Thurgood Marshall High School Essay

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    of racial domination held on from there on. In the mid twentieth century, African Americans in the South and in many parts of adjacent outskirt states were restricted from partner with whites in a large group of organizations and open facilities—schools, healing facilities, old people's homes, rest rooms, holding up rooms, railroad autos, lodgings, eateries, lunch counters, stops and shorelines, swimming pools, libraries, show corridors, and motion picture theaters. Some

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    Elena Kagan is currently an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. She was born on April 28, 1960 in New York City, New York, to Robert and Gloria Kagan (which makes her 56 years old today). Kagan is somewhat heavyset and on the shorter side- she stands about 5 feet and 3 inches tall. Her face appears friendly, with a medium skin tone, wide set, dark brown eyes, rosy cheeks, and medium brown hair cut to her chin. She is also known for wearing pearl or gemstone earrings and colorful

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    thirteen he moved to Lincoln, Illinois with his mother and stepfather. When times got hard and Hughes’s step father lost his job and they moved to Cleveland, Ohio. Hughes attended Central High School in Cleveland. In the eighth grade Hughes was elected as the class poet. He was again elected his senior year at Central High. James Nathaniel Hughes, Langston Hughes's father, and Langston did not have much of a relationship. His father left the United states for the purpose of racial prejudice that kept

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    1931, it became a member of the Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools and was approved by the Southern Association of Colleges. In the summer of 1934, the Houston School Board changed the junior college to a four-year college and the name to Houston College for Negroes. When the university opened its doors in September 1947, it had 2,300 students, two schools, one division and one college - the Law School, the Pharmacy School, the Vocational Division, and the College of Arts and Sciences. Responding

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    a historical NAACP court case was won in 1954 after the Supreme Court made a ground making decision in the Brown vs. Board of Education verdict. A lawsuit was brought against the Board of Education which denied back student the ability to attend schools with whites. This court case overturned the previous decision of Plessy v. Ferguerson of 1896, and helped to defeat the notion that America could be “separate but equal”. As a result segregation was banned and deemed as illegal, providing African

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    Drinking from different water fountains, going to different schools, and even being racially harassed constantly. This was the reality for African Americans in the early 20th century. The passage “The Long Path to Equality,” by Meryl Kwan, is about events before the civil rights movement (1954-1965). Meryl Kwan used the court cases of Murray v. Pearson and Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka to show how much happened for African Americans before the civil rights movement. Meryl Kwan used the court

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    mentioned criteria. I have only one way that will allow me to live the successful life I dream of, and that’s my education. I worked my hardest during elementary school just so I could be able to attend one of the top high schools in Chicago and only then was I accepted into Whitney M. Young Magnet High School, one of the top three high schools in the state. At Whitney Young, I participate in many clubs and extracurricular activities, including cheerleading, student council, Chicago Student Union

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    across the country: segregation in schools was now illegal. Blacks and whites were finally allowed to learn together and were enthusiastic to receive a higher quality education in better schools. However, not everyone was in favor of this new law. Governor Orval Faubus of Little Rock, Arkansas, repudiated the new desegregation law and called the National Guard to ward off nine African American students from enrolling themselves in what used to be an all white high school on September 4, 1957 (Anderson

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    the youngest of 13 kids. Her father was a farmer and her mother was a housewife. She was raised in a religious family and went to the Antioch Baptist Church in Tulsa, Ok. After high school, she did her undergraduate work at Oklahoma State University and graduated with honors in 1977. Afterwards, Anita attended Yale Law School where she graduated with her Juris Doctorate in 1980. After graduation she went to work with Wald, Harkrader and Ross law firm in Washington D.C. While working there she met Clarence

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    handed down its ruling in the landmark case of Brown V. Board of topeka, Kansas. The Court's Unanimous decision overturned provision of the 1896 Plessy V. Ferguson decision,which had allowed for “separate but equal” public facilities, including public Schools in the United States. Declaring that “separate educational facilities are inherently unequal,” the Brown V. Board decision help break the back of State Dash sponsored segregation, and provided a spark to the American Civil Rights Movement. This Unanimous

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