06—CIVIL RIGHTS

309
Ames, William C. The Negro struggle for equality in the twentieth century. [Teachers ed.] Boston, Heath [1965] 182, 16 p. illus., maps. (New dimensions in American history) E185.61.A49
Bibliography: p. 177-179.
310
Barbour, Floyd B., comp. The Black Power revolt; a collection of essays. Editor: Floyd B. Barbour. Boston, P. Sargent [1968] 287 p. (Extending horizons books) E185.615.B3
Includes bibliographies.
311
Belfrage, Sally. Freedom summer. New York, Viking Press [1965] 246 p. E185.93.M6B4
A personal account of a civil rights worker who spent the summer of 1964 in Mississippi.
312
Blaustein, Albert P., and Robert L. Zangrando, comps. Civil rights and the American Negro; a documentary history. New York, Trident Press [1968] xv, 671 p. E185.61.B665
313
Brink, William J., and Louis Harris. Black and white; a study of U.S. racial attitudes today. New York, Simon and Schuster [1967] 285 p. E185.615.B7
314
Bureau of National Affairs, Washington, D.C. The Civil Rights Act of 1964: text, analysis, legislative history; what it means to employers, businessmen, unions, employees, minority groups. Washington [1964] 424 p. forms. (A BNA operations manual) DLC-LL
315
Burns, William H. The voices of Negro protest in America. With a foreword by John Hope Franklin. New York, Oxford University Press [1963] 85 p. E185.61.B96 1963b
"Issued under the auspices of the Institute of Race Relations, London."
Bibliography: p. [87]-[89].
316
Cable, George W. The Negro question; a selection of writings on civil rights in the South. Edited by Arlin Turner. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1958. 286 p. (Doubleday anchor books) E185.61.C19 1958a
317
Cable, George W. A southerner looks at Negro discrimination; selected writings of George W. Cable, edited, with a biographical sketch, by Isabel Cable Manes. With an introduction by Professor Alva W. Taylor. [New York, 1946] 48 p. E185.61.C197
"References": p. 48.
318
Carmichael, Stokely, and Charles V. Hamilton. Black Power: the politics of liberation in America. New York, Random House [1967] xii, 198 p. E185.615.C32
Bibliography: p. 187-189.
319
Carter, Wilmoth A. The new Negro of the South; a portrait of movements and leadership. New York, Exposition Press [1967] 58 p. (An Exposition-university book) E185.61.C285
Bibliography: p. [57]-58.
320
Chambers, Bradford, comp. Chronicles of Negro protest; a background book for young people, documenting the history of black power, compiled and edited with a commentary by Bradford Chambers. New York, Parents' Magazine Press [1968] 319 p. illus., facsims., ports. (Background books) E185.61.C5
321
Clark, Mary T. Discrimination today; guidelines for civic action. Foreword by John J. Wright. New York, Hobbs, Dorman [1966] 372 p. [E185.61.C63] [TR: E185.615.C595]
Includes bibliographies.
322
Clarke, Jacquelyne J. These rights they seek; a comparison of goals and techniques of local civil rights organizations. Washington, Public Affairs Press [1962] 85 p. E185.93.A3C55 [TR: Clarke, Jacquelyne Mary Johnson]
Bibliographical references included in "References" (p. 78-85).
323
Commager, Henry S., comp. The struggle for racial equality: a documentary record, selected and edited by Henry Steele Commager. New York, Harper & Row [1967] 260 p. (Harper torchbooks. The Academy library, TB1300) E185.61.C72
"Originally published as part 4, chapter 14, of Living Ideas in America ... revised and greatly expanded."
324
Congressional Quarterly Service, Washington, D.C. Revolution in civil rights. 4th ed. Washington, 1968. 119 p. (CQ background) KF4757.Z9C6 1968
325
Cooke, Paul P. Civil rights in the United States. [Washington] Meridian House Foundation [1966] 32 p. illus., ports. E185.61.C775
325a
Cox, Archibald, Mark D. Howe, and James R. Wiggins. Civil rights, the Constitution, and the courts, Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1967. 76 p. KF4757.A5C6
"Papers ... originally presented in 1965-1966 as a series of evening lectures at the Massachusetts Historical Society."
Bibliographical footnotes.
326
Dorman, Michael. We shall overcome. [New York, Delacorte Press]; distributed by the Dial Press [1964] 340 p. E185.61.D69
327
Dumond, Dwight L. America's shame and redemption. Marquette, Northern Michigan University Press [1965] xvi, 171 p. port. E185.D9
328
Facts on File, New York. Civil rights, 1960-63; the Negro campaign to win equal rights and opportunities in the United States, compiled by the editors of Facts on file and News year. New York [1964] 152 p. illus., ports. (Interim history) E185.61.F16
A Facts on File publication.
329
Farmer, James. Freedom, when? With an introduction by Jacob Cohen. New York, Random House [1966, c1965] xxiv, 197 p. E185.61.F19
330
Fleishman, Stanley, and Sam Rosenwein. The new Civil Rights Act, what it means to you! [Los Angeles, Blackstone Book Co., 1964] 191 p. DLC-LL [TR: KF4750.F53]
331
Franklin, John H., and Isidore Starr, comps. The Negro in twentieth century America; a reader on the struggle for civil rights. New York, Vantage Books [1967] xxii, 542 p. illus. E185.61.F79
Bibliography: p. [539]-542.
332
Friedman, Leon, comp. The civil rights reader; basic documents of the civil rights movement. Foreword by Martin Duberman. New York, Walker [1967] xxi, 348 p. E185.61.F857
Bibliography: p. [347]-348.
333
Golden, Harry L. Mr. Kennedy and the Negroes. Cleveland, World Pub. Co. [1964] 319 p. group port. E185.61.G58
Bibliography: p. 309-314.
334
Grant, Joanne, comp. Black protest; history, documents, and analyses, 1619 to the present, edited with introduction and commentary by Joanne Grant. [New York, Fawcett World Library, 1968] 505 p. (The Political perspectives series) E185.G75
A Fawcett premier book.
Bibliography: p. [506]-[507].
335
Gregory, Dick. The shadow that scares me. Edited by James R. McGraw. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1968. 213 p. E185.615.G7
336
Handlin, Oscar. Fire-bell in the night; the crisis in civil rights. Boston, Little, Brown [1964] 110 p. E185.61.H23
337
Hansberry, Lorraine. The movement; documentary of a struggle for equality. New York, Simon and Schuster, 1964. 127 p. (chiefly illus., ports) E185.61.H24
338
Harris, Janet. The long freedom road; the civil rights story. Foreword by Whitney M. Young, Jr. New York, McGraw-Hill [1967] 150 p. E185.61.H27
Bibliography: p. 147.
339
Hedgeman, Anna A. The trumpet sounds; a memoir of Negro leadership. New York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston [1964] 202 p. E185.97.H44
340
Holt, Len. The summer that didn't end. New York, Morrow, 1965. 351 p. E185.61.H75
The struggle for civil rights in Mississippi.
341
Imari, Brother. War in America; the Malcolm X doctrine. Detroit, Malcolm X Society [1968] 64 p. port. E185.615.I45
342
Isaacs, Harold R. The new world of Negro Americans. A study from the Center for International Studies, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. New York, John Day Co. [1963] 366 p. E185.61.I75
Includes bibliography.
343
Jackson, Joseph H. Unholy shadows and freedom's holy light. Nashville, Townsend Press [1967] 270 p. group ports. E185.61.J15
Bibliography: p. 264-266.
344
Jacobs, Paul. Prelude to riot; a view of urban America from the bottom. New York, Random House [1968, c1967] 298 p. E185.615.J3 1968
"Sponsored by the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions."
345
Kahn, Tom. Unfinished revolution. [With forewords by Norman Thomas and James Lawson] New York [Socialist Party-Social Democratic Federation] 1960. 64 p. illus. E185.61.K335
Bibliography: p. 60-63.
346
Kalven, Harry. The Negro and the First amendment. Chicago, University of Chicago Press [1966, c1965] 244 p. (Phoenix books, P240) DLC-LL
"Lectures ... originally given for the Ohio State law Forum on April 7, 8, and 9, 1964."
Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [215]-244).
347
Kennedy, Robert F. Rights for Americans; the speeches of Robert F. Kennedy. Edited and with commentary by Thomas A. Hopkins. Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill [1964] 262 p. E185.61.K367
348
Killian, Lewis M. The impossible revolution? Black power and the American dream. New York, Random House [1968] xx, 198 p. (Studies in sociology, SS40) E185.615.K48
Bibliography: p. [189]-191.
349
Killian, Lewis M., and Charles Grigg. Racial crisis in America; leadership in conflict. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall [1964] 144 p. (A Spectrum book) E185.61.K49
Includes bibliographies.
350
King, Martin Luther. A Martin Luther King treasury. Photographs by Roland Mitchell. Yonkers, N.Y., Educational Heritage [1964] 352 p. illus., ports. (Negro heritage library) E185.61.K535
Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 338-348).
Contents.—Stride toward freedom; the Montgomery story.—Strength to love.—The days of Martin Luther King, Jr.: a photographic diary.—An appeal to the President of the United States.
351
King, Martin Luther. Where do we go from here: Chaos or community? New York, Harper & Row [1967] 209 p. E185.615.K5
Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 203-204).
London ed. (Hodder & Stoughton) has title: Chaos or Community?
352
King, Martin Luther. Why we can't wait. New York, Harper & Row [1964] 178 p. illus., ports. E185.61.K54
353
Konvitz, Milton R. A century of civil rights. With a study of State law against discrimination, by Theodore Leskes. New York, Columbia University Press, 1961. 293 p. DLC-LL [TR: KF4749.K626]
"Table of statutes": p. [278]-280.
Bibliographical footnotes.
354
Kunstler, William M. Deep in my heart. Forewords by James Forman and Martin Luther King, Jr. New York, Morrow, 1966. xxvi, 384 p. DLC-LL [TR: KF373.K8A3]
Autobiographical.
355
Leinwand, Gerald, comp. The Negro in the city. New York, Washington Square Press [1968] 191 p. illus. (Problems of American society) E185.61.L513
Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 179-182).
356
Levy, Charles J. Voluntary servitude; whites in the Negro movement. New York, Appleton-Century-Crofts [1968] 125 p. E185.92.L46
Bibliographical footnotes.
357
Lewis, Anthony. Portrait of a decade; the second American revolution [by] Anthony Lewis and the New York times. New York, Random House [1964] 322 p. illus. E185.61.L52 1964
London ed. (Faber) has title: The Second American Revolution: a First-hand Account of the Struggle for Civil Rights.
358
Lincoln, Charles Eric, comp. Is anybody listening to black America? New York, Seabury Press [1968] 280 p. (A Seabury paperback SP-54) E185.615.L48
Includes bibliographical references.
359
Lomax, Louis E. The Negro revolt. New York, Harper [1962] 271 p. E185.61.L668
Includes bibliography.
360
Mendelsohn, Jack. The martyrs: sixteen who gave their lives for racial justice. New York, Harper & Row [1966] 227 p. ports. E185.61.M54
361
Moral crisis; the case for civil rights, as stated by John F. Kennedy [and others] Minnesota, Gilbert Pub. Co. [1964] 185 p. illus., ports. E185.61.M79
On spine: The Case for Civil Rights.
362
Muse, Benjamin. The American Negro revolution; from nonviolence to black power, 1963-1967. Bloomington, Indiana University Press [1968] 345 p. E185.615.M83
363
Nelson, Bernard H. The Fourteenth amendment and the Negro since 1920. New York, Russell & Russell [1967, c1946] 185 p. E185.61.N44 1967
Bibliography: p. 172-181.
363a
Nye, Russel B. Fettered freedom; civil liberties and the slavery controversy, 1830-1860. [Rev. ed. East Lansing] Michigan State University Press [1964, c1963] 353 p. JC599.U5N9 1964
Bibliography: p. 319-[343].
364
Pain, William. To do justice, by the photographers and editors of Black star. [New York] Pyramid Publications, c1965. 104 p. illus., ports. (A Pyramid publication) E185.615.P3
On cover: To Do Justice; the Heroic Struggle for Human Rights.
365
Pettigrew, Thomas F. Epitaph for Jim Crow. New York, Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith [1964] 59 p. illus. E185.61.P48
"G415."
366
Proctor, Samuel D. The young Negro in America, 1960-1980. New York, Association Press [1966] 160 p. E185.61.P76
Bibliographical references included in "Notes by chapters" (p. 159-160).
367
Saunders, Doris E., ed. The Kennedy years and the Negro, a photographic record. Introduction by Andrew T. Hatcher. Designed by Herbert Temple. Chicago, Johnson Pub. Co., 1964. 143 p. illus., ports. E185.6.S3
368
Segal, Ben D., William Korey, and Charles N. Mason, eds. Civil rights in the Nation's Capital: a report on a decade of progress. [New York] National Association of Intergroup Relations Officials, 1959. 90 p. illus. E185.93.D6S4
"Appeared originally as volume 1, no. 5, of the Journal of Inter-group Relations."
369
Smith, Lillian E. Our faces, our words. New York, W. W. Norton [1964] 128 p. illus. E185.61.S647
370
Sobel, Lester A., ed. Civil rights, 1960-66. New York, Facts on File [1967] 504 p. (Interim history) E185.61.S66
A Facts on File publication.
371
Southern, David W. The malignant heritage; Yankee progressives and the Negro question, 1901-1914. Chicago, Loyola University Press, 1968. 116 p. (William P. Lyons master's essay award, 1967) E185.61.S685
Bibliography: p. 101-111.
372
Stahl, David, Frederick B. Sussmann, and Neil J. Bloomfield, eds. The community and racial crises. New York, Practising Law Institute [1966] xvii, 364 p. E185.615.S7
Outgrowth of a forum devoted to the community and racial crisis, held in New York City in December 1964.
373
Sterling, Dorothy. Tear down the walls! A history of the American civil rights movement. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday [1968] 259 p. illus., facsims., ports. E185.6.S76
Bibliography: p. [251]-252.
374
Sugarman, Tracy. Stranger at the gates; a summer in Mississippi. Illustrated by the author. Foreword by Fannie Lou Hamer. New York, Hill and Wang [1966] xiv, 240 p. E185.93.M6S88
375
Thomas, Howard E., and Sister Mary Peter. Organizing for human rights; a handbook for teachers and students. Dayton, Ohio, G. A. Pflaum [c1966] 64 p. illus. E185.615.T5
"Resource section": p. 39-58.
376
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Freedom to the free: century of emancipation, 1863-1963; a report to the President. [Washington, For sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1963] 246 p. E185.61.U582
Bibliography: p. 209-240.
377
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Hearing held in Cleveland, Ohio, April 1-7, 1966. Washington, For sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1966. 888 p. illus., maps. F499.C6A43
378
U.S. President, 1961-1963 (Kennedy) Civil rights. Message relative to civil rights, and a draft of a bill to enforce the constitutional right to vote, to confer jurisdiction upon the District Courts of the United States to provide injunctive relief against discrimination in public accommodations, to authorize the Attorney General to institute suits to protect constitutional rights in education, to establish a community relations service, to extend for four years the Commission on Civil Rights, to prevent discrimination in Federally assisted programs, to establish a Commission on Equal Employment Opportunity, and for other purposes. [Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1963] 24 p. (88th Congress, 1st session. House of Representatives. Document no. 124) E185.61.U5865
379
Warren, Robert Penn. Who speaks for the Negro? New York, Vintage Books [1966] 454 p. E185.61.W22 1966
380
Williams, Robert F. Negroes with guns. Edited by Marc Schleifer. New York, Marzani & Munsell [c1962] 128 p. illus. F264.M75W5
Concerns the Monroe, North Carolina, confrontation.
381
Wright, Nathan. Black power and urban unrest; creative possibilities. New York, Hawthorn Books [1967] 200 p. E185.615.W7
Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 195).
382
Young, Whitney M. To be equal. New York, McGraw-Hill [1964] 254 p. E185.61.Y73