After 34 days of a hunger strike protesting the closing of Dyett High School by some residents of the school’s community, the strikers claimed what they call a partial victory as they ended their strike due to the physical body’s limitations according to Juan Perez Jr. of Chicago Tribune.
Chicago Public Schools agreed to reopen the former Dyett High School on the city’s Southeast Side next Fall as a neighborhood arts focused school instead of a high school focused on green technology demanded by the strikers.
“Your body starts to deteriorate,” Jeanette Taylor-Ramann, a member of the Kenwood-Oakland Community Organization and one of the leaders of the strike said who helped lead the 34-day hunger strike.
Wow
John L. White, EdD, Adjunct Faculty Graduate School of Education & Psychology Pepperdine University, 6100 Center Dr. Los Angeles, CA 90045 john.white2@pepperdine.edu jwhite@ lausd.net novasystems@sbcglobal.net 323-299-6936 – message 213-309-4924 – cell
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John L. White, EdD, Adjunct Faculty Graduate School of Education & Psychology Pepperdine University, 6100 Center Dr. Los Angeles, CA 90045 john.white2@pepperdine.edu jwhite@ lausd.net novasystems@sbcglobal.net 323-299-6936 – message 213-309-4924 – cell
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It’s a shame that parents and community members have to starve to be heard!
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Amazing!
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Fight on!
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Interesting article!
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