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Wednesday, March 27, 2019

Brown v. Board of Education v. Today :: Comparative Essays Papers

cook v. menu of Education v. Today Whenever I walk into Foellinger Auditorium, its usually to attend my econ lecture, only if this time is different. Im not going to listen to a lecture about how the economy works, simply instead to listen to a family that caused the nation to rethink the educational system. The storied brownness family was going to give a talk about the storied case that carried their name and forever put them in history. The Brown v. Board of Education decision eliminated segregation in public schools, an injustice that so many African-Americans fought to end not only in public schools, but also public places. The Brown v. Board of Education decision was a step into the future where African-American and Caucasians could intermingle rather than be isolated just because of race. Segregation in the early 50s had eventually reached the end of its journey and a new law was made to inhibition segregation and promote integration.Walking into the auditorium, conversations about the excitement of the Brown sisters large a talk about the historical decision, politics, sports, and other everyday conversations could be heard. The auditorium fill up with people of different ethnic groups, mainly Caucasians but several(prenominal) African-Americans came to hear the true story behind Brown v. Board of Education. I would have to say about 60 percent of the people were Caucasians, 25 percent African-Americans and the other 15 percent were either Asians or Hispanics. pot of all ages came to hear what the Brown sisters had to say some as green as the age of seven and some as old as in their late 60s. Children, undergrad students, grad students, professors, as salubrious as people with other professions filled the auditorium, with undergrad students making up most of the people who attended. However, the auditorium was not full or as filled as one would expect knowing that the Brown family was going to establish the Brown v. Board of Education decision, a disappointing reality.The long await talk finally started a few minutes after four. Susan Fowler, co-chairman of the Brown v. Board commemoration, started by introducing the ten winning students who wrote to Linda Brown expressing their feelings about the Brown v. Board trial and decision. She then talked about how Project 500, established in 1968, recruited African-American students to the University of Illinois campus as a way to make the campus more diverse project 500 was a direct result of Brown v.

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