Lillie Mae Bradford was arrested for:
3. For sitting in the "wrong" part of the bus.
In 1951, afro-american citizens were segregated in many public places, one of them the buses. They were supposed to sit in the back of the bus, leaving the front available for white people. Bradford was arrested for breaking this rule while asking the driver to charge her the right price for the trip, which was too high. She was asked twice to go to the back of the bus without her request so, as a protest, she sat in front. Bradford was charged of disorderly conduct. Though a neighbor bailed her, the criminal record followed her for life as an obstacle to find a job.
Answer:
It grew bigger and stronger.
Explanation:
After the war there were many workers that had been making military equipment and vehicles for the armed forces for years and when the war was over the factory workers all over America now made and produced more goods for common life post WWII such as cars, tvs, refrigerators, houses, etc. There was more of a demand of products of that nature which then brought on more workers to build them which made companies bigger from increased revenue and increased revenue for the steel and lumber companies, which made shares of those companies stocks more valuable in the economy. After the war there was also research to be conducted when the Allies now had access to German inventions such as jet aircraft and recoil operated muzzle boosters to make guns fire faster. More and more jobs were being created and more and more money was made for everyone all over America. In a way, WWII saved the U.S. from more devastating years of the great depression.
<span>That is, in the years when there were Congressmen to be elected he must go twice to be registered—once for the ... Our committee struck out from it everything that did not bear directly on elections; mitigated the severity of the ... This was the famous force bill, and the whole of it—a provision that, if a sufficient petition were made to the court for ... So a conference of Republicans was held at which an agreement was made, which I drew up, and signed by a majority of the entire Senate<span /></span>