Medgar Evers, at the time of his assassination in 1963, was the Field Secretary for the Mississippi NAACP and, thus one of the leaders of the civil rights movement in that state. Evers was born on July 2, 1925 in Decatur, Mississippi. Evers was inducted into the US Army in 1943 and served in Normandy the following year. After his discharge from the service, Evers enrolled at Alcorn College (now Alcorn State University).
While at Alcorn, he met his future wife, Myrlie Beasley of Vicksburg, and the following year they were married on December 24, 1951. After their graduation from Alcorn in 1952, they moved to Mound Bayou, Mississippi. Evers worked at an insurance agency until 1954. While in Mound Bayou, Evers helped form local chapters of the NAACP in the predominantly African American Delta region of the state. His unsuccessful attempt in 1954 to attend the University of Mississippi Law School attracted national attention, especially since it came after the US Supreme Court decision declaring school segregation unconstitutional.
Evers soon worked full-time for the NAACP and moved to Jackson to run the statewide office. As state field secretary for the civil rights organization, he led a boycott of white Jackson merchants, who discriminated against black customers, and investigated racially motivated crimes against African Americans throughout the state. Evers also supported James Meredith’s successful effort to become the first African American to enter the University of Mississippi in 1962. Such high-profile leadership of the NAACP angered white supremacists throughout the state. He was assassinated outside his home in Jackson on June 12, 1963.
Black and white leaders from around the nation gathered in Jackson for Evers’s funeral. His brother, Charles, took over his position as state field secretary. Byron De La Beckwith stood trial twice in the 1960s for the assassination of Medgar Evers but was finally convicted in 1994 and sentenced to life in prison.
Evers’s legacy is ever-present in Mississippi. Ten years after his death, Mississippi had over 250,000 black voters (as opposed to 28,000 in 1963), 145 black elected officials, and African Americans were enrolled in each of the state’s public and private institutions of higher education.
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Computers need some unified video game settings that every game can inherit. Imagine every game having the same mouse/joystick sensitivity, the same control scheme, motion blur OFF, display resolution/refreshrate/HDR, preferred graphics levels and so on automatically. We could do this with steam or some open standard. It's overdue in my opinion. 90% of games are on one of 4 engines now anyway.
who the hell uses motion blur?! it's awful
It makes a fucked up framerate slightly less noticeable.
Note: this is not actually an answer to "who the hell uses motion blur?" but rather to "why do games keep including motion blur?"
Precisely. That's why we need somewhere to turn it off once and for all!
i like feeling dizzy and sick for realism
Per pixel motion blur is amazing. I think a lot of people got pissed at it when full screen motion blur was most common, but honestly I think turning off the good kind just degrades the experience of your game for no discernible reason other than elitism.
chromatic aberration and depth of field too