Even before graduating from college, McCaskill didn’t have a common lifestyle. She was born in Rolla, Missouri, had a father who served as a state Insurance Commissioner, a mother who was the first woman elected to be the City Council of Columbia, Missouri. After spending most of her childhood in Houston, Missouri, she later moved to Lebanon, and eventually to Columbia where she attended High School and was a cheerleader, Pep Club president, and a member of the debate club. This already showed what type of woman she would be when she grew up – a leader. After graduating from high school, she stayed in Columbia where she received her Bachelor’s of Arts in Political Science, and also received her Juris Doctor from the University Of Missouri School Of Law a few years later.…
April 27, 2009, Sonia Sotomayor was informed about the possibility to be nominated as Supreme Court Justice if David Souter were to retire. Davis Souter’s plans to retire we leaked on April 30, 2009, leading to early attention for Sotomayor’s nominee possibility as the new Supreme Court Justice. Sotomayor was informed of President Barack Obama choice on May 25. He then nominated her on May 26, 2009. When Sonia was nominated, history was made for the American court system; she became the second jurist to be appointed for three different judicial positions all by different Presidents. Sotomayor’s nomination matched closely with Obama’s campaign and got congradulations from Democrats and liberals. The greatest disapproval of her nomination came from Republicans.…
This article gives the concise information about the nomination of Sandra O’Connor. First, Reagan nominated O’Connor because of his previous promise. Next, Sandra O’Connor was an attorney, a judge and the first female state Senate majority leader in the country. The author also provides the names of the two famous people who support her. They are Barry Goldwater and William Rehnquist. Lastly, the article tells how long she served on the Supreme Court and her impact to the percentage of female law students from her nomination to her…
Magtadt defines liberals has typically holding civil rights close to heart. They are often the primary defenders of individuals or groups that they see as victims of past discrimination, such as racial minorities, women and the poor (p. 37, 2015). Although identifying as independent she has quite often voted along with the liberal side of the Supreme Court. However, it can be said that unlike other liberals Sotomayor takes a more case-by-case approach. Sotomayor has shown a willingness to side with conservative in cases pertaining to criminal law, no doubt an influence of her time as prosecutor. For example, in Wetzel v. Lambert back in February 2010, she sided with the conservative bloc’s majority opinion to reinstituting a convict’s death…
She started her work career as a Director of a day nursery on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. This experience gave her an acute awareness of her social surroundings. She saw first-hand how minorities were in substandard housing, inadequate schools, subjected to drugs and police brutality and no basic civil rights. This was when she determined that bad government had a connection to the fate of these minorities. She joined the Bedford-Stuyvesant Political League and gained lots of experience and political insight. She helped her neighbors to register to vote, unemployed to get jobs, students to get scholarships and fought with the league for 10 years and gained lots of respect and connections.…
In 2003, the Supreme Court of New Haven was mandated to reexamine Title VII of the Civil Rights Act 1964, as it was presented a disparate impact discrimination case against the same City’s firefighters. The African American firefighters, expressed their disgruntlement, as they did not feel professionally appreciated by their superiors. On the contrary, they did not have the privilege as the opposite ethnic group to seek for upward mobility within the Fire Department.…
A time when Sonia Sotomayor was determined to give back to her community was when she had to give her speech during her speech competition. She started by talking about the killing of Kiddie Jenaveys and how it took place. After she got off work from her job at a bar late at night around three in the morning, getting home to her apartments in the queens, she parked her car in a nearby parking lot walking through an alley towards her apartment when a stranger appeared in her shadow and frightened her so she ran and he caught up to her and stabbed her in the back as she screamed and cried for help. Several neighbors heard her cries and her struggle as Winston Mosley stabbed her. The windows were shut due to the cold weather, but kiddie kept screaming for help as he stabbed her repeatedly and beat her to shut up and finely raped her. When it was all over the neighbors called the police and they arrived minutes after but Mosley got away that night later caught for a burglary charge and now is faced with life in prison.…
He was born on July 2, 1908 in Baltimore, Maryland. His father, William Marshall, was a dilettante writer, and his mother, Norma Arica, was a kindergarten teacher. He went to an all black school, and Baltimore had twice the death rate of blacks than whites. By the time he was almost to high school, his parents had earned enough money to live in a nice area and for him to go to a top quality school. Once he graduated in 1925, he knew the entire constitution backwards and forwards. He got accepted to into Lincoln University in Oxford, Pennsylvania. He joined the college debate club, which led his desire to become a lawyer. Since he got rejected to law school of Maryland due to racial segregation, he went to the University of Howard. He and his wife moved in with his parents, and his mom sold her wedding ring to pay for law school (Oyez.com, 1-3). Charles Hamilton Houston guided and helped Marshall with practicing laws (History.com Staff, 2). Before he moved up to the supreme court, he won fourteen of nineteen cases (Housel, 79). Thurgood traveled the US because his name got widely known, and he earned the nickname “Mr. Civil Rights”. In the supreme court, he impressively won 29 of 32 cases. A few of the cases were ‘Smith v. Allwright’ in 1944, ‘Shelley v. Kraemer’ in 1948, and ‘Brown v. Board of education of of Topeka’. As he grew older, his power debilitated, but people still listened to him until he retired. Thurgood Marshall died on January 24, 1993 because of heart failure in Bethesda, Maryland (History.com Staff, 2). Thurgood Marshall has left an immense effect on most people in the world, making them view racism deeper and more…
The aim of this paper is to give some insights on the Supreme Court ruling of Brown vs Board of Education and to investigate whether it had some effects on Hispanic minorities.…
Ruth Bader Ginsburg had a hard life growing up. Ginsburg was born in Brooklyn,New York March 15,1933.Appointed to the Supreme Court by President Bill Clinton in 1993.The only good thing she had was her mother;she died the day before her high school graduation.Ginsburg kept going into her education and lead ACLU (American Civil Liberties Union). Ginsburg impacted society by making Civil Rights, Academic success true and possible even for a woman and with her personal struggle she went far from how she was raised in low-income.…
Women in the Hispanic culture are pressured by family and the men in their lives to be successful in both school and taking on the traditional rolls of a housewife. The Hispanic community is so focused on making sure Latina students become great mothers and wives that they disregard the more important and prosperous ways to succeed in life. However, women are stepping out and obtaining college degrees and making strides in changing the traditional gender roles. Latinas are becoming more aware of the economy stimulating women to challenge their traditional roles and soar above the expectations.…
| She talks about how she was able to go to school without fees, examinations, machinations, rulings, and no questions asked. She was able to get education for free.…
Many people know Thurgood Marshall as the first African American Supreme Court justice. Born in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1908, Marshall was raised in segregation and believed himself to be a Southerner. Upon graduation from law school he opened a practice in Baltimore. With limited opportunities for African Americans during the Depression, he became member of the local NAACP branch in an attempt to spread his name in the community. From 1938 and into the early 1960’s Marshall, beginning at the age of 32, served as the chief attorney for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and directed litigation for the advancement of legal rights for African Americans. He argued several civil rights cases before the Supreme Court, with the most famous case as a lawyer for the NAACP being, Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka. This case was the corner stone of desegregation in public schools. The Supreme Court ruled that “separate but equal” did not pertain to public education, because separate could never be…
Why College Education is important to me?, It's so important to me because it ONE of the most pompous thing you need in this world today to get somewhere in life, and survive so you can support yourselves, and yours kids. When I see the words “College Education” First thing pop up in my Mind is my Mother Smile, able to make her proud!, Not to be worried about her little baby-girl taking on this big world By herself. And to able to give her a little peace of mind that “I can” survive and support myself because I finished my College Education to get a Higher paying job and not Struggle.…
College is important to me as it is required for me to achieve the two careers that I am most interested in. I know that it will be challenging as high school was also. With the support systems of my parents, grandparents and siblings, mentors and friends I know I will be successful.…