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Americans often celebrate Black History Month by honoring famous civil-rights leaders like the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Thurgood Marshall...

Author: By Sadie H. Sanchez, | Title: Civil Rights Activist Gives Talk at K-School | 2/7/1997 | See Source »

...Rehnquist argued that such cases have never merited federal relief unless "an independent constitutional violation" has occurred. Justice Sandra Day O'Connor added that the innocence standard must be "extraordinarily high" so federal courts won't be "deluged with frivolous claims." As early as 1986, the late Justice Thurgood Marshall complained that this trend left death-row petitioners in "an increasingly pernicious vise grip...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NO COURT OF LAST RESORT | 11/11/1996 | See Source »

Such insulting language has become Scalia's signature style. It does not win friends or influence jurists--except perhaps to move them off the fence into alignment against him. Georgetown University law professor Mark Tushnet, who has studied the personal papers of the late Justice Thurgood Marshall, says Scalia "annoyed everybody at one time or another...They'd get over it and say, 'That's just how Nino is,' and then he'd do something else. It has to have left some residue of unwillingness to accommodate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ONE ANGRY MAN | 7/8/1996 | See Source »

...with those of 53 surrounding districts. In 1974 the Supreme Court struck down that order, holding in Milliken v. Bradley that suburban districts could not be ordered to help desegregate a city's schools unless those suburbs had been involved in illegally segregating them in the first place. Justice Thurgood Marshall warned in dissent that the court had set a course that would allow "our great metropolitan areas to be divided up each into two cities--one white, the other black...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE END OF INTEGRATION | 4/29/1996 | See Source »

...BEEN ALMOST 47 YEARS SINCE a black man named Heman Sweatt and his lawyer, Thurgood Marshall, brought a case before the Supreme Court that forcibly integrated the University of Texas. So it was oddly appropriate last week that the University of Texas at Austin was once again the defendant in a sweeping, precedent-setting court ruling on the subject of race. This time, though, the university was chastised for promoting racial diversity, not racial exclusion...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: UNDOING DIVERSITY | 4/1/1996 | See Source »

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