Asked by Social Studies Help
Which court case legally ended segregation within the United States?
A.) Plessy v. Ferguson
B.) Smith v. Allwright
C.) Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka
D.) Briggs v. Elliot
Thanks!
A.) Plessy v. Ferguson
B.) Smith v. Allwright
C.) Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka
D.) Briggs v. Elliot
Thanks!
Answers
Answered by
Writeacher
1. Go to http://www.google.com or http://www.bing.com
2. Type in <b>plessy v ferguson</b> (or whatever search terms you need). Press Enter.
3. Read different search results until you find what you need.
4. Re-search with the different search terms until you find what you need.
2. Type in <b>plessy v ferguson</b> (or whatever search terms you need). Press Enter.
3. Read different search results until you find what you need.
4. Re-search with the different search terms until you find what you need.
Answered by
Social Studies Help
It looks like the answer is A., Plessy v. Ferguson.
Answered by
Writeacher
Oh, my! No!
You need to go and research ALL of those cases after you re-read a Plessy v Ferguson article!!
You need to go and research ALL of those cases after you re-read a Plessy v Ferguson article!!
Answered by
Social Studies Help
My apologizes, just did some more researching on all the choices, the answer is C., Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka.
Answered by
Writeacher
Right.
Answered by
Social Studies Help
Thanks!
Answered by
Kayla
Which of these BEST describes the Supreme Court case of Brown v. Topeka Board of Education?
A) it reaffirmed the decision of Plessy vs Ferguson
B) ruled that universities must be open to people of all races
C) Kansas schools were to be desegregated as an experiment for racial integration
D) declared that "separate but equal" facilities for based on race are inherently unconstitutional
I don't know the answer
A) it reaffirmed the decision of Plessy vs Ferguson
B) ruled that universities must be open to people of all races
C) Kansas schools were to be desegregated as an experiment for racial integration
D) declared that "separate but equal" facilities for based on race are inherently unconstitutional
I don't know the answer
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