asked 190k views
2 votes
In his arguments in Brown v. Board of Education, the lawyer for Linda Brown claimed that "separate but equal" public

schools were
O separate but not truly equal.
O neither equal nor separate.
O equal but not truly separate.
O both separate and equal.

asked
User Tobrun
by
8.1k points

2 Answers

4 votes

It would be the first option

-"separate but not truly equal"

hope this helps :)

answered
User Driax
by
8.3k points
1 vote

Answer:

separate but not truly equal.

Step-by-step explanation:

answered
User Memyself
by
7.7k points
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