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6 Sentences With "abolish segregation"

How to use abolish segregation in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "abolish segregation" and check conjugation/comparative form for "abolish segregation". Mastering all the usages of "abolish segregation" from sentence examples published by news publications.

" A white couple in a St. Louis suburb wrote Truman, asking him to abolish segregation in the armed forces, adding: "We feel that one of the most effective, firm and noticeable ways in which we can show the rest of the world we believe in Democracy is to practice such a virtue in all possible places at home.
The Texas State Board of Education issued an accommodating statement of policy and instructed local school districts to abolish segregation of Mexican Americans.Arturo Rosales, Dictionary of Latino Civil Rights History (Houston, TX: Arte Publico Press, 2006), 141.
His principal duties were in the field of management. He helped institute Symington's program of "Management Control Through Cost Control," an initiative to place the U.S. Air Force on a business-like basis, using accepted industrial practices as a yardstick for establishing Air Force procedures. Zuckert represented the Air Force in the formulation of the fiscal 1950 budget, the first joint Army-Navy-Air Force budget in U.S. history. The accomplishment that Zuckert considered his most professionally satisfying stemmed from President Harry S. Truman's 1948 directive requiring the armed services to abolish segregation.
Only men could become members of Omicron Delta Kappa in the first sixty years of its existence. At the 1970 and 1972 National Conventions, the University of Alabama Circle introduced an amendment to the National Constitution to admit women into the Society. In June 1972, Title IX of the "Education Amendments Act of 1972" prohibited sex discrimination in federally assisted educational programs and amended parts of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Professional and honor fraternities were included in Title IX. The Special Committee on the Possible Role of Women met in January 1973 and recommended changes to the National Constitution that would abolish segregation based on gender within the Society.
One article on race matters, by Wilfred H. Kerr, co-chairman of the Lynn Committee to Abolish Segregation in the Armed Forces, forecast one ironic effect in the postwar era of race strife, prophesying in its very title, "Negroism: Strange Fruit of Segregation",Wilfred H. Kerr, "Negroism: Strange Fruit of Segregation", politics, March 1944, pp. 212-217. the eventual rise of Black Power and other forms of black separatism. The African-American writer George S. Schuyler, sometimes called "the black Mencken" after his earlier association with the Baltimore journalist's monthly The American Mercury, contributed an impassioned review George S. Schuyler, "Free and Equal", politics, July 1944, pp. 181-182. of An American Dilemma: The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy, the Swedish scholar Gunnar Myrdal's pathbreaking and exhaustive survey of the current state of the American racial agony.
Chief Justice Earl Warren, the author of the Court's unanimous opinion in Brown On May 17, 1954, the Supreme Court issued a unanimous 9–0 decision in favor of the Brown family and the other plaintiffs. The decision consists of a single opinion written by Chief Justice Earl Warren, which all the justices joined. The Court's opinion began by noting that it had attempted to find an answer to the question of whether the Fourteenth Amendment was meant to abolish segregation in public education by hearing a second round of oral arguments from the parties' lawyers specifically on the historical sources relating to its drafting and ratification, but to no avail. In addition to the inconclusive information of the historical scope of the Fourteenth Amendment's application to public education, the Court stated that applying this historical information was also difficult because of the major social and governmental changes that had taken place in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

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