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    Let The Pigeon Drive the Bus Finally, a book to say “no” to! Don’t Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus takes the reader on a journey where they explore the persuasion of a mischievous pigeon who wants to drive a bus that is not his. The book starts off before the title page, where as soon as the book is opened, the pigeon is illustrated daydreaming about driving the bus. On the very next page, the bus driver is introduced and gives one task: don’t let the pigeon drive the bus! The pigeon shows…

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    do not automatical- ly think of school bus drivers. A hero is defined as “a person who is admired or idealized for courage, outstanding achievements, or noble quali- ties.” Similarly, an old proverb states, “A hero is a man who is afraid to run away.” Here are just few examples of Florida school bus drivers who didn’t “run away.” • Students in Boca Raton credit their school bus driver with saving their lives, as she was able to safely stop her bus on a busy street following a brake…

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    The London Bus Tendering Regime – Principles and Practice[1] Toner, JP[2] Institute for Transport Studies, University of Leeds, LS2 9JT, UK email: jtoner@its.leeds.ac.uk telephone: 00 44 113 233 6617 fax: 00 44 113 233 5334…

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    America had gone through so many things when the Montgomery Bus Boycott was going on. They just had gone through the Vietnam War, which was hard for America to overcome. America was at one time almost in all out nuclear war with Russia, better known as the cold war. But now you have blacks fighting for the same rights that the whites had. They were breaking laws, but yet they were not using any violence while breaking these laws, because their leader Martin Luther King Jr. knew that they could…

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    The “Montgomery Bus Boycott” was a Civil Rights Movement in Montgomery, Alabama where African Americans protested against rules on the bus. The rules and laws on the bus were that if a white male or female asked an African American male or female to get up, they would have to stand up and allow the white person to sit down. The bus boycott lasted 381 day from the dates December 1, 1955 through December 20, 1956. The movement was started by Rosa Parks refusing to give her seat up after a long day…

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    The Montgomery Bus Boycott is considered one of the first large-scale demonstrations against segregation in the United States during the civil-rights movement (History). Beginning in 1955, african americans stopped riding the public busses in protest of being made to sit in the back of the bus in the “colored section.” Instead, they either rode in cars, rode bikes, or walked to show that they no longer wanted to be treated as second class citizens. The boycott was important to the civil rights…

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    Rosa looked at the bus driver, as he asked her to stand up and with no hesitation she said, “No.” (Reed & Parks 23). Parks changed history with one simple word leading to equality between races and no segregated buses. When looking at the Civil Rights movement in America, it is important to discuss the significance of the Montgomery Bus Boycott, the result of the Montgomery Bus Boycott on civil rights, and what did Parks did to help change the world. The history of the Montgomery Bus Boycott…

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    The Montgomery Bus Boycott started in December of 1955. Pre-1955 ensured that black Americans were very much second class citizens. Early December of 1955 Rosa Parks refused to give up her bus seat to a white man; all heck broke loose. A year later the black community began riding the buses once again. Eventually, the violence ended, and thing began to look up for the blacks. On December 1st, 1955 Rosa Parks was on her way home from work. She rode the bus just like any average person. She sat…

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    The Montgomery Bus Boycott was not as instantaneous as you may think. There were more people arrested, violent approach of the white people to stop the boycott, and much more. The Montgomery Bus Boycott didn’t start off with just Rosa Parks getting arrested, there were at least a dozen more before her, in Montgomery alone. Rosa Parks was not really the reason why the boycott was started. They chose Rosa, over the two arrested a week before her, becauseshe was a better candidate then they were.…

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    Montgomery Bus Boycott began and lasted over a year. Four days prior to the start of the boycott, Rosa Parks was arrested after refusing to relinquish her seat to a white man on a bus. As a result of the closeness in timing between both events and the large focus on this particular arrest, many believed it to be the reason behind the boycott. To this day, history books are placing more emphasis on Rosa Parks’ arrest than on the reality behind the success of the boycott. The Montgomery Bus…

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