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ordered the paper closed after two issues, believing the paper to be
Communist-influenced, telling Taylor that "I hate to ruin anyone's career, but in your case, I'm prepared to make an exception." A decade after he graduated from the college in 1952, officials at the college implored federal
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game show, where he had been offered answers by the producers, which he refused to accept. After appearing before a grand jury investigation of cheating on quiz shows, the jury foreman informed him that he had been the most successful of any of the show's contestants who had not cheated.
333:
due to fluid in his lungs, the result of a head injury he suffered in an accidental fall one month before his death. He was survived by a son, two daughters, and three grandchildren. In 1954, he married
Harriett Elaine Rosen, who died in 1997.
303:, who chaired the Block Bork coalition recounted how Taylor's team "examined every article, every speech, every decision, every statement that Robert Bork ever made", providing the supporting material that blocked Bork's path to nomination.
151:'". In speeches over the years he said that as a Jewish teenager he had experienced anti-Semitism in a neighborhood that Jews shared mainly with Italians. He first became aware of anti-African American prejudice when he saw whites harassing
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officials not to hire him for a government job, saying that he had "espoused liberal causes such as the rights of the Negro in the South". Brooklyn
College awarded Taylor an honorary degree in 2001, with college president
170:, where he was editor of the school paper but was suspended by the college's president for publishing an article that alleged that a professor had been declined tenure based on his political views. College president
287:, criticizing the administration's interpretations of civil rights law. He was credited with developing the strategy by which liberal organizations recruited law professors to testify against Reagan's
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public school systems, Taylor was able to avert the threat by offering an interdistrict transfer program that the city and county districts agreed to voluntarily.
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school board decided to end a desegregation program in 1958, Taylor wrote a brief that convinced the court to require the continued integration of its schools.
147:, where he was harassed by his anti-Semitic Italian neighbors, later recalling of his youth that "I remember being pushed around as a kid and being called a '
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Guide to the
William L. Taylor papers, 1954-2009, Special Collections Research Center, Estelle and Melvin Gelman Library, The George Washington University
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starting in 1982, Taylor helped revise civil rights legislation. He headed a team of lawyers that wrote a 75-page report early in the
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119:(October 4, 1931 – June 28, 2010) was a Jewish-American attorney, lobbyist and activist who advocated on behalf of
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Finding Aid to the
William L. Taylor papers, 1971-1996, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress
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Finding Aid to the
William L. Taylor papers, 1971-1996, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress
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described Taylor as "a huge champion for closing the achievement gap, for accountability".
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calling Taylor "a person who represents what this institution is all about".
500:"William L. Taylor, civil rights lawyer who created St. Louis' deseg plan"
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410:"William L. Taylor, 78; Washington lawyer, champion of civil rights"
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to the United States
Supreme Court, which ultimately failed in the
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329:, Taylor died at age 78 on June 28, 2010, at Suburban Hospital in
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He served as general counsel, and later as staff director, at the
228:, assisting in civil rights cases that arose in the wake of the
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475:"William L. Taylor dies at 78; leading civil rights advocate"
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threatening to impose a mandate to combine the St. Louis and
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During the 1950s, Taylor was a successful contestant on the
455:"Commencements; College Honors Man It Tried To Discredit"
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Taylor's personal papers and archives were given to the
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during the 1960s, where his research helped lead to the
380:"William Taylor, Vigorous Rights Defender, Dies at 78"
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529:Guide to the William L. Taylor Papers, 1954-2009
19:For the former Attorney General of Indiana, see
429:"Harry D. Gideonse, 83 Headed Brooklyn College"
281:Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights
435:. New York Times News Service. March 15, 1985
306:He helped draft the 2002 legislation for the
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182:In 1954, he earned his LL.B. degree from
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247:United States Commission on Civil Rights
226:NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund
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21:William L. Taylor (Indiana politician)
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127:and played a major role in drafting
473:Nelson, Valerie J. (July 4, 2010).
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267:United States District Court Judge
192:The Catholic University of America
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343:The George Washington University
196:Georgetown University Law Center
634:Activists from New York (state)
599:American civil rights activists
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644:20th-century American lawyers
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619:Stanford Law School faculty
285:Presidency of Ronald Reagan
235:Brown v. Board of Education
230:United States Supreme Court
155:, when he stepped over the
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649:21st-century American Jews
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639:Activists from California
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308:No Child Left Behind Act
279:As vice chairman of the
259:Fair Housing Act of 1968
251:Civil Rights Act of 1964
135:Early life and education
129:civil rights legislation
609:Brooklyn College alumni
629:Yale Law School alumni
498:Freivogel, William H.
312:Secretary of Education
188:Columbus School of Law
159:while playing for the
584:Lawyers from Brooklyn
240:Little Rock, Arkansas
186:. He later taught at
125:Civil Rights Movement
110:Harriett Elaine Rosen
102:Civil rights advocate
297:United States Senate
265:school system. With
232:'s 1954 decision in
177:Christoph M. Kimmich
117:William Lewis Taylor
30:William Lewis Taylor
415:The Washington Post
339:Library of Congress
321:Personal and family
263:St. Louis, Missouri
220:Taylor worked with
200:Stanford Law School
157:baseball color line
139:Taylor was born in
460:The New York Times
453:Arenson, Karen W.
385:The New York Times
331:Bethesda, Maryland
315:Margaret Spellings
270:William L. Hungate
69:Bethesda, Maryland
50:Brooklyn, New York
479:Los Angeles Times
378:Martin, Douglas.
257:of 1965, and the
255:Voting Rights Act
222:Thurgood Marshall
172:Harry D. Gideonse
121:African Americans
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238:. After the
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63:(2010-06-28)
579:2010 deaths
574:1931 births
555:Appearances
293:Robert Bork
123:during the
568:Categories
439:October 3,
349:References
301:Ralph Neas
289:nomination
91:Occupation
42:1931-10-04
484:March 26,
76:Education
145:Brooklyn
94:Attorney
341:and to
224:at the
198:and at
86:, LL.B.
559:C-SPAN
253:, the
107:Spouse
486:2017
441:2017
58:Died
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