Answer:
 No, I don’t think the Brown court would have said that people could be separated by race on a train. Brown fought against segregation in schools because it was unconstitutional and violated the 14th Amendment. I can’t see why they would agree with segregation in other institutions. 
 The Plessy case, which occurred quite a bit earlier than the Brown case, ruled that segregation was okay as long as it was “separate but equal.” If it was Plessy v. Brown, Brown could have made the argument that “If it has to be separate, it’s not truly equal.” There’s no reason to divide the people unless there’s unfair treatment involved. 
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
made clothing and baskets.
Explanation:
The correct answer is - made clothing and baskets.
Reason -
In Northwest Coast culture, there were specific roles for both the men and women.  Men were responsible for all the hunting and fishing.
They did all the building (longhouses) and carving (canoes, totem poles).
Women stayed near the home, doing work on land.
They were responsible for all of the chores related to keeping the home: they cleaned, cooked, and looked after the children.  They dug for clams and shellfish, and collected berries from nearby forests.
The women also pounded and softened cedar bark for weaving and making clothes.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Andrew Jackson is on the $20 dollar bill
 
        
             
        
        
        
The answer is 
X= -4
Hopefully this helps:)
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
Executive Order 9066 is an executive order issued by Franklin Delano Roosevelt following the aftermath of the bombing of Pearl Harbor in December 7, 1941, and was pointed at citizens and residents of the US in the west coast who had Japanese ancestry. The President issues, and justifies issuing this Order, by stating that there may be Japanese spies that live in the US who may, not only feed information to the Japanese on US's movements & how the US public reacts, but also sabotage the war effort. Since the hazard is great, the US decided that it would be better to have all of them interned at isolated camps then to try to find spies loyal to Japan individually. However, technically the internment is wrong, and some people of today even compare it to the Nazi's concentration camps (however, I believe there are wide differences between the two). In the end, the Order was put out for fear of destruction not only from the outside, but from within also. 
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