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10 votes
10 votes
Was Georgia Governor Ernest Vandiver's response to the admission of two African America students to the University of Georgia on the orders of a federal judge in 1961 consistent with Sibley Commission's

recommendations regarding the integration of schools in the state? Why or why not?
The governor responded by attempting to close the university entirely, an action that was consistent with the commission's recommendation that the state strongly resist any federal
integration orders and that its schools remain segregated
B
The governor responded by attempting to close the university entirely, an action that was not consistent with the commission's recommendation that schools be allowed to decide for
themselves whether to integrate or close their institutions.
c
The governor responded by ordering the immediate integration of the university, an action that was consistent with the commission's recommendation that the government begin the
process of fully integrating all public schools in the state
integrating
D
The governor responded by ordering the immediate integration of the university, an action that was not consistent with the commission's recommendation that the question
schools should be decided by the state's electorate

User Muhammad Atif Agha
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1 Answer

13 votes
13 votes

Answer:

Answer:The Sibley Commission was created to study the issue of desegregation.

The Sibley Commission was created as a result of the Brown v. Board of

Education decision

The leader of the Sibley Commission- John Sibley- did not want to integrate public schools in Georgia.

The findings of the Sibley Commission did not affect private schools.

I just took the test so these are 100% correct :)

Step-by-step explanation:

User Oluchi
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