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Bus Ride to Justice: Changing the System by the System, the Life and Works of Fred Gray Revised Edition [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 448 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Dec-2012
  • Kirjastus: NewSouth, Incorporated
  • ISBN-10: 1588382869
  • ISBN-13: 9781588382863
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 448 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Dec-2012
  • Kirjastus: NewSouth, Incorporated
  • ISBN-10: 1588382869
  • ISBN-13: 9781588382863
First published in 1995, Bus Ride to Justice, the best-selling autobiography by acclaimed civil rights attorney Fred D. Gray, appears now in a newly revised edition that updates Grays remarkable career of ""destroying everything segregated that I could find.""

Of particular interest will be the details Gray reveals for the first time about Rosa Parkss 1955 arrest. Gray was the young lawyer for Parks and also Martin Luther King Jr. and the Montgomery Improvement Association, which organized the 382-day Montgomery Bus Boycott after Parkss arrest. As the last survivor of that inner circle, Gray speaks about the strategic reasons Parks was presented as a demure, random victim of Jim Crow policies when in reality she was a committed, strong-willed activist who was willing to be arrested so there could be a test case to challenge segregation laws.

Grays remarkable career also includes landmark civil rights cases in voting rights, education, housing, employment, law enforcement, jury selection, and more. He is widely considered one of the most successful civil rights attorneys of the twentieth century and his cases are studied in law schools around the world. In addition he was an ordained Church of Christ minister and was one of the first blacks elected to the Alabama legislature in the modern era. Initially denied entrance to Alabamas segregated law school, he eventually became the first black president of the Alabama bar association.

This volume also includes new photographs not found in the previous edition.
Preface to the Revised Edition ix
Foreword to the 1995 Edition xiii
Acknowledgments to the 1995 Edition xv
Introduction to the 1995 Edition xviii
1 The Making of a Lawyer
3(28)
2 The Bus Protest Begins
31(44)
3 The City's Get-Tough Policy
75(22)
4 Black Justice, White Law
97(8)
5 State of Alabama v. NAACP
105(4)
6 Seeking the Ballot and Other Rights
109(21)
7 George Wallace Assisted Me
130(14)
8 Dr. King's Most Serious Charge
144(12)
9 Times v. Sullivan: The New Law of Libel
156(9)
10 Sit-ins, Freedom Rides, Freedom Walks
165(20)
11 `With All Deliberate Speed'
185(29)
12 Selma Once More
214(31)
A Selection of Photographs
221(24)
13 Denial and Dilution of Voting Rights
245(9)
14 Fred Gray, the Politician
254(15)
15 Fred Gray, the Preacher
269(6)
16 The Family
275(8)
17 A University That Should Not Have Been
283(11)
18 The Tuskegee Syphilis Study
294(9)
19 The Judgeship That Was Not To Be
303(14)
20 Post-`Judgeship'
317(9)
21 My Challenge to Young Lawyers
326(3)
22 Vestiges of Discrimination
329(18)
23 Four Who Affected My Legal Career
347(4)
24 The Many Faces of Power
351(9)
Epilogue to the 1995 Edition 360(3)
Epilogue to the Revised Edition 363(24)
Table of Cases 387(4)
Appendices 391(21)
Index 412
Fred D. Gray is one of the nations leading civil rights attorneys. At age 24, he was the lawyer for Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Montgomery Bus Boycott, which began the modern Civil Rights Movement. His other cases and clients include the Freedom Riders, the Selma-to-Montgomery March, numerous school desegregation and voting rights lawsuits, and many others. He lives in Tuskegee, Alabama.