Reverend Sykes
They sit up top with the blacks, even after Atticus said they need to stay home.
Children typically sit with the prosecutor or victim's advocate during a trial in order to provide support and ensure their well-being. This arrangement shows the court's concern for the child's comfort and protection during the legal proceedings, and recognizes the potential emotional impact of the trial on the child.
yes this is true, the finch children sit with them because of the trial (remember that atticus doesn't know they're watching!) I just had to do a paper on "To Kill a Mockingbird"!
They go to the courthouse. But, the white section is completely full so Reverend Sykes, the the black preacher at Calpurnia's church invites them to the black balcony where they sit with him.
They sat in the balcony with the blacks.
The Finch children sit in the area reserved for black people during the trial, since there was not enough room for them in the white area.
On his southern tours Duke Ellingtons black fans had to sit in the balcony when he played.
Reverend Sykes; in the balcony where black people are required to sit in order to watch the trial.
They sit with the colored people, along with Reverend Sykes, on the balcony.
i think because she want us to know that they don't care where do they sit even if they beside black people(no offense) and to show that they have not created racial boundaries that most adults in this town have come to have.
Statler and Waldorf are the two old men who sit in the balcony and heckle Fozzie Bear.
In "To Kill a Mockingbird," the character Tom Robinson is seated on the witness stand during his trial for allegedly assaulting Mayella Ewell. Tom Robinson is a black man falsely accused of a crime due to racial discrimination.