Asked by justin
In his arguments in Brown v. Board of Education, the lawyer for Linda Brown claimed that “separate but equal” public schools were
separate but not truly equal.
neither equal nor separate.
equal but not truly separate.
both separate and equal.
All Answers 1
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Separate but not truly equal.
Thurgood Marshall and the NAACP argued that segregation produced inherently unequal educational opportunities — the doctrine of "separate but equal" was a sham.
Thurgood Marshall and the NAACP argued that segregation produced inherently unequal educational opportunities — the doctrine of "separate but equal" was a sham.
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