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- Thurgood Marshall / by Kanefield, Teri,1960-author.(CARDINAL)704827;
Includes bibliographical references and index.Prologue: a public enemy -- Way up South -- College days -- Top man in the class -- The equalization strategy -- A social engineer -- Speaking out -- Mr. Civil Rights -- Brown v. Board of Education -- Massive resistance -- Judge Marshall -- A more perfect union"Thurgood Marshall (1908-1993) was a US Supreme Court Justice and important civil rights activist. Born in Baltimore, Marshall faced racial segregation at school, but he worked his way up and earned his law degree from Howard University, where he met Charles Hamilton Houston. He followed Houston to New York to serve the NAACP and argued cases as an attorney. He argued more than thirty-two cases before the Supreme Court-more than anyone else in history. And eventually, he argued against laws that justified Jim Crow segregation-and won. He became the first African American man to serve on the Supreme Court, and he served from 1967-1991. The biography series begins with six books (see below). Unlike other biographies which tell a person's life chronologically and is only about that person's contributions, THE MAKING OF AMERICA series links the stories of individuals to create a single overarching story of America's growth and maturity. Each story becomes more interesting when fit into the larger narrative; however each biography is also a stand-alone title."--
- Subjects: Biographies.; Marshall, Thurgood, 1908-1993.; United States. Supreme Court; Judges; African American judges;
- Available copies: 2 / Total copies: 2
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- Civil rights and the American Negro : a documentary history / by Blaustein, Albert P.,1921-1994.(CARDINAL)123076; Zangrando, Robert L.(CARDINAL)151066;
1. Slavery and the new world -- 1619-1775 : First negroes at Jamestown ; Privileges and exemption for patroons : Massachusetts body of liberties ; An act concerning negroes, Maryland ; Protest of the Germantown Mennonites ; The first abolitionist tract ; Regulations concerning negroes, New Jersey ; Smith v. Brown and Cooper ; The assiento ; Slavery in Georgia: from prohibition to acceptance ; Blackstone's commentaries on the law of England ; The Somerset caste -- 2. Slavery during the revolutionary and national period -- 1776-1820 : Declaration of independence ; Delaware constitution ; The Quock Walker case ; Northwest ordinance ; Constitution of the United States ; Fugitive slave act ; Act to prohibit the importation of slaves ; Mississippi and Alabama state constitutions ; Virginia statute on slaves, free negroes, and mulattoes ; American colonization society memorial -- 3. Expansion and the anti-slavery controversy -- 1820-1860 : The Missouri compromise ; Elkison v. Deliesseline ; Garrison's liberator ; Nat Turner's insurrection and "confession" ; Calhoun's resolutions ; The Amistad case ; Roberts v. Boston ; Wilmot proviso ; The compromise of 1850 ; Teaching negroes to read ; The Kansas-Nebraska territories ; The Dred Scott case ; The Lincoln-Douglas debates ; Incident at Harper Ferry ; The Mississippi legislature on the right of secession -- 4. Civil war and reconstruction -- 1861-1883 : Confederate states of America-constitution ; Federal confiscation acts ; Lincoln's wartime objection ; Emancipation proclamation -- a wartime measure ; Jefferson Davis on the negro in wartime ; The thirteenth amendment ; Freedmen's bureau ; Southern black codes ; The fourteenth amendment ; The civil rights acts ; The fifteenth amendment ; Senator Blanche K. Bruce on the Mississippi election ; The reconstruction era cases ; United States v. Cruikshank ; Hall v. Decuir ; Strauder v. West Virginia ; The civil rights cases -- 5. National growth and the era of Jim Crow -1884-1914 : Frederick Douglass denounces lunch law ; Booker T. Washington and compromise ; New York's civil rights act ; Plessy v. Ferguson -- The doctrine of "separate but equal" ; The Louisiana constitution ; Tennessee's Jim Crow law in education ; Congressional valedictory of the negro ; The classic southern position on the negro -- 6. Emergence of negro protest -- 1915-1941 : W.E.B. Du Bois's program for the American negro ; Voting rights and the grandfather clause; French directive on the treatment of black American troops ; The program of the national association for the advancement of colored people ; The supreme court and the right to a fair trial ; Marcus Garvey extols black nationalism ; The Scottsboro cases ; The Gavagan antilynching bill -- 7. War, and Cold War: executive and judicial responses -- 1941-1958 : President Roosevelt's fair employment practices committee ; Screws v. United States -- murder and the fourteenth amendment ; President Truman's civil rights program ; Integration in the armed services ; Shelley v. Kraemer -- on segregated housing ; Texas white primary cases ; Brown v. board of education of Topeka: the predecessors cases ; School segregation cases ; Reaction to Brown v. board of education of Topeka ; The little rock crisis -- 8. Civil rights and the congressional response -- 1957-1968 : The civil rights act (1957) ; The civil rights act (1960) ; President Kennedy on negro rights ; NAACP v. Button ; Freedom to the free -- report of the United States commission on civil rights ; Martin Luther King, Jr.: letter from a Birmingham jail ; The sit-in cases ; The antipoll tax amendment ; The civil rights act (1964) ; Equality in accommodations ; President Johnson's commencement address at Howard university ; The voting rights act ; South Carolina v. Katzenbach ; United States v. Price ; School desegregation guidelines ; Black power ; Racial isolation in the public schools ; U.S. riot commission report- official summary.
- Subjects: Case studies.; African Americans; Civil rights.;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
- On-line resources: Suggest title for digitization;
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- Jane Crow : the life of Pauli Murray / by Rosenberg, Rosalind,1946-author.(CARDINAL)342635;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 457-470) and index.Part I: Coming of age, 1910-1937. A Southern childhood ; Escape to New York -- Part II: Confronting Jim Crow, 1938-1941. "Members of your race are not admitted" ; Bus trouble ; A death sentence leads to law school -- Part III: Naming Jane Crow, 1941-1946. "I would gladly change my sex" ; California promise, 1944-1946 -- Part IV: Surviving the Cold War, 1946-1961. "Apostles of fear" ; A person in between ; "What is Africa to me?" -- Part V: A chance to lead, 1961-1967. Making sex suspect ; Invisible woman ; Toward an NAACP for women -- Part VI: To teach, to preach, 1967-1977. Professor Murray ; Triumph and loss ; The Reverend Dr. Murray -- Epilogue."Throughout her prodigious life, activist and lawyer Pauli Murray systematically fought against all arbitrary distinctions in society, channeling her outrage at the discrimination she faced to make America a more democratic country. In this definitive biography, Rosalind Rosenberg offers a poignant portrait of a figure who played pivotal roles in both the modern civil rights and women's movements. A mixed-race orphan, Murray grew up in segregated North Carolina before escaping to New York, where she attended Hunter College and became a labor activist in the 1930s. When she applied to graduate school at the University of North Carolina, where her white great-great-grandfather had been a trustee, she was rejected because of her race. She went on to graduate first in her class at Howard Law School, only to be rejected for graduate study again at Harvard University this time on account of her sex. Undaunted, Murray forged a singular career in the law. In the 1950s, her legal scholarship helped Thurgood Marshall challenge segregation head-on in the landmark Brown v. Board of Education case. When appointed by Eleanor Roosevelt to the President's Commission on the Status of Women in 1962, she advanced the idea of Jane Crow, arguing that the same reasons used to condemn race discrimination could be used to battle gender discrimination. In 1965, she became the first African American to earn a JSD from Yale Law School and the following year persuaded Betty Friedan to found an NAACP for women, which became NOW. In the early 1970s, Murray provided Ruth Bader Ginsburg with the argument Ginsburg used to persuade the Supreme Court that the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution protects not only blacks but also women - and potentially other minority groups - from discrimination. By that time, Murray was a tenured history professor at Brandeis, a position she left to become the first black woman ordained a priest by the Episcopal Church in 1976. Murray accomplished all this while struggling with issues of identity. She believed from childhood she was male and tried unsuccessfully to persuade doctors to give her testosterone. While she would today be identified as transgender, during her lifetime no social movement existed to support this identity. She ultimately used her private feelings of being "in-between" to publicly contend that identities are not fixed, an idea that has powered campaigns for equal rights in the United States for the past half-century"--
- Subjects: Biographies.; Murray, Pauli, 1910-1985.; Episcopal Church; African American intellectuals; African American women poets; African American women lawyers; African American civil rights workers; African American women clergy; African American feminists; African American women social reformers; Civil rights movements; African American civil rights lawyers; African American lawyers; Social reformers; Women; Women.; Womyn.;
- Available copies: 18 / Total copies: 20
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- Mirror to America : the autobiography of John Hope Franklin / by Franklin, John Hope,1915-2009.(CARDINAL)143816;
John Hope Franklin lived through America's most defining 20th-century transformation, the dismantling of legally-protected racial segregation. A renowned scholar, he has explored that transformation in its myriad aspects, and he was, and remains, an active participant. Born in 1915, he could not but participate: evicted from whites-only train cars, confined to segregated schools, and threatened--once with lynching. And yet he managed to receive a Ph.D. from Harvard. He has become one of the world's most celebrated historians and reshaped the way African American history is understood and taught. But Franklin's participation was much more fundamental than that. From his effort in 1934 to hand President Roosevelt a petition, whether aiding Thurgood Marshall's preparation for Brown v. Board in 1954, marching to Montgomery in 1965, or testifying against Robert Bork's nomination to the Supreme Court in 1987, Franklin has pushed the national conversation on race towards humanity and equality.--From publisher description.
- Subjects: Autobiographies.; Franklin, John Hope, 1915-2009.; African American historians; Historians;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- Mirror to America : the autobiography of John Hope Franklin / by Franklin, John Hope,1915-2009.(CARDINAL)143816;
John Hope Franklin lived through America's most defining 20th-century transformation, the dismantling of legally-protected racial segregation. A renowned scholar, he has explored that transformation in its myriad aspects, and he was, and remains, an active participant. Born in 1915, he could not but participate: evicted from whites-only train cars, confined to segregated schools, and threatened--once with lynching. And yet he managed to receive a Ph.D. from Harvard. He has become one of the world's most celebrated historians and reshaped the way African American history is understood and taught. But Franklin's participation was much more fundamental than that. From his effort in 1934 to hand President Roosevelt a petition, whether aiding Thurgood Marshall's preparation for Brown v. Board in 1954, marching to Montgomery in 1965, or testifying against Robert Bork's nomination to the Supreme Court in 1987, Franklin has pushed the national conversation on race towards humanity and equality.--From publisher description.
- Subjects: Autobiographies.; Franklin, John Hope, 1915-2009.; African American historians; Historians;
- Available copies: 28 / Total copies: 33
- On-line resources: Suggest title for digitization;
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- The Supreme Court A to Z / by Jost, Kenneth.(CARDINAL)652254;
Includes bibliographical references and index.Machine generated contents note: A.Abortion -- Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts -- Affirmative Action -- Aliens -- Alito, Samuel A., Jr. -- Amending Process -- American Bar Association -- Amicus Curiae -- Antitrust -- Appeal -- Appointment and Removal Power -- Arguments -- Arms, Right to Bear -- Arrests -- Assembly, Freedom of -- Assigning Opinions -- Association, Freedom of -- Attainder, Bill of -- Attorney General -- B.Background of Justices -- Bail -- Baker v. Carr -- Baldwin, Henry -- Barbour, Philip P. -- Bar of the Supreme Court -- Bill of Rights -- Black, Hugo L. -- Blackmun, Harry A. -- Blair, John, Jr. -- Blatchford, Samuel -- Bradley, Joseph P. -- Brandeis, Louis D. -- Brennan, William J., Jr. -- Brewer, David J. -- Breyer, Stephen G. -- Brief -- Brown, Henry B. -- Brown v. Board of Education -- Burger, Warren E. -- Burton, Harold H. -- Bush v. Gore -- Busing -- Butler, Pierce -- Byrnes, James F. -- C.Calhoun, John C. -- Campaigns and Elections -- Campbell, John A. -- Capital Punishment -- Cardozo, Benjamin N. -- Case Law -- Case or Controversy Rule -- Catron, John -- Certiorari -- Chase, Salmon P. -- Chase, Samuel -- Chief Justice -- Child Labor -- Circuit Riding -- Citizenship -- Civil Liberties -- Civil Rights -- Civil War Amendments -- Clark, Tom C. -- Clarke, John H. -- Class Action -- Clay, Henry -- Clerk of the Court -- Clerks -- Clifford, Nathan -- Comity -- Commerce Power -- Common Law -- Communism -- Concurring Opinions -- Conferences -- Confessions -- Confirmation Process -- Congress and the Court -- Congressional Immunity -- Constitutional Law -- Contempt of Court -- Contract Clause -- Cost of Supreme Court -- Counsel, Right to Legal -- Counselor to the Chief Justice -- Courts, Lower -- Courts, Powers of -- Criminal Law and Procedure -- Cruel and Unusual Punishment -- Curator's Office -- Currency Powers -- Curtis, Benjamin R. -- Cushing, William -- D.Daniel, Peter V. -- Davis, David -- Davis, John W. -- Day, William R. -- Decision Days -- De Facto, De Jure -- Defendant -- Disability Rights -- Discrimination -- Dissenting Opinions -- Diversity Jurisdiction -- Docket -- Double Jeopardy -- Douglas, William O. -- Due Process -- Duvall, Gabriel -- E.Education and the Court -- Elections and the Court -- Electronic Surveillance -- Ellsworth, Oliver -- Equal Protection -- Exclusionary Rule -- Executive Privilege and Immunity -- Ex Parte -- Ex Post Facto -- Extrajudicial Activities -- F.Federalism -- Federal Judicial Center -- Felony -- Field, Stephen J. -- Flag Salute Cases -- Foreign Affairs -- Fortas, Abe -- Frankfurter, Felix -- Fuller, Melville W. -- G.Garland, Augustus H. -- Gay Rights -- Gibbons v. Ogden -- Gideon v. Wainwright -- Ginsburg, Ruth Bader -- Goldberg, Arthur J. -- Grand Jury -- Gray, Horace -- Grier, Robert C. -- H.Habeas Corpus -- Hamilton, Alexander -- Harlan, John Marshall (1833-1911) -- Harlan, John Marshall (1899-1971) -- Historical Society, Supreme Court -- Holmes, Oliver Wendell, Jr. -- Housing the Court -- Hughes, Charles Evans -- Hunt, Ward -- I.Impeachment -- Impeachment of Justices -- Income Tax -- Incorporation Doctrine -- Indictment -- In Forma Pauperis -- Injunction -- Intellectual Property -- International Law -- Internet -- Internment Cases -- Iredell, James -- J.Jackson, Andrew -- Jackson, Howell E. -- Jackson, Robert H. -- Jay, John -- Jefferson, Thomas -- Job Discrimination -- Johnson, Thomas -- Johnson, William -- Judgment of the Court -- Judicial Activism -- Judicial Conference of the United States -- Judicial Restraint -- Judicial Review -- Juries -- Jurisdiction -- Justiciability -- K.Kagan, Elena -- Kennedy, Anthony M. -- L.Lamar, Joseph R. -- Lamar, Lucius Q. C. -- Legal Office of the Court -- Legal System in America -- Legal Tender Cases -- Legislative Veto -- Libel -- Library of the Court -- Lincoln, Abraham -- Livingston, H. Brockholst -- Loyalty Oaths -- Lurton, Horace H. -- M.Majority Opinion -- Mandamus -- Mandatory Jurisdiction -- Marbury v. Madis
- Subjects: Biographies.; Encyclopedias.; United States. Supreme Court; United States. Supreme Court;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- The U.S. Supreme Court / by Lewis, Thomas T.,(Thomas Tandy),editor.;
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.Abington School District v. Schempp -- Abortion -- Adamson v. California -- Adarand Constructors v. Peña -- Admiralty and maritime law -- Advisory opinions -- Affirmative action -- Age discrimination -- Alito, Samuel -- Allgeyer v. Louisiana -- Americans with Disabilities Act -- Antitrust law -- Appellate jurisdiction -- Assembly and association, freedom of -- Atkins v. Virgnia -- Automobile searches -- Bad tendency test -- Bail -- Baker v. Carr -- Baldwin, Henry -- Bankruptcy law -- Barbour, Philip P. -- Barnes v. Glen Theatre -- Barron v. Baltimore -- Batson v. Kentucky -- Bill of attainder -- Bill of Rights -- Birth control and contraception -- Black, Hugo L. -- Blackmun, Harry A. -- Blair, John, Jr. -- Blatchford, Samuel -- BMW of North America v. Gore -- Boerne v. Flores -- Bolling v. Sharpe -- Boys Scouts of America v. Dale -- Bradley, Joseph P. -- Bradwell v. Illinois -- Brandeis, Louis D. -- Brandenburg v. Ohio -- Brennan, William J., Jr. -- Brewer, David J. -- Breyer, Stephen G. -- Briefs -- British background to U.S. judiciary -- Brown, Henry B. -- Brown v. Board of Education -- Brown v. Mississippi -- Buck v. Bell -- Buildings, Supreme Court -- Burger, Warren E. -- Burton, Harold H. -- Bush v. Gore -- Butler, Pierce -- Byrnes, James F. -- Calder v. Bull -- Campbell, John A. -- Capital punishment -- Capitalism -- Cardozo, Benjamin N. -- Carolene Products Co., United States v. -- Catron, John -- Censorship -- Certiorari, writ of -- Chase, Salmon P. -- Chase, Samuel -- Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy Railroad Co. v. Chicago -- Chief justice -- Chimel v. California -- Chinese Exclusion Cases -- Chisholm v. Georgia.Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye v. Hialeah -- Circuit riding -- Citizenship -- Civil law -- Civil rights and liberties -- Civil Rights Cases -- Civil Rights movement -- Civil War -- Clark, Tom C. -- Clarke, John H. -- Clerks of the justices -- Clifford, Nathan -- Clinton v. City of New York -- Clinton v. Jones -- Cold War -- Comity clause -- Commerce, regulation of -- Common law -- Conference of the justices -- Constitutional interpretation -- Constitutional law -- Contract, freedom of -- Contracts clause -- Counsel, right to -- Court-packing plan -- Cruel and unusual punishment -- Cruikshank, United States v. -- Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of Health -- Curtis, Benjamin R. -- Curtiss-Wright Export Corp., United States v. -- Cushing, William -- Daniel, Peter V. -- Darby Lumber Co., United States v. -- Davis, David -- Day, William R. -- Debs, In re -- DeJonge v. Oregon -- Delegation of powers -- Devanter, Willis Van -- Disability of justices -- Dissents -- Diversity jurisdiction -- Double jeopardy -- Douglas, William O. -- Due process, procedural -- Due process, substantive -- Duncan v. Louisiana -- Duvall, Gabriel -- Eighth Amendment -- Elastic clause -- Eleventh Amendment -- Ellsworth, Oliver -- Employment discrimination -- Employment Division, Department of Human Resources v. Smith -- Engel v. Vitale -- Environmental law -- Epperson v. Arkansas -- Equal protection clause -- Espionage acts -- Everson v. Board of Education of Ewing Township -- Evolution and creationism -- Exclusionary rule -- Executive agreements -- Executive privilege -- Federalism -- Fetal rights -- Field, Stephen J. -- Fifteenth Amendment.Fifth Amendment -- First Amendment -- First Amendment speech tests -- Flag desecration -- Florida v. Bostick -- Fortas, Abe -- Fourth Amendment -- Frankfurter, Felix -- Fugitive slaves -- Full faith and credit -- Fuller, Melville W. -- Fundamental rights -- Furman v. Georgia -- Garcia v. San Antonio Metropolitan Transit Authority -- Gender issues -- General welfare clause -- Gerrymandering -- Gibbons v. Ogden -- Gideon v. Wainwright -- Ginsburg, Ruth Bader -- Gitlow v. New York -- Goldberg, Arthur J. -- Grandfather clause -- Gratz v. Bollinger -- Gray, Horace -- Gregg v. Georgia -- Grier, Robert C. -- Griggs v. Duke Power Co. -- Griswold v. Connecticut -- Guarantee clause -- Habeas corpus -- Hammer v. Dagenhart -- Harlan, John M., II Harlan, John Marshall -- Heart of Atlanta Motel v. United States -- Holmes, Oliver Wendell -- Housing discrimination -- Hughes, Charles Evans -- Hunt, Ward -- Hustler Magazine v. Falwell -- Illegitimacy -- Immigration law -- Income tax -- Incorporation doctrine -- Iraq War -- Iredell, James -- Jackson, Howell E. -- Jackson, Robert H. -- Japanese American relocation -- Jay, John -- Johnson and Grahamʼs Lessee v. McIntosh -- Johnson, Thomas -- Johnson, William -- Judicial activism -- Judicial review -- Judicial scrutiny -- Judicial self-restraint -- Judiciary Act of 1789 -- Jury, trial by -- Katz v. United States -- Kelo v. City of New London -- Kennedy, Anthony M. -- Korematsu v. United States -- Lamar, Joseph R. -- Lamar, Lucius Q.C. -- Lee v. Weisman -- Lemon v. Kurtzman -- Libel -- Livingston, Brockholst -- Lochner v. New York -- Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock -- Lopez, United States v. -- Loving v. Virginia.Lurton, Horace H. -- McCleskey v. Kemp -- McCulloch v. Maryland -- McKenna, Joseph -- McKinley, John -- McLean, John -- McReynolds, James C. -- Mapp v. Ohio -- Marbury v. Madison -- Marshall, John -- Marshall, Thurgood -- Matthews, Stanley -- Meyer v. Nebraska -- Michigan Department of State Police v. Sitz -- Military and the Court -- Miller, Samuel F. -- Milligan, Ex parte -- Minton, Sherman -- Miranda rights -- Moody, William H. -- Moore, Alfred -- Moore v. City of East Cleveland -- Munn v. Illinois -- Murphy, Frank -- National Association for the Advancement of Colored People v. Alabama -- National Labor Relations Board v. Jones and Laughlin Steel Corp. -- National security -- National Treasury Employees Union v. Van Raab -- Native American law -- Native American sovereignty -- Native American treaties -- Natural law -- Near v. Minnesota -- Nelson, Samuel -- New Deal -- New York Times Co. v. Sullivan -- New York Times Co. v. United States -- New York v. Ferber -- Ninth Amendment -- Nominations to the Court -- Obscenity and pornography -- OʼConnor, Sandra Day -- Opinions, writing of -- Oral argument -- Palko v. Connecticut -- Paterson, William -- Payne v. Tennessee -- Peckham, Rufus W. -- Penry v. Lynaugh -- Peonage -- Pierce v. Society of Sisters -- Pitney, Mahlon -- Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey -- Plea bargaining -- Plessy v. Ferguson -- Police powers -- Political questions -- Poll taxes -- Powell, Lewis F., Jr. -- Presidential powers -- Printz v. United States -- Privacy, right to -- Privileges and immunities -- Progressivism -- Public forum doctrine -- Race and discrimination.Reconstruction -- Reed, Stanley F. -- Reed v. Reed -- Regents of the University of California v. Bakke -- Rehnquist, William H. -- Religion, establishment of -- Religion, freedom of -- Reporting of opinions -- Representation, fairness of -- Resignation and retirement -- Restrictive covenants -- Review, process of -- Reynolds v. Sims -- Reynolds v. United States -- Right to die -- Roberts, John -- Roberts, Owen J. -- Rochin v. California -- Roe v. Wade -- Roth v. United States; Alberts v. California -- Rule of reason -- Rules of the Court -- Rutledge, John -- Rutledge, Wiley B., Jr. -- Salaries of justices -- San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez -- Sanford, Edward T. -- Scalia, Antonin -- Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States -- Schenck v. United States -- School integration and busing -- Scott v. Sandford -- Search warrant requirement -- Second Amendment -- Sedition Act of 1798 -- Seditious libel -- Segregation, de facto -- Segregation, de jure -- Self-incrimination, immunity against -- Senate Judiciary Committee -- Separation of powers -- Seriatim opinions -- Shelley v. Kraemer -- Sherbert v. Verner -- Shiras, George, Jr. -- Sixth Amendment -- Slaughterhouse Cases -- Slavery -- Smith Act -- Smith v. Allwright -- Solicitor general -- Souter, David H. -- Speech and press, freedom of -- Standing -- State action -- Statesʼ rights -- Statutory interpretation -- Stevens, John Paul -- Stewart, Potter -- Stone, Harlan Fiske -- Story, Joseph -- Strong, William -- Sunday closing laws -- Sutherland, George -- Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education -- Swayne, Noah H. -- Symbolic speech -- Taft, William H. -- Takings clause.Taney, Roger Brooke -- Tennessee v. Garner -- Tenth Amendment -- Terry v. Ohio -- Texas v. Johnson -- Thirteenth Amendment -- Thomas, Clarence -- Thomas-Hill hearings -- Thompson, Smith -- Time, place, and manner regulations -- Time v. Hill -- Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District -- Todd, Thomas -- Travel, right to -- Treaties -- Trimble, Robert -- Vietnam War -- Vinson, Fred M. -- Virginia, United States v. -- Waite, Morrison R. -- Wallace v. Jaffree -- War and civil liberties -- War powers -- Warren, Earl -- Washington, Bushrod -- Washington v. Glucksberg -- Wayne, James M. -- Webster v. Reproductive Health Services -- West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish -- White, Byron R. -- White, Edward D. -- Whittaker, Charles E. -- Wilson, James -- Wisconsin v. Mitchell -- Wisconsin v. Yoder -- Witnesses, confrontation of -- Woodbury, Levi -- Woods, William B. -- Worcester v. Georgia -- Workload -- World War I -- World War II -- Youngstown Sheet and Tube Co. v. Sawyer -- Zoning -- Appendixes: Constitution of the United States, Time Line Glossary, Bibliography, Justicesʼ Careers, Indexes, Index of Court Cases, Subject Index.A comprehensive and up-to-date survey of the history and functioning of the U.S. Supreme Court.
- Subjects: United States. Supreme Court;
- Available copies: 3 / Total copies: 3
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