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Pemberton, John de J. Jr. (ed.). Civil Liberties, the monthly publication of the American Civil Liberties Union, documenting the organization's response to civil rights demonstrations, Cold War political repression, censorship disputes, and constitutional litigation during one of the pivotal years of the modern civil rights movement. Published in 1963, the same year as the Birmingham Campaign, the March on Washington, and escalating federal confrontations over segregation, these issues reveal how the ACLU publicly framed conflicts involving protest rights, political surveillance, racial discrimination, freedom of the press, and anti-communist investigations. The material documents civil liberties advocacy and constitutional defense systems through editorials, legal commentary, political cartoons, reports on litigation, and coverage of protest movements, revealing how the ACLU coordinated legal and public responses to state repression and racial inequality while providing primary-source evidence for the study of Cold War liberalism, civil rights law, and First Amendment activism. Civil Liberties. New York: American Civil Liberties Union, 1963. Nine issues comprising Nos. 203-211, published January through November 1963. Quarto bifolium format, each issue four pages, illustrated throughout with photographs, editorial cartoons, and legal commentary relating to civil rights, censorship, anti-communism, and constitutional law. [1] Civil Liberties, No. 203, January 1963. Includes "Union Protests Investigation into The Peace Movement by HUAC," condemning congressional investigations into antiwar activism, alongside John de J. Pemberton Jr.'s "An ACLU Travelogue" discussing Black voter registration drives, fair housing campaigns, and grassroots organizing. [2] Civil Liberties, No. 204, February 1963. Features "ACLU Denounces Investigation of Pacifica Fund's FM Radio Stations," defending First Amendment protections against Senate investigations, together with coverage of discharged Black Illinois teachers seeking reinstatement and political cartoons criticizing McCarthyist rhetoric. [3] Civil Liberties, No. 205, March 1963. Contains "ACLU, Ohio Branch Ask High Court to Restudy 1957 Censorship Stand," challenging obscenity and censorship precedents, as well as a profile of Mississippi civil rights attorney William Higgs with accompanying photograph. [4] Civil Liberties, No. 206, April 1963. Reports congressional opposition to continued HUAC appropriations and includes coverage of Roger Baldwin receiving a Japanese government award. [5] Civil Liberties, No. 207, May 1963. Memorializes murdered civil rights protester William Moore following his desegregation march through the South, quoting Moore's final statements opposing segregation, while also criticizing sedition legislation and film censorship laws. [6] Civil Liberties, No. 208, June 1963. Warns against proposed states' rights constitutional amendments viewed by the ACLU as threats to First Amendment protections and denounces segregationist legal strategies. [7] Civil Liberties, No. 209, September 1963. Declares civil rights demonstrations constitutionally protected under the First Amendment and advocates for stronger federal civil rights legislation to combat discriminatory state practices. [8] Civil Liberties, No. 210, October 1963. Announces ACLU support for New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, framing the Alabama libel suit as an attack on freedom of speech and press coverage of civil rights protests, accompanied by fundraising and organizing appeals from Pemberton. [9] Civil Liberties, No. 211, November 1963. Documents arrests of ACLU attorneys representing controversial clients and critiques retaliatory legal tactics directed against civil liberties lawyers. The run captures the ACLU during a period of transition from primarily anti-censorship and anti-communist defense work toward direct engagement with southern civil rights struggles and constitutional questions surrounding publi.
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