Busing —Not Integration— Opposed: Invoke Our Color-Blind Constitution to End It / Chapter One |
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Busing Dissenters Told They Can Run, But Can't Hide |
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published in Newsline, recalling the tone of school officials at a meeting in June, 1977: ... I remember because I had attended a meeting at Mira Mesa High School that the district had staged. The whole tenor of the meeting was — get ready because it's (busing) coming and there is nothing you can do about it. That was the way it was presented. Make whatever accommodations you have to but just accept it. The following experience presaged difficulty in finding a forum for their views in legal publications. Prior to undertaking representation of Groundswell, et al., I had submitted on August 14, 1978, an essay entitled "Court Busing-Orders Increasingly are Infringing upon our Liberty" to the California State Bar Journal. There was strong support within the editorial staff and committee for acceptance of this article for publication. But it was finally rejected six months later, on February 7, 1979. The extent of my concern about judicially-ordered busing, at that time is shown by excerpts from that rejected essay (footnotes omitted) as follows:
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— Busing: Chapter 1, pages 17 - 28 — | ||||||||||||||||||||
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