Wednesday 10 February 2016

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY - ELEANOR HOLMES NORTON - WAS A CIVIL RIGHTS ACTIVIST, POLITICIAN WHO WAS ELECTED TO U.S. CONGRESS FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA.

                                                        BLACK      SOCIAL     HISTORY                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      







































































































































Eleanor Holmes Norton Biography
Civil Rights Activist, U.S. Representative (1937–)


NAME
Eleanor Holmes Norton
OCCUPATION
Civil Rights Activist, U.S. Representative
BIRTH DATE
June 13, 1937 (age 78)
EDUCATION
Yale University, Antioch College, Yale Law School
PLACE OF BIRTH
Washington, D.C.
MAIDEN NAME
Eleanor Holmes
ZODIAC SIGN
Gemini
SYNOPSIS
PROFILE
CITE THIS PAGE
Civil rights activist and ACLU alum Eleanor Holmes Norton serves as a non-voting delegate to Congress from the District of Columbia.
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Synopsis

Eleanor Holmes Norton defended George Wallace while working for the American Civil Liberties Union in the 1960s. She then moved to the New York Human Rights Commission (1970-77), and the Equal Employment Opportunities Commission (1977-83). In 1990, Norton was elected to Congress as a nonvoting delegate from the District of Columbia, and supported legislation to give D.C. a full vote in the House.

Profile

Civil rights activist, politician. Born June 13, 1937 in Washington, D.C. A graduate of Antioch College, Yale University and Yale University Law School, Norton worked in private practice before becoming assistant director of the American Civil Liberties Union (1965–70) where she defended both Julian Bond's and George Wallace's freedom-of-speech rights.

As Chairman of the New York Human Rights Commission (1970–7), Norton championed women's rights and anti-block-busting legislation. She then went to Washington to chair the Equal Employment Opportunities Commission (1977–83), and in 1982 became a law professor at Georgetown University.

In 1990, Norton was elected as a Democratic non-voting delegate to the House from the District of Columbia. Currently under scrutiny, the DC Fair and Equal House Voting Rights Act (or DC Vote) would give one vote to the District of Columbia in the House of Representatives, but not the Senate. Norton is a regular panelist on the PBS women's news program To the Contrary.

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