Education: No Private Segregation
Sandra McCrary, a U.S. Navy employee who lived in the Washington suburb of Falls Church, Va., and Margaret Gonzales, a Howard University secretary in nearby Dale City, Va., once shared the same baby sitter. That was how they found out that they also shared the same problem. The McCrarys' son Michael, 2, and the Gonzaleses' son Colin, 6, had both been rejected by local private schools. So the parents went to court and charged that their children had been barred on racial grounds. Last week Federal District Judge Albert V. Bryan Jr. ruled in...
To read the entire article, you must be a TIME subscriber. Already registered? Sign in below
Current print subscribers to register
Subscribe now to get TIME All Access
Email, Password or Region is incorrect
A required form parameter was missing.
The System is currently down. Please try again in a few minutes.
Email Address is invalid
Password is blank
Most Popular »
- Westminster Dog Show Winners: Where Are They Now?
- After Whitney Houston, Musicians Say: I'm Afraid
- Attacking Israel's Diplomats: The View from Iran
- Presenting Kate Upton, Sports Illustrated's 2012 Swimsuit Cover Model
- Europe's Deep Freeze: Why Climate Change Is Not (Entirely) to Blame
- The Lesson of the Laptop-Shooting Dad
- As its Single Ranks Swell, Japan Wonders 'Where's the Love?'
- Same-Sex Marriage Boosted in Two States
- Jeremy Lin Makes Us All American
- Buffett Rule Shares Flaw with Tax it Would Replace
- Europe's Deep Freeze: Why Climate Change Is Not (Entirely) to Blame
- The Upside Of Being An Introvert (And Why Extroverts Are Overrated)
- Attacking Israel's Diplomats: The View from Iran
- As Its Single Ranks Swell, Japan Wonders 'Where's the Love?'
- Friends With Benefits
- It's Alive! The Greatest Space Telescope Ever Built Survives
- Harvard's Hoops Star Is Asian. Why's That a Problem?
- I Hope I Die Before I Have to Live with Old People
- Halftime and Hyperbole
- Assisted Suicide




