Search for: "Brown v. South Carolina State Board of Education" Results 41 - 60 of 85
Sort by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
8 Sep 2017, 5:05 am by Jim Sedor
Jim Merrill Pleads Guilty to Misconduct, Agrees to Assist Investigators in Statehouse Corruption ProbeCharleston Post and Courier – Glenn Smith and Andrew Brown | Published: 9/1/2017 South Carolina Rep. [read post]
4 Jun 2017, 1:06 pm by Calvin TerBeek
Board of Education and asserting states’ rights to operate segregated institutions—which, again, Ervin saw as conforming to natural law. [read post]
19 Apr 2017, 7:19 am by Meg Kribble
The Frankfurter Papers are of special note because they reveal how the Supreme Court approached the Brown v. [read post]
6 Dec 2015, 11:06 am by Dan Ernst
But the nominations of Clement Haynsworth of South Carolina and G. [read post]
7 Oct 2014, 10:02 am
Board of Education, which was fiercely resisted in many states for more than a decade. [read post]
19 Apr 2014, 8:12 am
Black teachers in South Carolina, where another of the desegregation suits had been filed, worried, with some cause, that integration would end a state of affairs in which black children, though deprived of equal resources, at least benefitted from teachers who did not calibrate their expectations according to the color of their students’ skin. [read post]
17 Apr 2014, 9:00 am by Rose Falconer
A month today sees the 60th anniversary of the US Supreme Court’s 1954 landmark ruling in Brown v Board of Education, in which the Court declared racially segregated schools to be unconstitutional. [read post]
6 Mar 2014, 7:42 am
Fast forward to 1956, when North Carolina decided to deal with Brown v. [read post]
1 Jun 2012, 7:02 am by Matthew L.M. Fletcher
Education for Extinction: American Indians and the Boarding School Experience, 1875-1928. [read post]
1 Jun 2012, 7:02 am by Matthew L.M. Fletcher
Education for Extinction: American Indians and the Boarding School Experience, 1875-1928. [read post]
9 Jan 2012, 3:25 am by Alfred Brophy
Board of Education: the idea is that the Supreme Court supported Brown because it served the United States’ cold war agenda of supporting human rights. [read post]