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26/01/2001 11:35:49
Tom Gahagan
Alliance Computer Solutions
Thomaston, Georgie, États-Unis
Information générale
Forum:
Politics
Catégorie:
Autre
Titre:
Divers
Thread ID:
00468273
Message ID:
00469095
Vues:
33
>From the link....
>
>"The initial optimism was quickly destroyed by the reality of student strikes, increased violence and theft, racial riots, and great disparity in students' abilities. D.C. schools were not the only ones to face these problems. Their situation was typical of schools across America." emphasis added....
>
>Thanks Chris for posting more evidence of exactly what I've been trying to say. < s >

Well, maybe I misread this, but it appears to me that there was not forced segregation:

"The public schools of Washington, D.C., were among the first in the nation to successfully integrate."

And all this took place pretty early:

"On September 13, 1954, less than four months after Bolling v. Sharpe, schools across the city opened with integrated faculties and student bodies."

I read this as forced integration, rather than forced segregation.
Chris McCandless
Red Sky Software
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