The 1965 civil rights act gave them the freedom to make sure the laws are followed.
One type of segregation that was present at the time of Martin Luther King, Jr. was school segregation.
Brown V Board
Fight for school segregation in the south
discriminationsegregation
I think it was Plessy vs Ferguson
Earl Warren - Apex
The supreme court justice was Earl Warren.
well at this time the answer is not founded but you can try to find it and be smart ... (:
No single justice declared segregation unconstitutional in Brown v. Board of Education, (1954); all nine justices overturned the "separate but equal" precedent set in Plessy v. Ferguson, (1896), by voting unanimously.Chief Justice Earl Warren wrote the opinion of the Court in that case, a safe bet for a test answer, but don't be mislead into thinking he overturned any racial segregation laws unilaterally (all by himself).
Non-segregation would put children in physical danger.
Chief Justice Earl Warren, who presided over the US Supreme Court from 1953 - 1969.
Naval Justice School was created in 1946.
Segregation is a matter of racism
Brown vs. Board of Education decided that segregation should occur with "diliberate speed" which allowed southern school districts to move quite slowly and delay segration for many years (15 years on average). The Nixon administration and the then current attorney general supported a plan to delay implementation of the courts de-segregation order. Justice Black encouraged the NAACP to bring a case before the supreme court that argued against further delays. chief justice Berger agreed to further delays in the desgregation order. However, Justin Black supported the argument that immediate de-segregation was in order. Justice Douglas supported Justice Black. Justice Thurgood Martial argued that an alternative plan of de-segration within a short period of time was appropriate. Justice Brennans draft opinion was ultimate accepted by the majority of justices and required the southern school district to immediately end segregation (with some editing by Justices Black and Harlan). The decision stated that "The obligation of every school district is to terminate dual school systems at once and to operate now and hereafter only unitary schools."[18] The previously-set pace of "all deliberate speed" was no longer permissible.
One type of segregation that was present at the time of Martin Luther King, Jr. was school segregation.
Justice Thurgood Marshall, who argued for the end of segregation in education in Brown v. Board of Education, (1954). Justice Marshall believed affirmative action for African-Americans was an important remedy to the disadvantages and oppression they'd experienced under the law for hundreds of years.
Chief justice Earl Warren had seen a number of cases during his time in the supreme court. His most notable though was his ruling on civil rights cases, which ended segregation in the school systems.