History
Civil Rights Act of 1964
Civil Rights Act of 1964 ended segregation in public places and banned employment discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex or national origin. The right was proposed by President John F. Kennedy and was then signed into law by Lyndon B. Johnson. Congress expanded the act and passed additional civil rights legislations, such as the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The act forbade the use of federal funds for any discriminatory program, authorized the Office of Education, to assist with school desegregation, gave extra clout to the Commission on Civil Rights and prohibited the unequal application of voting requirements.
There were many people who were involved in the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Those people were brave enough to stand up for what they believed was right no matter what the consequence was because they wanted the law to change since they felt it wasn’t right. President Lyndon B. Johnson was the one who signed the law
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He was a Swiss mathematician and physicist who accomplished many things during his lifetime. One famous accomplishment many know him for was the separation of calculus from geometry. Other accomplishments were developing the theory of trigonometric/ logarithmic functions, finding imaginary logarithms of negative numbers, the law of quadratic reciprocity which then became an essential part of modern theory and showing each complex number has an infinite number of logarithms. He also released hundreds of articles and other publications during his life. Euler was one of the founders of pure mathematics. He made decisive and formative contributions to geometry, calculus, mechanics and the number theory, while developing methods for solving problems in observational astronomy. In 1727, he moved to St. Petersburg and became an associate of the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences. In 1735, Euler lost eye sight in his left eye due to a