Answer:
At the time, the participants had to face both gains and failures in a very painful and long process. Despite such painful events, their fight was no in vain, as the Civil Rights Movement was intensified, and eventually, African Americans got the basic civil rights they demanded.
Explanation:
At the time, the participants had to face both gains and failures in a very painful and long process.
Although by 1961 police brutality in Albany lessen a little (with 500 demonstrators arrested but no clashes reported), the lack of reliable gains in that city pushed King and the SCLC to leave to Birmingham. There, King´s being arrested and his “Letter from Birmingham Jail”
draw media attention to the matter. Although police brutality against student marchers continued, measures to desegregate some businesses begun to be applied.
After the march over Washington and King´s famous "I have a dream speech", four girls were assassinated by the Ku Klux Klan, and President Kennedy was killed shortly after.
Despite such painful events, their fight was no in vain, as the Civil Rights Movement was intensified, and eventually, African Americans got the basic civil rights they demanded.
Answer:
The answer is below
Explanation:
Gary Nash thinks that the defining factor in the colonist's agitation for independence from the British rule is the new ideas coming from emerging social and commercial associations which eventually led to Revolution against Great Britain to establish a preferred democratic social and political arrangement.
On the other hand, Pauline Maier believes that the main factor comes from the old Ideas dating back into English history around the age of discovery which enabled all the British colonies to form alliances in the American revolutionary movement.
"People had <span>more negative feelings toward the Republican Party" is the best option, since many people viewed the Republicans as being selfish when they chose to shut down the government over a budget issue.</span>
Answer: 101 miles
The Yamato Core is a shallow ice core in the eastern region of Antarctica. The Yamato Mountains were first observed and photographed from the air in 1960 by an expedition team from Belgium, who named the mountains the Queen Fabiola Mountains, after the Queen of Belgium at that time. The Japanese Antarctic Research Expedition made the first visit and geological exploration of the mountains a few months later, in 1960, and gave the name Yamato Mountains to the region.