The answer is Japan / Vietnam
The 14th Amendment was significant to the Civil Rights Movement because it ensured <span>that states guaranteed all people born or naturalized in the U.S. the rights granted by the Bill of Rights. The correct option among all the options that are given in the question is the third option or option "C". I hope it helps you.</span>
We can tell someone’s clothing show that they have fired a gun when the burning gunpowder residue stays or remains on the clothes. If the clothes test positive for GSR gunshot residue it means that it is very close to a gun that was fired. Remember that a traces of a gunpowder residue remains on clothing or skin and on the surface after discharging a firearm is 78 hours.
The 1950 Supreme Court decision to ban "separate but equal" law schools in Texas was:
SWEATT v. PAINTER
Details:
The case of <em>Sweatt v. Painter (</em>1950), challenged the "separate but equal" doctrine regarding racial segregated schooling which had been asserted by an earlier case, <em>Plessy v. Ferguson</em> (1896).
Heman Marion Sweatt was a black man who was not allowed admission into the School of Law of the University of Texas. Theophilus Painter was the president of the University of Texas at the time. So that's where the names in the lawsuit came from.
In the case, which made its way to the US Supreme Court, the ultimate decision was that forcing Mr. Sweatt to attend law school elsewhere failed to meet the "separate but equal" standard, because other schools available to him as a black man had lesser facilities, and he would be excluded from interaction with future lawyers who were attending the state university's law school, available only to white students. The school experience would need to be truly equal in order for the "separate but equal" policy to be valid.
In 1954, another Supreme Court decision went even further. <em>Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka </em>extended civil liberties to all Americans in regard to access to all levels of education. The <em>Plessy v. Ferguson </em>case had said that separate, segregated public facilities were acceptable as long as the facilities offered were equal in quality. In <em>Brown v. Board of Education</em>, segregation was shown to create inequality, and the Supreme Court unanimously ruled segregation to be unconstitutional. After the Brown v. Board of Education decision, there was a struggle to get states to implement the new policy of desegregated schools, but eventually they were compelled to do so.