Answer:
first one elected to congress
Explanation:
The civil rights movement evolved between 1955 and 1968. The seachange in strategy resulted from the feeling that the movement was largely Southern focused. After 1965, two years after the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, civil rights activists turned their attention to the urban North. Conditions in the urban ghettoes changed little during the civil rights movement and activists viewed the fight for political rights, especially economic rights as extremely important part of the movement. Moreover, groups such as the Black Panthers advocated economic rights, cultural awareness and internationalization of the black freedom struggle. This was evident in the Ten Point program presented by the Panthers. It was also evident in Malcolm X's break with the Nation of Islam and establishment of the Organization of African American Unity modeled on the Organization of African Unity (OAU). Bot h of these events occurred in 1965.
Martin Luther King's work also reflected the shift to political and human rights. King led marches in Cicero, Illinois (a Chicago suburb), criticized increased American involvement in the Vietnam War and began plans for a Poor People's Movement and March. King's focus on anti-war, anti-militarism and poverty and human rights issues marked both a departure and continuation of the issues extant in the first part of the movement. Rather than seeing the movement as two different moments, it is best to see it as adapting to address the larger issues of societal discrimination and inequality rooted in militarism and economic inequality.
I believe the common themes would be courage and patirotism.
All of the stories above depict the sacrifice that characters made for the glory of their own country.
In number the stars for example, it revolves around the life of the characters in denmark during the invasion period by Germany.
Like Jefferson, Andrew Jackson believed in the fully spread, unrestricted democracy of the common man. Opponents of such vision of Democracy preferred to restrict the voting rights of citizens with regulations such as poll taxes, property requirements, level of income, etc. Both Jefferson and Jackson considered that true democratic power had to be held by the largest majority of citizens possible in order to avoid both corruption and/or aristocracy. However, Jefferson abhorred cities and considered that yeoman farmers were the most virtuous and decent of citizens and profoundly disliked cities and its dwellers, including ordinary industrial workers. Jackson on the other hand made no distinction between the rural or urban common classes.
According to this definition, correct answer looks like this: National culture <span>is the set of shared values and beliefs that affects the perceptions, decisions, and behavior of people from a particular country.</span>