Hello,
I really don't understand what our asking comment more and I would be happy to answer your question.
-Bell
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
In each of the mentioned events, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. demonstrated his commitment to nonviolent demonstrations despite the local police's different aggressions.
The Montgomery bus boycott started on December 5, 1955, and ended on December 20, 1956. The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom Alabama protests occurred on August 28, 1963, and approximately 250,000 participated in this historic demonstration.
Dr. King, Rosa Parks, and all the civil rights leaders who participated in both demonstrations resisted the police and other people's aggressions and maintained their commitment to never act violently. Indeed, it was the "trademark" of Dr. King's style.
A. Having to branches or chambers (legislative body).
B. Group which have a certain Equality between its members.
In the era after Wold War I and before the Great Depression, American towns grew rapidly mostly because of the Second Industrial Revolution, which gave way to a rise of factories both in and around major cities in the US.
Many people opposed FDR's court packing plan. Many people saw his move as a threat to the principle of separation of powers. People also accused the president of packing the court with people who supported his view. This completely made people not like this even more then they had before, although some people still did approve of FDR's packing plan. Eventually Roosevelt withdrew his plan after fighting for it for a long time, but he gave up.