American Decades
People in the News
In 1956 John Ogden Bigelow, attorney and jurist, was nearly denied a position on the board of governors of Rutgers University because as a lawyer he had defended accused Communist schoolteacher Richard Lowenstein; after bitter debate and personal appeals from New Jersey's governor, the state senate finally agreed to confirm Bigelow.
In 1953 Herbert Brownell, Jr., became U.S. attorney general under President Dwight Eisenhower. He served in the post until his resignation in October 1957. During his first year as attorney general, in November 1953, Brownell made headlines by accusing the Harry S Truman administration of promoting known-Communist Harry Dexter White to a high-level position in the State Department.
In 1954 Roy Cohn, chief counsel for the Senate Permanent Investigations Subcommittee, resigned from the position after facing considerable criticism during that year's army-McCarthy...
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1950's Law and Justice
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- The Brink's Robbery
- Brown V. Board of Education Topeka, Kansas
- The Emmett Till Case
- The First Amendment in the 1950s
- J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI
- Juvenile Delinquency
- The Kefauver Committee and Organized Crime
- The McClellan Committee and Labor Racketeering
- Prison Life in the 1950s
- Red Monday
- The Supreme Court of the 1950s
- The Ten Most Wanted
- Youngstown Sheet & Tube Company V. Sawyer
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Law and Justice, 1950–1959
