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  1. ORVAL E. FAUBUS 17 addressed to "the comrades of Combs" and carried the names of ten men, four of them named Faubus. Whoever copied the names apparently inverted Sam's initials so that he is listed as S. J. Faubus. The post of secretary, carrying with it the responsibility of chief organizer, went to him. Arch Cornett, O. T. Green, and Sam ...

  2. The "Little Rock Nine," as the nine teens came to be known, were to be the first African American students to enter Little Rock's Central High School. Three years earlier, following the Supreme Court ruling, the Little Rock school board pledged to voluntarily desegregate its schools. This idea was explosive for the community and, like much of the South, it was fraught with anger and bitterness.

  3. Orval Eugene Faubus ( / ˈfɔːbəs / FAW-bəs; January 7, 1910 – December 14, 1994) was an American politician. He was the 36th Governor of Arkansas from 1955 to 1967. Faubus was a member of the Democratic Party . In 1957, he refused to comply with the decision of the U.S. Supreme Court in the 1954 case Brown v. Board of Education.

  4. 14. Dez. 1994 · ORVAL EUGENE FAUBUS was born in Combs, Arkansas, on January 7, 1910. He briefly attended Commonwealth College, the radical labor school at Mena, Arkansas. He worked as an itinerant farmer, a lumberjack and a schoolteacher before enlisting in the U.S. Army from 1942 to 1946 during World War II, with two years in the European …

  5. 21. Nov. 2023 · Orval Faubus, the infamous 36th Governor of Arkansas, was born on January 7, 1910 in Arkansas. His father was a socialist farmer and taught his son that government is meant to help those in need.

  6. 15. Dez. 1994 · Orval Eugene Faubus was born in a shack at Greasy Creek in northwest Arkansas. As a young man, he was a schoolteacher, then hopped freights as a hobo. During World War II, he served in the Army ...

  7. Orval Eugene Faubus was born in Arkansas on 7th January 1910. His father, Sam Faubus, was an active member of the Socialist Party and gave his son the middle name Eugene after one of his heroes, Eugene Debs. As a child Faubus was told by his father that "capitalism was a fraud and that both poor whites and blacks were its victims".