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BIO: HONORABLE COUNCILMAN JOSEPH MAKHANDAL CHAMPAGNE, JR.


BIOGRAPHY OF THE HONORABLE COUNCILMAN

JOSEPH MAKHANDAL CHAMPAGNE, JR.

Joseph Makhandal Champagne is Mayor of the Borough of South Toms River, New Jersey. He was elected on November 2, 2010. Two years earlier, November 2, 2008, during Barack Obama’s presidential election, Mayor Champagne won the Councilman seat in a landslide against an incumbent in South Toms River. Mayor Champagne is committed and passionate about serving his constituency and community. He is married with two beautiful daughters.
Mr. Champagne holds a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology and with science concentrations from Columbia University (where he received a full academic scholarship). Upon graduation, Mr. Champagne returned to Brooklyn to teach Environmental and Earth Science along with Mathematics at his former High School (Sarah J. Hale High School in Brooklyn where he had graduated top of his class). A year later, he attended Georgetown University, Law Center’s Charles Hamilton Houston Pre-law Institute program, where he won the Best Respondent Advocate award of class of 1999. Mayor Champagne earned his Juris Doctor degree from Vermont Law School (VLS). While at VLS, asides from being on Deans’ List, he founded The Vermont Law Student Leadership Collective for Human Rights, a campus wide student group that identifies and promotes leadership talents. As an exchange student, Mayor Champagne also studied European Union Law at the University of Trento, School of Law, in Trento, Italy.
Upon graduation, Mayor Champagne served as a Judicial Law Clerk to the Honorable Wendell E. Daniels, J.S.C., of the Superior Court of New Jersey, Ocean County. Mayor Champagne practices in New Jersey and focuses primarily on immigration, criminal and civil law. Mr. Champagne is a member of the Ocean County Bar Association. He is admitted to practice in the New Jersey Supreme Court, the United States District Court, the Third and Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals of the United States of America. He appears regularly in Federal courts, in addition to State and Municipal courts throughout New Jersey. He serves on several advisory committees including Alternative Dispute Resolution, Law Day, and Minority Concerns.
Notwithstanding the practice of law, Mr. Champagne is passionate about social engineering and actively serves in this capacity. He is a board member of Ocean Community Economic Action Now, (O.C.E.A.N., Inc.), a community agency that provides comprehensive services to improve the quality of life of individuals and assist them in moving toward self sufficiency. Mayor Champagne is also a member of the Global Syndicate, Haitian-American Leadership Council and the National Haitian-American Elected Officials Network (NHAEON). He also served as an assistant to the Public Policy Counsel and Executive Director of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law in Washington, D.C.
Mayor Champagne is an inductee in the All American Scholar Book, 1993 and from 2001 to 2002 he was elected in the Who’s Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges for his outstanding merit and accomplishment as a student at Vermont Law School.
Provided By: The Office of Mayor Champagne

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Greetings Readers


Greetings Readers,

This month The Verdict will work in conjunction with MSL Black Law Student Association, to provide famous African American literature in celebration of Black History Month. Our joint goal is to spread awareness about African Americans whose diligent work and effort have led to unprecedented change throughout America.

Also, this semester will feature The Verdict’s first ever interview series. This series will focus on key MSL faculty and will allow students to pose questions to the professors, who typically ask the questions. We appreciate your support and continued participation. We look forward to providing readers with new original pieces following the month of February.


Darryl Caffee

Editor-in-Chief

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Brown v. Board of Education Re-enactment


MSL’s Black Law Students’ Association
Presents:

Brown
v.
Board of Education of Topeka

Wednesday, February 16, 2011
5- 6 PM in the Old Courtroom
Refreshments will be served

Join the MSL Community as we engage in an educational
experience through the re-enactment and panel discussion
of a historical case that changed America. Join us as we
celebrate Black History!


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I Too Sing


I, Too, Sing America

By Langston Hughes

I, too, sing America.

I am the darker brother.
They send me to eat in the kitchen
When company comes,
But I laugh,
And eat well,
And grow strong.

Tomorrow,
I'll be at the table
When company comes.
Nobody'll dare
Say to me,
"Eat in the kitchen,"
Then.

Besides,
They'll see how beautiful I am
And be ashamed--

I, too, am America.


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Thurgood Marshall Biography


THURGOOD MARSHALL

FIRST AFRICAN-AMERICAN TO SERVE ON THE UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT

Thurgood Marshall was born on July 2, 1908 in Baltimore, Maryland, to William Canfield Marshall, a railroad porter and a steward at an all-white country club, and Norma Williams Marshall, an elementary school teacher.. He graduated with honors from Lincoln University (Pennsylvania) in 1930. After being rejected by the University of Maryland Law School because he was not white, Marshall attended Howard University Law School; he received his degree in 1933, ranking first in his class. At Howard he was the protégé of Charles Hamilton Houston, who encouraged Marshall and other law students to view the law as a vehicle for social change.

Upon his graduation from Howard, Marshall began the private practice of law in Baltimore. Among his first legal victories was Murray v. Pearson (1935), in which Marshall successfully sued the University of Maryland for denying an African American applicant admission to its law school simply on the basis of race. In 1936 Marshall became a staff lawyer under Houston for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP); in 1938 he became the lead chair in the legal office of the NAACP, and two years later he was named chief of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund.

Throughout the 1940s and '50s Marshall distinguished himself as one of the country's top lawyers, winning 29 of the 32 cases that he argued before the U.S. Supreme Court. Among them were cases in which the court declared unconstitutional a Southern state's exclusion of African American voters from primary elections ( Smith v. Allwright [1944]), state judicial enforcement of racial “restrictive covenants” in housing ( Shelley v. Kraemer [1948]), and “separate but equal” facilities for African American professionals and graduate students in state universities ( Sweatt v. Painter and McLaurin v. Oklahoma State Regents [both 1950]). Without a doubt, however, it was his victory before the Supreme Court in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka that established his reputation as a formidable and creative legal opponent and an advocate of social change. Indeed, students of constitutional law still examine the oral arguments of the case and the ultimate decision of the court from both a legal and a political perspective; legally, Marshall argued that segregation in public education produced unequal schools for African- Americans and whites (a key element in the strategy to have the court overrule the “separate but equal” doctrine established in Plessy v. Ferguson [1896]), but it was Marshall's reliance on psychological, sociological, and historical data that presumably sensitized the court to the deleterious effects of institutionalized segregation on the self-image, social worth, and social progress of African -American children.

In September 1961 Marshall was nominated to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit by President John F. Kennedy, but opposition from Southern senators delayed his confirmation for several months. President Lyndon B. Johnson named Marshall U.S. solicitor general in July 1965 and nominated him to the Supreme Court on June 13, 1967; Marshall's appointment to the Supreme Court was confirmed (69–11) by the U.S. Senate on

August 30, 1967.

During Marshall's tenure on the Supreme Court, he was a steadfast liberal, stressing the need for equitable and just treatment of the country's minorities by the state and federal governments. A pragmatic judicial activist, he was committed to making the U.S. Constitution work; most illustrative of his approach was his attempt to fashion a “sliding scale” interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment's equal protection clause that would weigh the objectives of the government against the nature and interests of the groups affected by the law. Marshall's sliding scale was never adopted by the Supreme Court, though in several major civil rights cases of the 1970s the court echoed Marshall's views. He was also adamantly opposed to capital punishment and generally favored the rights of the national government over the rights of the states.

Marshall served on the Supreme Court as it underwent a period of major ideological change. In his early years on the bench, he fit comfortably among a liberal majority under the leadership of Chief Justice Earl Warren. As the years passed, however, many of his closest allies, including Warren, either retired or died in office, creating opportunities for Republican presidents to swing the pendulum of activism in a conservative direction. By the time he retired in 1991, he was known as “the Great Dissenter,” one of the last remaining liberal members of a Supreme Court dominated by a conservative majority. Thurgood Marshall died in Bethesda, Maryland , on January 24, 1993.

http://www.biography.com/articles/Thurgood-Marshall-9400241


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The Verdict | by Darryl Caffee ©2010