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The Southern Regional Council reports that for the first time desegregation in the South’s public schools was the rule rather than the exception.
1971 (Mar 24)
The Southern Regional Council issued a report in Atlanta which said that for the first time desegregation in the south's public schools was the rule rather than the exception. This transformation had occurred, the Council said, despite the proliferation of all-white private academies in the region and the continued operation of some all-Black schools. At the same time, the council accused the Nixon administration of "playing a deceptive game of numbers" by using misleading figures about the extent of actual desegregation. Despite the recent gains, the council asserted that the south was "a far cry from the final dismantling of the dual [school] system." Desegregation in 1970 and in 1971, according to the council, was less successful than the administration asserted in its figures, but "more successful than policies of the government gave it any right to be." The council's report was titled "The South and Her Children: School Desegregation, 1970-71."
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.