| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary - 1959 - 710 páginas
...the State and include most of the lawyers, witnesses, jurors, judges and other officials with whom petitioner will inevitably be dealing when he becomes a member of the Texas Bar. With such a substantial and significant segment of society excluded, we cannot conclude that the education... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Education and Labor - 1963 - 136 páginas
...Justice Vinson : [The separate but equal law school for Negroes] excludes from the student body 85 percent of the population of the State which includes...Court banned separate-but-equal education. Yet in 1963, 9 years later, the Civil Rights Commission tells us than only 7 percent of the eligible Negro... | |
| United States Commission on Civil Rights - 1974 - 556 páginas
...the State and include most of the lawyers, witnesses, jurors, judges, and other officials with whom petitioner will inevitably be dealing when he becomes a member of the Texas bar. With such a substantial and significant segment of society excluded, we cannot conclude that the education... | |
| Leslie Friedman Goldstein - 1988 - 660 páginas
...the State and include most of the lawyers, witnesses, jurors, judges and other officials with whom petitioner will inevitably be dealing when he becomes a member of the Texas bar. The second critical 1950 case 44 involved a black graduate student who was actually admitted into the... | |
| Abraham L. Davis, Barbara Luck Graham - 1995 - 512 páginas
...the State and include most of the lawyers, witnesses, jurors, judges and other officials with whom petitioner will inevitably be dealing when he becomes a member of the Texas Bar. With such a substantial and significant segment of society excluded, we cannot conclude that the education... | |
| Pauli Murray - 1997 - 778 páginas
...the State and include most of the lawyers, witnesses, jurors, judges and other officials with whom petitioner will inevitably be dealing when he becomes a member of the Texas Bar. With such a substantial and significant segment of society excluded, we cannot conclude that the education... | |
| John E. Semonche - 2000 - 532 páginas
...the State and include most of the lawyers, witnesses, jurors, judges and other officials with whom petitioner will inevitably be dealing when he becomes a member of the Texas bar." To the argument that had influenced the Court in Plessy v. Ferguson — that the separated races suffer... | |
| James E. St. Clair, Linda C. Gugin - 2002 - 420 páginas
...attend "excludes from its student body 85% of the population of the state that includes most of the lawyers, witnesses, jurors, judges and other officials...dealing when he becomes a member of the Texas Bar." In response to the state's claim that excluding Sweatt from the University of Texas Law School was... | |
| Michael R. Gardner - 2002 - 326 páginas
...the State and include most of the lawyers, witnesses, jurors, judges and other officials with whom petitioner will inevitably be dealing when he becomes a member of the Texas Bar. With such a substantial and significant segment of society excluded, we cannot conclude that the education... | |
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