Description:
New York: Emergency Civil Liberties Committee, 1963. Magazine. 19p., 5.5x8.5 inches, staple inserted in the middle of the cover page, wraps slightly toned else in good condition. Drawing on cover is of the ECLC's new chairman, Corlise Lamont.
RIGHTS. Annual Report of HUAC Activities Vol IX No 1 Jan Feb, 1962 [Civil Rights Activist Publication] by Emergency Civil Liberties Committee
by Emergency Civil Liberties Committee
RIGHTS. Annual Report of HUAC Activities Vol IX No 1 Jan Feb, 1962 [Civil Rights Activist Publication]
by Emergency Civil Liberties Committee
- Used
- very good
Very Good.
Stapled wraps with front illustration and a political cartoon on the rear. 5.5 by 8.5 inches, 22 pages.
Carefully handled, Text clean, Bindings firm.. The National Emergency Civil Liberties committee was formed by civil rights activists who disagreed with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) decision not to participate directly in the defense of people charged with violations of the Anti-Communist 1950
Originally organized as a minor congressional committee investigating domestic subversion, HUAC (also known as the House Un-American Activities Committee) rose to such power in the late 1940's and early 1950's that the mere threat of investigation by it could ruin a person's career. By the time it was abolished in 1975, HUAC had widened its scope of investigation to include almost every aspect of American society.
Subjects: McCarthy-era; McCarran Act; Subversive activities -- United States; Communism; Civil Rights, McCarthy, McCarthyism
Stapled wraps with front illustration and a political cartoon on the rear. 5.5 by 8.5 inches, 22 pages.
Carefully handled, Text clean, Bindings firm.. The National Emergency Civil Liberties committee was formed by civil rights activists who disagreed with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) decision not to participate directly in the defense of people charged with violations of the Anti-Communist 1950
Originally organized as a minor congressional committee investigating domestic subversion, HUAC (also known as the House Un-American Activities Committee) rose to such power in the late 1940's and early 1950's that the mere threat of investigation by it could ruin a person's career. By the time it was abolished in 1975, HUAC had widened its scope of investigation to include almost every aspect of American society.
Subjects: McCarthy-era; McCarran Act; Subversive activities -- United States; Communism; Civil Rights, McCarthy, McCarthyism
- Seller Independent bookstores (US)
- Book Condition Used - Very Good
- Quantity Available 1
- Keywords Civil Rights, McCarthy, McCarthyism, Serials, journals, magazines