DREAM BIG #4 July 2015 | Page 6

equality, Brown v. Board of Education freedom, Selma, justice, peace, change, Jim Crow, Daisy Bates, African Burial Ground National Monument, Rosa Parks, Mae Mallory, 1954, ministers, students, Ernest Green, property, President Theodore Roosevelt, schools, Robert F. Williams, courage, federal law, education, system, religion, 1971, sports, black Americans, "separate but equal", legal, segregation, Maggie L. Walker, Frederick Douglass, Ku Klux Klan, plaintiffs, history, brutality, stand, U.S. Supreme Court, unconstitutional, Oliver Brown et al. v. the Board of Education of Topeka, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), The Crusader, Greensboro, North Carolina, individuals, official, President Obama, African American history, protection from discrimination, African American Civil War Memorial, Booker T. Washington, Mary McLeod Bethune, Confederate Flag, Nicodemus, constitution, Montgomery Bus Boycott, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., love, Plessy v. Ferguson, Violence, President Harry Truman, Housing segregation, Hartman Turnbow, Anniston, Alabama, boycotts, sit-ins, Freedom Rides, marches, Regional Council of Negro Leadership, Montgomery Women's Political Council, leaders of the Montgomery Improvement Association, Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Moton High School, Cumming v. Richmond County Board of Education, Brown II, de facto segregation, E.D. Nixon, 381 days, Little Rock Central High School, President Dwight D. Eisenhower, National Guard, Nonviolence, James Forman, riots, African-Americans, civil rights, NAACP Youth Council, Samuel Wilbert Tucker ,