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she is a civil rights leader
nothing
Linda Brown's parents, Oliver and Leola Brown, were plaintiffs in the landmark civil rights case of Brown v. Board of Education. They challenged the segregation of public schools in Topeka, Kansas, which led to the Supreme Court ruling that segregation in public schools was unconstitutional.
Linda Brown never died. She was born in February 20, 1942 in Topeka Kansas and was involved in the civil rights movement to fight for equal rights between African Americans and Caucasians and other minorities. She still fight for causes such as these to this day, still living. So, she is alive and well.
Linda Brown was the daughter of the named petitioner in the landmark US Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Education,(1954). Linda was denied enrollment in an "all-white" school near her home in Topeka, Kansas, and was forced to travel a substantial distance to attend a segregated African-American school in another neighborhood.The NAACP recruited thirteen Topeka families to file a class action suit against the city board of education in an attempt to end segregation practices in their public schools. The Brown case was consolidated with four other NAACP-initiated class action suits from different parts of the country. These cases were part of a carefully planned test designed to challenge the constitutionality of segregation in public schools nationwide.By the time Brown v. Board of Education reached the Supreme Court, it involved quite a few plaintiffs, but Linda Brown and her father, Oliver Brown, became icons of the civil rights movement.
Linda Brown was a civil rights activist and educator. She is best known for being the lead plaintiff in the landmark Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Education, which declared state laws establishing separate public schools for black and white students unconstitutional.
Linda Brown was one of thirteen students whose parents instituted the Brown v. Board of Education lawsuit. This lawsuit overturned the previous Plessy v. Ferguson case that passed the "separate-but-equal" doctrine, essentially declaring that segregation in schools and other public places was illegal.
the civil rights movement.
He was.
emanual oliver in his darkness aka mr.no money
He fought for equal rights. By that i mean that he fought for equal protection and won his case. his case was about the segregation in schools. As a result African americans and whites were allowed to attend any of the same schools TOGETHER.
Linda Bevis has written: 'The applicability of human rights law to occupied territories' -- subject(s): Civil rights, Geneva Conventions, Military government, Protection of civilians, War