Welcome APUSH'ers

Hello AP US History Students of the Summer 2014e,

Many of you are aware that something happened to the blog and posting was disabled. I only just was able to correct the problems with Google this weekend. I have a How to to help those who haven't posted anything, or just need to submit your final comment. Please do so as soon as you can. Deadlines will be extended to Tuesday, August 19th at 10 pm for all the Summer Blog deadlines.

You can access the Help Sheet by Clicking Here.

You need to post comments three different times for your Summer Reading.

Every time you post
, you must include your first and last name-- every time you post (get the idea that your name is important?). Without a name, grades cannot be assigned. Keep in mind that we do not know you by name other than from the legal roster, please put any given names not used in parenthesis).

It is IMPORTANT that you use the username and password included in your Summer Reading packet. (username: mcapush2 password: historyrules)

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Tori Holloman: The President Calling

I listened to President Lyndon B. Johnson talk to Civil Rights Leader Martin Luther King Jr. and FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. During the conversation between LBJ and MLK they seemed to discuss how to get the voting rights bill passes. Johnson asked for King's help in getting Americans to see the wide discrimination against blacks  that wanted to vote so they could see that it wasn't right and would want to make a change. So Martin Luther King Jr. organized a march to Montgomery from Selma, which resulted in "Bloody Sunday." Even though "Bloody Sunday" occurred, King decided to organize more marches and one of these marches led to the death of a women named Viola Liuzzo, a white women. She was killed by some members of the Ku Klux Klan while she was driving a black man home from one of the marches. After her death, President Lyndon B. Johnson and J. Edgar Hoover talked about how the FBI caught the people that killed her. In my eyes, it was a good idea that MLK organized more marches after "Bloody Sunday" even though many people tried to stop him. The marches seemed to help with the passing of the voting rights bill and it thought it was interesting how the FBI caught the murders of Viola Liuzzo.

No comments: