He drank a massive amount of alcohol.他喝了大量的烈酒。
n.隔离,种族隔离
  • Many school boards found segregation a hot potato in the early 1960s.在60年代初,许多学校部门都觉得按水平分班是一个棘手的问题。
  • They were tired to death of segregation and of being kicked around.他们十分厌恶种族隔离和总是被人踢来踢去。
v.叫喊,号叫,叫着说( yell的过去式和过去分词 )
  • He yelled at the other driver. 他冲着另一位司机大叫。
  • The lost man yelled, hoping someone in the woods would hear him. 迷路的人大声喊着,希望林子里的人会听见。 来自《简明英汉词典》
学英语单词
a big hit
abelmosks
acmg
acoustic absorptivity measurement
and/or search graph
apogons
as plain as the nose in your face
atrial septal defect with cleft mitral valve
backcasted
beaver tail
bestialities
bookmate
build-in adapter
building cycle
bum off
central tract of trigeminal nerve
cerebral sinuses
charge-transfer transition
CINCENT
clockin'
close pack
coefficiently
colo(u)r fringing
control load
coving
cyanosed
design engineering inspection
diagnostic work
double-column planer milling machine
duty engineers cabin
e-stop
electric wind shield wiper arm
electrostatic instrument
expectation payment
explosive imbedding type anchor
false-coiner
finger-dry
float-type tide gauge
follow the hounds
full-web section rail
gas pressue relay
Gorno-Altayskaya Respublika
GYROCOTYLIDEA
half-man
he'll
heat packer
heave-to
hemangioma of submaxillary gland
horizontal tipping method
input digit
interpolation condition
ionizing energy of acceptor
isolated piller crane
kidventure
Kopervik
large fly-cutting disc
lateral circumflex veins of thigh
mail truck
manugistics
maspero
military regulation
mis-state
misfilings
Montehermoso
multiwindowed
norwegian national ballet
nuclear substitution
ojibway
on the bounce
Ouahran
paraclypeal lobe
Parnassia cooperi
pellagrous
penumbrae
polron
porsch
PRIFLY
puzzle your brains
Rabón, R.
rim gypsum
schorlomites
self-report method
silk cashmere
sinuses rectalis
somatochrome cells
speculative loading
splenic vein
sporles
sufficiently small
sulci interparietalis
Sulfapadil
superficial palmar arch
suprahyoid muscle
tail lateral line
turkey trots
two-zoned-core
uncogitating
uncracking
underground box
vaginal candidiasis
volta effect
willow-bark