No major civil rights laws were passed during the Depression. The Democratic Party depended upon the "Solid South" for support and FDR overlooked things like the Jim Crow Laws of southern states. He even refused to give his support to an anti-lynching bill and he allowed segregation of work gangs on federal projects. Under pressure from the NAACP and Eleanor Roosevelt, and other minority leaders, the New Dealers made sure Blacks shared in relief programs. Black people moved into more than a third of new housing units constructed by the federal government.
yes
Louie Armstrong
a mad person lol
President Roosevelt
I would say Herbert Hoover
I assume that the question is supposed to be 'What were white people like during the Great Depression? If that is the case, I'm afraid there is not single answer. "White people" in the 30's would be a very different breed that what people would think of as 'White' today. In 2011, most people of Irish Catholic decent would consider themselves white , this was not the case during the early 1900's. Are Italians 'White'? What about Greeks, Turks, Jews? A 'white' person in the 30's could have fallen into any number of economic categories. All the jobs that Americans won't do, like being a maid or a migrant worker, well white Americans used to do those jobs. The average white person during the depression did the same thing as the average person did, anything to survive.
It would be pretentious for a single person to consider him or herself to be an organization, however, one person can be the beginning of an organization if that person recruits other people into the organization.
A person who starts an organization is called its founder.
Yes. Depression doesn't prevent you from ever laughing.
Depression is the feeling of how a person feels with and extreme length of sadness.
Close model organization is an organization one person rule.whil open model organization is open to the public and more then one person rule.
An anthropologist analyzes the organization of civilizations and societies.