NEW YORK TIMES
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JAN 2 8 1966
An Announcement `' y
EMERGENCY CIVIL LIBERTIES CCMMIt
recognizes the existence of serious ons tu-
tional problems arising from the current
RI-compulsory induction of young men into the,
armed forces. Many people feel that ethical
considerations shoule a eg- ima a as> T
for exemption from the draft. 'hese consid-
erationswere not covered by the recent ~'u-
p-reme Court decision- holdin tt lack of
belief in a Supreme Being was'no"bar to ex-
emption as a conscientious objector.
Many disap ove of certain United States
crimes ,,alnst humanity and violations of
interna a1 Iaw They honesty eeI that
their participation in the war, even under
military orders, would be unlawfu under the
Nuremberg Judgment.
The Emergency Civil Liberties Committee,
which is neither a political nor a religious
organization, does not take an organizational
position on these issues. But it doc; >.,naize
that these arguments may be_ i ?. ;l
conscience, and that they deserve to 6i ?re-
sented to the courts with the a-tmost
In accordance with its policy of undee-
taking test cases upon Constitutional issues
of importance affecting the A\ C-1-1oein r of
Americans generally, The. iii 2Jfc cy Civil
Liberties Committee through its- National
Council has agreed to paiicipate in ::zp;iropr>;-
ate test cases which raise these vital c elf Aion-.
Emergency Civil Liberties Carrmittce -
('hn.irr~urar.
Corlisg Lamm-,f,
Mrs. Eleatwor Brrrssrl, Dice-Charon
John M. Pickering,,S crcla, y -
Johat, $. rudder, 4': easrarcr
(j?r -rn, Director
A symposium on the suhiect of this announcement will
be included in the forthcoi ir.g 1-sus of Rights, official
Publication of the Emergcncy Civil Libcrtics Committee,
421 Seventh Ave_Jjcw York, N. Y. Rights is 25c.
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ST
AT
C
0
NATIONAL REVIEW
App, oved r Release 2094/jAj%e1CI 9 PP88-0131
Voices of Moderation: Sen. Thomas Kuchel
(R., Cal.), as he pulled out of guber-
natorial primary against front-running
Ronald Reagan, blasted right wing of
GOP in these terms: "[It is a] fanati-
cal, neo-fascist, political cult, over-
: come by a strange mixture of corrosive
c-c
S! Al
STAT
Counter-insurgency: brie Government o
Accounting Office is preparing to in-
vestigate War on Poverty, to check on :
possible waste, graft, negligence in
Job Corps camps, Community Action Pro :
grams. . . . Maybe-it should look. at
latest .Pentagon . brochure describing_ :
hatred and sickening fear, recklessly Sec.....MeNa,wara's cost!-cutting' proced-
determined to control our Party or to''.~ures. Brochure itself cost an estimated.
destroy it." . . . John Bailey, Demo -U thou .Y , . Official figures on
cratic National Chairman, urging Demo- Dominiaan'`'~epublic operation show it
crats to use discredited Group Research
Inc. for source material against
right- '-Sts (some rightists GRI has dossiers
16, on. Gen_ Eisenhower, Gen, Omar Bradley,
.; Astronaut John Glenn). GRI, which works
closely with AFL-CIO COPE, reportedly
in trouble financially; Bailey bid to
Democrats to use its services could be
move to get it back into black.
Gov. Mark Hatfield of Ore., who might
run for Sen. Maurine Neuberger's seat
next year, becoming a fighting Dove, to,
wit: the Johnson Administration's pol-
icy in Vietnam contains "horrendous pos-
sibilities of miscalculation and errors
of'judgment which could trigger WW III,
or at least a vast Asian land war."
francs. . . .Atrocity count: Since,1964 of Peking-oriented Progressive Labor
pay the transport charges in Swiss' to be tried,separately. Luce pulled out
cost $67 million from April through mid-
September.
Trial of three students who 'violated
State Department ban on travel to Cuba
scheduled to open this week. Two, Levi
Den Roth Agency
:
{ o'
weapons shipped across China to'North Laub'and Steve Martinot, defended by
Vietnam are now' at long last moving Emergency Civil Liberties Committee.
'smoothly, the Soviets having agreed to The third; Phillip Abbott Luce, asking
National Guardian reports 2,000 mem-
bers of Cuban assault brigade that took
Apart in Bay of Pigs have volunteeredto
th'e'y` wro't.e"'' "We"'wish to represent the
eople of Cuba on the battlefields of
--Vietnam.The ' fighting in Vietnam is part
of our fight." . A fascinating Der
Spiegel. news item holds that Russian
Vietcong guerrillas have killed, wound- Party last spring, wrote piece for
ad or kidnaped 20,300 Vietnamese ci SatEvePost: "Why I Quit the Extreme'
vilians, including 2,300 village head- Left."
men, teachers and officials. . . . Re-
treating Vietcong forces have taken to. Aux armes, les zero zero sept I French
beheading their Vietnamese prisoners spies enraged at failure of do Gaulle
when pressed too closely by government government to'increase Secret Service
forces. allotment in 1966 budget.
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NEW C, : y,iC
HERALD TIW5UNi3
Approved For Relea 04/ n1-1 tCIA-R
AYK -79
Breaks Tic With FarLeff
last week, its first it many a times for taking pert in pro-
year. He Is Phillip A. Luce, 28, Assistant District Attorney;
whose credentials. Include an tests against American policy Joseph Philiipps, the man!
unauthorized trip to Cuba and in Cuba and Viet Nam, who is handling, the grand;
several arrests in Viet Nam Some time in , January, jury investigation, said he!
.;demonstrations. Luce said last week, he didn't know Luce. Luce was;
Last week Luce was expelled "changed some of my ideas." subpconaed to appear befora'
form the Progressive Labor He resigned from all the or- the grand jury on April 1, but!
Movement, an u~'iabaehedly ganizations he belonged to, his , appearance was post-'
Communist group; in a'1nan including PLM. And recently paned.
ner that left hiui. frightened he began writing an article He freely admitted that he'
and shocked. Ho obtained a for the Saturday Evening was Mitt'ng. a Saturday Eve-
police guard .and - prepared Post describing his' experi- Wing Post article, but F Ls for
himself to initiate a lawsuit. ences in PLUM.' the National Review piece, he
Among the reasons cited for ? "This is tthe first time this told.this story:
his expulsion were that he has happened to PLM;" said I was having' a cup of:
The Far Left discovered an
- student trip to Cuba in 1963, Luce flatly denied that he,' to - goodness defector i and has been arrested several has become an informant.
by Due ? rPeinerc P.-.-- .Vi -
Ay a sia/1 Correspondent ' ? in et Nam). Ho has been . could print, some of them be
indicted twice for leading a cause 'of libel laws.
had become a police inform- Milton Rosen, the movements- coffee in a,cafeteria that day!
ant in the current grand jury chairman. "We went to great [the day of the expulsion] ands
investigation of last sum-' lengths to try and verify it. talking to a PLM member. He?
mer's Harlem riots, during We hated to see this happen . asked- me what I was doing
'..which a number of PLM mom- to somebody. He seems to be lately' and I said I had just'.
bers have been jailed, and doing this to save the Left finished a review of Norman:
that he had written articles from Progressive Labor." Mailer's book ["Art American;
for the Saturday Evening Post According to the PLM "na- Dream"]. He said, 'Where are;
and the National Review. . tional steering committee," you going to send it?' 'Oh, I'll
"I thought they were more which expelled Luce last try the National Review,' -.I'
rational," Luce said. "Anyone Monday, he did not resign said;"
who is capable of making - from PLM In January, but Luce'laughed."I don't know.
charges ? like this is capable o~ was "removed", from the ed.- Maybe I will by 'the National
trying anything." itorship of the PLM maga- ' Review," he said.
Luce said he joined PLM zine, "Progressive Labor." He refuses to talk in detail`;
last August, . and also be Numerous charges were. about the reasons for his dis-'
longed ' to . twq ' other radical ' made in the PLM announce- Illusionment with PLM an&1
organizations, the' Emergency ment of Luce's expulsion; A. other groups because of they
? : Civil Liberties Committee.and ; PLM ' officer. .Fred Jerome, Post article, which has not yet
the May 2d Movement (to editor of "Ohallerge," con- appeared. However, he said his
k:, . ., .....,. ..._.,.....:.,_ _. .. .. 1. difFerence; with PLM were
"mostly a question of meth-
ods." lie still believes that?the
ban on travel to Cuba "had to
be tested," and he thinks the
United Stp-tes should with
draw front VietNam,
In its denunciation of Luce, l
the PLM said: "It is to be ex- ,;
pected that when faced with.
the prospect of going to jail in
defense of one's principles, a
few already weak individuals
:'will choose to crawl for the 30
pieces of silver which are wait-
ing in the gutter. But . .
there will. be hundreds of
honest young'men and women
who will stand firm and grow
stronger, under pressure, in
the struggle. for a better
U. S. A., a socialist U. S.
"I'm relieved that it's come
to a head." said Luce. "I hope'
to continue writing---not spe-
cifically on political things..
I've had' enough of that." .
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MAY 1 8 1964
WASHINGTON STAR
WARREN- PROBE
Redlich:.My
By .I. F. TER IIORST
star Special Writer
T h e Warren Commission
Investigating. President Kenne-
dy's assassination may be ,able
to get.off.a political hot seat by
including Norman Redlich, its,
controversial staff consultant, in
a general staff' cutback early
next month.
The idea is being broached
quietly as one way to avoid the
distasteful alternative of "fir-
ing" Mr. Redlich, a New York
University law professor, be-
cause of his affiliation with the
Emergency Civil Liberties
Committee. ,
Republican members of Con-
gress and some conservative
groups have been mounting an
increasing attack on the Warren
panel over Mr. Redlich's' con-
nections with an. organization
they consider ' to be a "Com
that time..
Since the commission., has
nearly finished gathering evi-
. dence and testimony from wit-.
tresses, there is a feeling among
some panel members that, a
staff cutback is possible.
Those who . would remain
'under J. Lee Rankin, the . chief
'`counsel, could adequately han-,
;.die the task of writing the final
report. ' .
Mr.' Redlich, `38; has - been
working . about three days -a
,week" on commission matters
- While Mr. Redlich denies. he
Is a Communist-and an inten-
sive FBI, investigation backs
h i m up-some commission
members fear his presence.may
mar public acceptance' of their
upcoming report on the assas-
sination.
Contract Expires Soon
Mr. Redlich's contract ' as a
$100-a-day consultant expires
early in June. It is understood
the contracts of. several other
staff members also expire about
utback:
Mr. Ter Horst is with the Washing-
ton Bpreau. of the Detroit News.
here since ' he, was hired, De-
cember 20. '
Whether the'? inclusion of Mr.
Redlich in a : staff reduction
would satisfy critics of the
commission Is anybody's guess.
Up to now, Senator Mundt,
Republican of . South Dakota;
Representative , Bee r m a n n,
Republican of Nebraska and
others have been just as critical
of Mr. Redlich's hiring as they
have been over- his continued
presence. They. want to know
how he came to' be employed in
"Human Oversight" Blamed
The explanation of, at least
one authority in position A o
know can be summed up:.. "Hu-
man oversight." .
Here is his account: '
Early. in Its proceedings, the
seven-man commission .. infor-
mally adopted a rule that no
one would be employed for staff
work if he were affiliated . or
aligned with either the extreme
left or extreme right. '
The theory was that the
commission could thus' best
insure, public trust In its even-
tual findings about the Kennedy
,assassination. '
Chief Justice Warren and.the
panel members selected by Mr.
Johnson have discreetly avoided
public moves that would reflect
upon the commission's work.
So ' scrupulously did the
commission. set. out to hire its
staff that it insisted on review-'
-ing the entire background of
every applicant for. work under
Mr. Rankin, who was ' United
States Solicitor General- during
the Eisenhower administration.
Redlich Listed Affiliation
But that didn't happen, with
Mr. Redlich.
service Form 57 and had listed
on it the ECLC 'affiliation which
now has ruffled Congress.
"There was no. subterfuge by
Redlich,". a source said. . .11
-Yet for : a, reason nobody can
now. explain, -Mr. . Redlich's
Form 57 was - not ..physically
examined by, ' the commission
members.
As : best as It ' can be recon-
structed, Mr. Redlich's name
was brought up by Mr. Rankin;
together with recommendations
from others as. to his extraor-
dinary abilities in the field of
legal research. That, apparent-
ly, satisfied the panel members.
They, gave Mr. ' Rankin the go-
ahead sign to hire him.-
There has- been no criticism
within the commission over Mr.
Redlich's' work. There, is, in
fact, considerable praise for the
way he - has handled what
amounts to the No. 2 staff job.
No.'.'Risk".Support
In ", addition;, the FBI field
investigation is understood to
have' come up with no evidence
that might support. the "securi+
ty risk" allegation 'hurled by:
Representative Gurney, Repub-
lican of Florida. ' '
But Mr. Redlich for many,
years has felt strongly that the,,
House Un-American Activities'
Committee' has overstepped its
authority-and he. hasn't hesi-
tated to say so publicly. The'
House committee has' put the!
ECLC on its list of "front"'
groups, although the group is,
not so ' listed by the Justice,
Department.
Thus," while 'members of the,
Warren Commission do not
question Mr. Redlich's per-
formance on the' staff or' his
loyalty to his' country,, some feel
his continued presence - is w
violation of the hiring policy.
they. adopted and . applied' to:'
STAT
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WASlINGTO;Rp ` For Releasg)N411 ~1f 6~IA-RDP88-013152000200450001-6
~s I:af:a'~/ ~?- ;.;t~rv''/ti,~ r ri'r:'r V~ ~'~ ~ W ~ iii
4":'ith Sunday Morning Edition
Publisher by THE EVENING STAR NI WSPAPER CO., Washington, D. C.
SAMUEL H. KAUFFMANN; Chairman of tho Foard.
CROSBY N. x 0'CD, i'rasidonf N:Y18OLD NOYES, Editor
UNJAMIN M. McKILWAY, E'diferici?Chclrmorr
_- ~- -~
SATURDAY, MAY 16, 1964
A-4
The Commission, headed by Chief
Justice Warren, which is investIgatin
.the assassination of President Kennedy
is in a jam of its own making. But it
is not enough simply to say this and
sign off..
Surely through Inadvertence, the
Commission employed as a consultant
a Professor Norman Redlich, of the New
York University Law School. On his
application 'orln Professor, Redlich
-stated that he was a member of the
Emergency Civil Liberties Committee.
This group has been named as a Com-
munist-froirt organization by the House
Un-American Activities Committee. Row
his application was -approved is un-
explained and hard to understand.
Even so, it would not be too iiu-
portant if it, were not for the wild
rumors floating around to the effect
that the murder of the late President
by Lee Harvey Oswald was tied in with
some kind of Communist conspiracy.
Unfortunately there are people who
believe this. And when the word reaches
them, primarily through a few Repub-
lican speeches, that the Warren Com-
mission hired a consultant with Coin-
munist sympathies (Professor Redlich
.denies that he is a sympathizer) there
is no doubt that public confidence in
the Commission's report will, to some
degree, be impaired.
The Commission is expected to meet
,next week to decide what to do about
'Professor Redlich. That is its problem,
not ours. We think it is important to
-emphasize, however, that the report,
z Shen it is published, will be the Co:n-
;mission's report. And even if one wishes
Ito assume the worst about Professor
~iRedlich, which we do not, he isn't going
4o lead the knowledgeabietimembervof
the Warren Commission down any-
;body's primrose path.
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NEW YORI<
DAILY, NEWS'
.. MAY 6 1964
By FRANK HOLEMAN
------ - --- -- -...?...~ .,k.,. -vuayaa L1i0-.all \lO-lY CIJ.) ueinanuea
today that the, Warren Commission fire a. $10M-day' consultant linked to an organiza-
,.tion branded a Red front by the House Un-American Activities Committee.
Redlich, 38, a law prrfessor
r on part-time leave from New
York University.. He works
several days a week , here as
`.'a top aid to J. Lee Rankine
staff 'director of., the coma
mission . investigating the
assassination ` of President -
Kennedy. ' .
"The hiring of Redlich was a:
tragic mistake," Beerman said in
a , statement inserted in. today's
Congregational Record. . "It eer
rtainly impresses me as one, 6f the.
greatest- miscarriages of appoint-
ive judgment:, in the history of
American government.
tt Patently Unqualified.
"I call upon those in responsible
positions to dismiss this patently
unqualified consultant from' the
Warren Comission staff
and to
,
investigate and make public facts J. Lee Rankin
k concerning how Redlich managed , Hired accused legal aid
to get hired and keep his job deg-
F,pite -nis ]known C,ommunist-xront,
affiliations."
Redlich was listed as a member
of the national council of the
Emergency Civil Liberties Com-
mittee in a New York newspaper
Iad April 13 soliciting public, cori-
`'tributions.
i.. He has since confirmed his asso-
ciation, with the group but denied
that the committee was Red-domi-
?nated.
1; In a report issued- March 29;
[1959, the Un-American Activities
Committee said of the group:
j. "The' committee 'finds that the
;.Emergency Civil Liberties Com
Smittee established in '1951, al-
?though representing itself as a
-non-Communist group, actually.
operates as a,front for the Com-:
I"munist Party."
The ad in which Redlich's name
appeared also listed as officials
of_ the ECLC 1 Corliss . Lamont,.
wesalthy New Yorker who has. fi
alleged Communists,. and David
Rein, lawyer for accused Reds,'
who once took the. Fifth Amend-
ment on questions about his own.
Beerman pointed out that Lee
Harvey Oswald, Kennedy's al-
leged assassin, was "a self-de-
clared Marxist who had once,
defected to the Soviet Union, and
who was connected with the pro-
Communist Fair 'Play for Cuba
Committee."
Calls It "Incredible"
"Yet Communists and their.
sympathizers around thg . world
have sought to spread the false
theory that the assassination was
,a..-plot by So-called ?rightwing
'extremists," he went on.
revising and distorting history,""
Warren 'Commission 'should be,
"it iiunpeachable."
"Considering these circum-
stances, it is amazing-shocking
competent a n d unimpeachable
liower_Administration, :_
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SAT
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EXCERPT FROM THE STATEMENT OF PRINCIPLES
ADOPTED BY THE CIVIL LIBERTIES COMMITTEE
IN 1954.
The threat to civil liberties in the United States today is the most seri-
ous in the history of our country. Combining to create this crisis of free-
dom are the following:
? Repressive administrative orders and loyalty purges on the part
of the Federal, State and City Governments;
? A number of laws which undermine the. Bill of Rights such as the
Smith Act, The Internal Security Act and the Walter-McCarran
Immigration Act;
? The veritable inquisition established by the Congressional in-
vestigating committees;
? The activity of private vigilante groups in setting up blacklists
and acting to repress freedom of speech, assembly and press;
?' The' spread of censorship and purges to education, the arts, science
had cultural enterprise in general; -
? The use of arbitrary lists of "subversive" organizations by both
governmental authorities and private institutions;
The imposition of loyalty oaths by private organizations,,
? Current procedures and proposed legislation interfering with free.
elections in trade unions, and the denial of the right to work, f
to engage in business and to practice professions on the basis of
political beliefs or associations;
? The continuation of racial discrimination, segregation and perse-
cution;
? The widespread state of fear and alarm among large sections of
the population.
All persons of whatever views, race, national origin and religion prop.
erly share in our constitutional liberties, whether as individuals or as col-
lectively grouped in organizations of one kind or another. Those who
make exceptions to the Bill of Rights undermine democracy. Civil liberties
are indivisible.
THE program of the Emergency Civil Liberties Committee is simple.,
It is to reverse sueh trends as noted above and to re-establish in full
the traditional freedoms guaranteed under the Constitution and Bill
of Rights. The meaning of American democracy has always been that
these freedoms should extend to all individuals and groups in the
United States. We stand uncompromisingly for civil liberties for every-
one: businessmen and workers, Socialists and Trotskyites, Communists
and anti-Communists, Catholics, Protestants, Jews and atheists, and
every variety of dissenter.
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The Emergency Civil Liberties Committee wns formed in 1951 to give
uncompromising support for the Bill of Rights and the freedom of con-
science and expression it guarantees.
The governing body of ECLC is the National Council of 104 members from
20 states, Puerto Rico, and D.C. All who agree with our aims are invited to
join as Associates by paying =5.00 a year. Associates receive RIGHTS and
other literature distributed by the Committee.
Chairman: Corliss Lament Secretary: Lewis J. Graham
Vice-Chairman: Eleanor Brussel General [.ousels Leonard R. Boudin
V.-Chm. & Editor: John M. Pickering Director: Clark Foreman
Treasurer: John Scudder Assistant lHrector, Edith Tiger
F FREEDOM is important to you, we invite
you to become an Associate of the Emer-
gency Civil Liberties Committee for $5
a year. You will receive the bulletin, Rights,
and other publications.
Enclosed please find $ ........
NAME ....................................................................................................
ADDRESS ..............::...................................................................:.............
CITY ................................................ ZONE............ STATE....................
EMERGENCY CIVIL LIBERTIES COMMITTEE
421 Seventh Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10001
31
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EMERGENCY CIVIL LIBERTIES COMMITTEE
421 Seventh Ave. New York, N. Y. 10001
CORLISS LAMONT
Chairman
MRS. ELEANOR BRUSSEL
Vice-Chairman
JOHN M. PICKERING
Vice-Chairman
LEWIS J. GRAHAM
Secretary
NATIONAL COUNCIL
Executive Committee
Dr. Alan R. Bleich,' N. Y.
Mrs Donna Allen, D. C.
Bernard Brightman, N. J.
Ernest Chanes, N. Y.
Dave Dellinger, N. Y.
Prof. Dorothy W. Douglas. N. Y.
Rabbi Robert E. Goldburg, Conn.
Prof. David Haber, N. Y.
Sanford M. Katz, N. Y.
William Meyers. N. Y.
Prof. Mary Mothersill. N. Y.
Russ Nixon, N. Y.
Harvey O'Connor, R. 1.
Icon Quit, N. Y.
Harry I. Rand, N. V.
Louis L. Redding, Del.
Morton Stavis, N. J.
Stanley Swerdlow, N. Y.
Peter Weiss, N. Y.
Henry Abrams, N. Y.
Byron Allen, Md.
James Aronson. N. Y.
Prof. John S. Adee, Pa.
Prof. Stringfellow Bart, N.
Mrs. Walter Boyden. Mass.
Mrs. Anne Braden, Ky.
Stokley Carmichael, Ga.
Prof. Robert S. Brown. N. J.
Kenneth Cloke, N. Y.
Mrs. Aleine Austin Cohen, Md.
Prof. Robert S. Cohen, Mass.
Lawrence Cole. N. Y.
Dr. Charles W. Collins, N. Y.
Prof. Edward U. Condon, Colo.
Joseph H. Crown, N. Y.
Hon, Hubert T. Delany, N. Y.
Earl B. Dickerson, 111.
Prof. Douglas Dowd N. Y.
Ben amin Dreyfus, Ctalif.
Prof. Thomas I. Emerson, Conn.
Moe Fishman, N. Y.
Laurent B. Frantz, Calif.
Rev. Stephen H. Fritchman, Calif
Maxwell Geismar, N. Y.
Daniel S. Gillmor. N. Y.
Sidney J. Gluck. N. Y.
JOHN H. SCUDDER
Treairrer
LEONARD B. BOUDIN
General Counsel
CLARK FOREMAN
Director
MRS. EDITH TIGER
Asst. Director
Warren flinckle III Calif.
Rev. Chester B. Hodgson, N. Y.
Leo Huberman, N. Y.
Abraham J. lsserman, N. Y.
Mrs. Edna Ruth Johnson, Fla.
Prof. Erich Kibler, N. J.
Prof. Jeffrey Kaplow N. Y.
Mrs. Alexander A. Katz, N. Y.
Robert Kenny, Calif.
Mrs. Rockwell Kent, N. Y.
Arthur Kinoy, N. Y.
Paul Krassner. N. Y.
William Kunstler, N. Y.
Edward Lamb. Ohio
Miss Sandra Levinson, N. Y.
Herman Liveright, Pa.
Prof. Oliver Loud Ohio
Conrad J. Lynn, N. Y.
Prof. Curtis D. MacDougall, Ill.
Carey McWilliams, N. Y.
Prof. Clyde Miller, N. Y.
Prof. Broadus Mitchell, N. Y.
W. Edward Morgan, Ariz.
Prof. Philip Morrison, N. Y.
Prof. Anatol Murad Puerto Rico
Prof. Lawrence Pinitham, N. Y.
Victor Rabinowitz, N. Y.
David Rein, D. C.
Mrs. Esther Rowland, N. Y.
Mrs. S. M. Sacher, N. Y.
Nat Schwerner, N. Y.
Donald Shaffer, N. Y.
Rev. Guy Emery Shipler. Calif.
Mrs. A. W. Simkins, S. C.
John Simon, N. Y.
1. Phillip Sipser, N. Y.
Michael Standard, N. Y.
Russell D. Steller, Jr., Pa-
l F. Stone, D. C.
Robert Ware Straus, Md.
Paul Sweezy, N. Y.
Moe Tandler, N. Y.
Miss Olive Van Horn, N. Y.
Bruce C. Waltzer, La.
Palmer Weber, N. Y.
David Wesley, Pa.
Frank Wilkinson, Calif.
Henry Willcox, Conn.
Prof. H. H. Wilson, N. J.
Prof. Francis D. Wormuth, Utah
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STA
Enclosed please find S ....................
?
Nance.............................
Address ......................... .
.........................................................
City ........................................ state .......... .......... 'Lip..................
EMERGENCY CIVIL LIBERTIES COMMITTEE
25 East 26th St. New York City MU 3-3120
The Emr.rgency Civil Liberties Committee was formed in 1951 to give
uncomr ;iisirtg support for the Bill of Rights and the freedom or con-
scie;--ec nd exprceaion it guarantees.
The go.craing body of ECLC is the National Council of 104 members from
20 states, Puerto Rico, and D.C. All who agree with our aims are invited to
join as Associates by paying $15.00 a year. Associates receive RIGHTS and
other literature distributed by the Committee.
Chairman ; Corliss Lamont Seer( 'iry. Lewis J. Grahant
Yicc?r7 :. an: Eleanor Brusscl Gen,,' Counsel: Leonard B. Boudin
1'.-C!t ^. .',i Editor: John M. Pickering Director: Clark Foreman
Tretazr~rcr: John Scudder Assistant Director: Edith TIGc
Staff Counsel: Michael J. Kennedy
Vol. \V, No. 2 Price 50,
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THE I' to;i i L. A. D.
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EDITORIAL
expel riceci ewspaperman enhances our
n
iennitted our government to
knowledge of the ways in which we have
uch of what lie re
id littlel will be surprising. lio The, hock
undermine the poi
C
ibertarians,
a
familiar r to civil like
to which
comes from rec troll of our ]i les Si inn other words, rthe eextent o the
ministrative con
over5house because w
we have ceased
iilted uur,ostensible tpublic sei