My General Profile and Major Accomplishments
Myself and eight other students desegregated Central High School in 1957. I was the only senior and I was the first to graduate in 1958.
Education
I attended Dunbar Junior High School and graduated after ninth grade.
Then I went to Horace Mann High School, a high school for African-Americans.
Senior Year I went to Central High School.
After Graduating I attended Michigan State University, earning a BA in social science in 1962 and an MA in sociology in 1964.
Profession
I was the director for the A. Philip Randolph Education Fund from 1968 to 1977.
Then I became Assistant Secretary of Labor during the Jimmy Carter administration from 1977 to 1981.
In 1987 I joined Lehman Brothers, an investment banking firm in Washington DC, where where I am currently a Senior Managing Director.
Organizations and Memberships
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)
Winthrop Rockefeller Foundation.
http://www.encyclopediaofarkansas.net/encyclopedia/entry-detail.aspx?entryid=722
Signature Quote
“They used to call Arkansas 'the land of opportunity,' and black people said, 'Opportunity for whom? Today, we can say 'opportunity for all,' and Arkansas can be proud of this moment.”
http://thinkexist.com/quotes/ernest_green/
“It’s been an interesting year. I’ve had a course in human relations first hand.”
http://www.easynotecards.com/notecard_set/13404?num=9
In 1957 my goal was to graduate from Central High School so I could prove that African Americans were equally intelligent was Whites. No one clapped when I walked across the stage, but I was proud that I had accomplished my goal despite the challenges I had faced that year.
http://rebeckeronline.blogspot.com/2009/01/little-rock-nine-and-ernest-green.html
Mr. Green, I understand that when you graduated you were only 16 years old and that somebody famous attended your graduation. (However, he wasn't famous yet)
Mr. Green,
How many children do you have?
Mr. Green,
What is your favorite food?
Congratulations on being the first of the nine to graduate from Little Rock Central High School. It must have been a challenge to go through that alone but we must remember our white allies. They may have not been a lot of them but people like Ann Emerson who volunteered herself to walk down the aisle with you really made a statement. It's people like her and like us who made the big difference and took a stance.
School Desegregation and the Story of the Little Rock Nine, Mara Miller
Good Evening Ernest Green. It seems like I made a mistake and friended you. It seems like we had no connections during the civil rights movement. Sorry for troubling.
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