American Decades
Red Monday
Talking Communism.
One evening in 1950, a year after the Communist revolution in China, a Houston couple sat down in a local Chinese restaurant. The woman, a radio writer, asked the Asian owner some questions regarding a program she was producing on recent developments in China. A man seated at a nearby table overheard the conversation, rushed to the nearest phone, and informed the police that people were "talking Communism." The police then arrested the couple and incarcerated them for fourteen hours before concluding that there was no case.
A History of Paranoia.
This was not an isolated incident. Several decades worth of anticommunist paranoia reached a fever pitch during the 1950s. By 1957 nearly six million persons had been investigated by administrative agencies and legislative committees because of their alleged disloyalty to the United States, with only a handful of dubious convictions resulting. Congress...
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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
