december 12, 1965 to defend the report. >> it's a good place to see the results of unemployment, the results of discrimination, results of bad housing, poor education. >> five decades later, the problems of inequality and poverty are worse in many areas. 50 years ago, 1/3 of african-american children live with only one parent or none. nearly three times the number of children overall at the time. that number is 60%. baltimore, 62% of children live in single parent homes. in 1965 unemployment rate among african-americans was nearly double the national average. 2015, the situation is exactly the same. twice the national average. in baltimore, 59% of black men between ages 25 and 54 are working. compared with 79% of white men. child poverty rates for african-american children have gone down since the 1960s, but they are nearly twice as many african-american kids that continue to live in poverty as children overall.