Contributor
McClellan, Grant S. ed.
Imprint:New York : H. W. Wilson Co., 1964.
Description192 p. ; 20 cm.
Note:Reference shelf volumes present a collection of writings and speeches contemporary to the topic.
Note:I. THE MID-CENTURY CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT: Since the Supreme Court spoke / Anthony Lewis - Changes on a broad front / James E. Clayton - "Why we can't wait" / Martin Luther King, Jr. - A "Marshall plan" for the American negro. - Negro leaders speak / Gertrude Samuels - Is equality enough in education? / John H. Fischer - Equality for both negroes and whites / Eil Ginzberg - II. THE ROLE OF LAW AND GOVERNMENT: Negroes and the civil rights laws / Constance Baker Motley - The 1964 Civil Rights Law - The meaning of the Civil Rights Act / Alexander M. Bickel - A moral issue / John F. Kennedy - An act of lawmaking / Lyndon B. Johnson - A vote against the Civil Rights Bill / Barry M. Goldwater - The South looks ahead / Ralph McGill - More than law is needed / Alexander M. Bickel - The law and Mississippi / Louis Lusky - III. PROTECTING TRADITIONAL RIGHTS: The individual and his rights - Free speech / LeRoy Collins - Free press / Anthony Lewis - Freedom to travel - The right to privacy / John T. Lynch - Equality before the law / Robert G. Sherrill - The right to equal justice / Robert F. Kennedy - IV. NEW RIGHTS AND UNIVERSAL RIGHTS: Rights, liberties, freedoms / Carl J. Friedrich - The right to an income / Robert Theobald - An emerging constitutional right / William P. Murphy - Human rights in Western Europe / Jack Greenberg - Human rights for mankind / Richard N. Gardner - The Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Bibliography Note:Includes bibliography: p. 188-192.