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Henderson, Tex.: An African ministerial student, hit by a blackjack by a policeman after he refused to move to the rear of a bus, was released from jail after an official of the college he is attending paid his $25 fine. The officer said he was investigating reports a Negro refused to move back in the bus. The officer said when the student, a native of Nigeria, told him in a British accent he did not understand the order, he grabbed him by the arm and took him to the rear. Then, when he reached in his pocket, "I had to tap him with a slapjack," the policeman said. The student said he was reaching for his passport to show the officer. (August 25, 1957-B)

Beaumont, Tex.: A flaming bottle of kerosene hurled at the home of a college professor narrowly missed the window of a bedroom occupied by two small children. Police said the bomb was tossed at the house of Dr. Russell Long, a biology professor at Lamar State College of Technology. Long and his wife extinguished a small fire with a garden hose, the siding on the front of the house was scorched.

Neither Long nor his wife, who teaches in a Beaumont high school, could think of a motive for the action. (June 20, 1958-B)

VIRGINIA

Yorktown, Va.: About 20 white men tossed stones and fired at the home a Negro widow recently rented for her family in a previously all-white section of York County. (November 9, 1957-B)

Alexandria, Va.: The night after a Negro family moved into an all-white residential block a rock was thrown through the dining room window while the family ate. About six weeks later a bullet ripped through a front window. A few weeks later the mother and her daughter were sleeping in a second floor bedroom when a shotgun explosion awoke them; pellets sprayed the walls above their heads. The police promised them protection and they planned to stay. (April 1, 1958-Z)

CODE

A-Southern School News
B-Associated Press
C-United Press
D Chattanooga Times
E-Atlanta Constitution
F-The Arkansas Gazette
G-Montgomery Advertiser
H-Birmingham News
1-Wall Street Journal

J-Jackson (Miss.) Clarion Ledger
K-New York Times

L-Jackson (Miss.) State Times
M-International News Service

N-Columbus (Ga.) Ledger

O-Twin City (Winston-Salem) Sentinel
P Charlotte Observer

Q-Orangeburg (S.C.) Times and Democrat
R-Rock Hill (S.C.) Evening Herald
S-Washington Post and Times Herald
T-Winston-Salem Journal

U-Nashville Tennessean

V-The State (Columbia, S. C.)

W-Birmingham Post Herald

X-Delta Democrat-Times

Y-United Press International

Z-Evening Star (Washington, D. C.)

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In connection with the overall study of civil rights, the staff of the Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights has compiled a bibliography dealing with civil rights and liberties as affect by segregation and desegregation. Publications that were referred to or authors quoted by witnesses testifying at the open hearings are incorporated in the bibliographical listings

BOOKS

Abrams, Charles. Forbidden neighbors; a study of prejudice in housing.

New York, Harper, 1955.

Adams, James Truslow. America's Tragedy. New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1934. 415 pages.

Aldrich, Blake. The Civil rights revolution. Laguna Beach, Calif., 1955.

American Friends Service Committee. The right of every child: the story of
Washington, D. C. prigram of school integration. Washington, 1955.

Andrews, Bern. Washington witch hunt. New York, Random House, 1948.

Angle, Paul M. Created equal press, 1958. 422 pages

Lincoln-Douglas Debates of 1885.. Univ. of Chicago

Ashley-Montagu, M. F. Man's most dangerous myth; the fallacy of race. New York
Columbia University Press.

1945.

Barth, Alan. The loyalty of free men. New York, Viking Press, 1951.

Basler, Roy P. Abraham Lincoln: his speeches and writings. Rutgers Univ. Press, 1953. 843 pages.

Berger, Morre. Racial Equality and the law; the roll of law in the reduction of discrimination in the U.S. New York, Columbia Univ. Press. 1947.

Berns, Walter. Freedom, virtue and the First Amendment. Baton Rouge, Louisiana
State University, 1957.

Biddle, Francis. The fear of freedom; a discussion of the contemporary obsession of anxiety and fear in the U.S. New York, Doubleday, 1951.

Bowers, Claude. The tragic ere the revolution after Lincoln. Cambridge, Houghton-
Mifflin Co, 1929. 567 pages.

Brownlee, Frederick L. These rights we hold. New York, Friendship Press, 1952.
Cain, Richard H. Civil rights bill speech of Hon. Richard Cain of South Carolina
delivered in the House, Jan 24, 1874.

New Haven,

Cardoso, Benjamin N. The nature of Judicial process./ Yale Univ. Press, 1921. 180 pages.
New York,

Carr, Robert K. Federal protection of civil rights: quest for a sword.
Cornell Univ. Press, 1947.

Caughey, John W. In clear and present danger. Chicago, Univ. of Chicago Press, 1958.

Chafee, Zechariah. How human rights got into the Constitution. Boston, Boston

Univ. Press, 1952.

-. The blessings of liberty. Philadelphia, Lippincott, 1956.

Chamberlain, Lawrence H. Loyalty and legislative action; a survey of activity by
the New York State Legislature, 1919-1949. Ithaca, Cornell Univ. Press, 1957.
Clincy, Everett Ross. Equality of Opportunity: Latin Americans in Texas. Ann Arbor,
Univ. of Michigan Press, 1954.

Commager, Henry Steele (and others). Civil liberties under attack. Philadelphia,
University of Pennsylvania Press, 1951.

-. Freedom, loyalty, dissent. New York, Oxford Univ. Press, 1954. Committee on Civil Liberties in New Jersey; a report submitted to Hon. Alfred E. Driscoll, Governor of New Jersy by Committee on Civil Liberties

Cook, Thomas I.

BOOKS--Continued

Democratic rights versus communist activity. New York,
Random House, 1954.

Corwin, Edward S. Liberty against government; the rise, flowering and decline of a famous jurisdical concept. Baton Rouge, Louisiana State University Press, 1948.

Cushman, Robert E.

Civil liberties in the U. S.; a guide to current problems and experiences. Ithaca, New York; Cornell University Press, 1956.

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Our constitutional freedoms; civil liberties, an American heritage. New York, Public Affairs Committee, 1944.

Davie, Maurice R. Negroes in American society. New York, McGraw-Hill, 1949. Davis, Jerome. Character assassination; prejudices and antipathies; civil rights, U. S., and race question. New York, Philosophical Library, 1950. Davis, Saville R. Toward freedom and security-1955. New York, Association Press, 1955.

Discant, V. L. Essays on human rights. New York, Vantage, 1956.

Douglas, William 0. Almanac of liberty. New York, Doubleday, 1954.

Right of the people. New York, Doubleday, 1958.

Drinker, Henry S. Some observations on the four freedoms of the First Amendment. Boston, University of Boston Press, 1957.

Emerson, Thomas I. Political and civil rights in the U. S. Buffalo, Dennis Press, 1952.

Epes, Travis Freeman. Separate schools and better race relations; suggestions and solutions. Richmond, 1954.

Findlay, B. A. Guaranteed for life; your rights under the U. S. Constitution. New Jersey, Prentice Hall, 1955.

Foster, William Z. The Negro in American History. New York, International Publishers, 1954, 608pp.

Fowler, Grady. Three races under God (1st ed.). New York, Vantage Press, 1956, 172pp.

Fraenkel, Osmond. Our civil liberties.

New York, Viking Press, 1944, 277pp.

Frazier, E. Franklin. The Negro in the U. S. New York, Macmillan, 1949.

Gellhorn, Walter. Individual freedom and governmental restraints. Baton
Rouge, Louisiana State University Press, 1956.

Georgia. Department of Law. The Georgia Constitution and mixed public schools, by Eugene Cook.

Gerhart, Eugene.

1953.

American liberty and natural law. Boston, Beacon Press,

Gillmor, Dan. Fear, the accuser. New York, Abelard-Schuman, 1954.

Ginzberg, Eli. The Negro potential. New York, Columbia University Press, 1956.

Goodwin, R. Dean. Man: living soul. Philadelphia, Judson, 1952.

Guild, June P. Think on these things: what a group of Negro southerners think about civil rights. California, Schaver Co., 1947.

BOOKS--Continued

Hand, Learned. The Bill of Rights. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1958.

Hartley, Eugene L. Problems in prejudice. New York, King's Crown Press, 1946.

Height, Dorothy I. The Christian citizen and civil rights. New York, Women's Press, 1949.

Hill, Herbert. Citizens guide to desegregation; a study of social and legal change in American life. Boston, Beacon Press, 1955.

Holley, Jospph Winthrop. Education and the segregation issue; a program of education for the economic and social regeneration of the Southern Negro. New York, William-Frederick Press, 1955..

Ruszar, George B. Equality in America: the issue of minority rights.
New York, Wilson Co., 1949.

Johnson, Charles S. Patterns of Negro segregation. New York, Harper, 1943.

---. To stem this tide. Boston, Pilgrim Press, 1943.

Johnson, Gerald W. This American People. New York, Harper, 1951.

Johnson, James W. Negro Americans, what now? New York, Viking Press, 1934.
Kelly, Alfred H. Foundations of freedom. New York, Harper, 1958.

- Where constitutional liberty came from; the origins and meanings
of one Bill of Rights and constitutional government. New York Catt
Memorial Fund, 1954.

Konvits, Milton R. Civil rights in immigration. Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 1953.

The constitution and civil rights. New York, Columbia University
Press, 1947.

Lamont, Corliss. Freedom is as freedom does; civil liberties today. New York, Horizon Press, 1956.

Lasson, Wilson B. History and development of the Fourth Amendment of the
U. S. Constitution. Baltimore, Johns Hopkins, 1937.

Laswell, Harold D. National security and individual freedom. New York,
McGraw-Hill, 1950.

Lloyd, H. Grann. White Supremacy in the U. S. Public Affairs Press, Washington,
D. C., 1952.

Logan, Rayford W. The Negro in American life and thought: the nadir, 18441901. New York, Dial Press, 1954.

McWilliams, Carey. Brothers under the skin. Boston, Little Brown Co., 1943.
Wably, Jack. Who's on first? New York, Public Affairs Committee, 1956.
Mangum, Charles S. The legal status of the Negro. Chapel Hill, University
of North Carolina Press, 1940.

Maxwell, Allen. Present danger; four essays on American freedom. Dallas,
Southern Methodist University, 1953.

Mecklin, John M. Democracy and race friction; a study in social ethics.
New York, Macmillan, 1921.

Minnesota University Graduate School. Social Science Research Center. Social
Science and freedom; a report to the people. Minneapolis, University of
Minnesota, 1955.

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