Introduction Part I: Debating the Civil Rights Movement: The View from the Nation Chapter 1: Excerpt from To Secure These Rights: The Report of the President's Committee on Civil Rights (1947) Chapter 2: '96 Congressmen's Declaration of Integration (March 11, 1956) Chapter 3: Dwight D. Eisenhower's Radio and Television Address to the American People on the Situation in Little Rock (September 24, 1957) Chapter 4: Excerpts from Hearings before the United States Commission on Civil Rights, Montgomery, Alabama (December 8 and 9, 1958) Chapter 5: Memorandum to Mr. Belmont from A. Rosen Concerning the Racial Situation in Albany, Georgia (January 17, 1963) Chapter 6: Memorandum to the Attorney General from the Director of the FBI Concerning the Racial Situation in Albany, Georgia (January 18, 1963) Chapter 7: John F. Kennedy's Radio and Television Report to the American People on Civil Rights (June 11, 1963) Chapter 8: Letter from Wiley A. Branton, Project Director, Voter Education Project, to Dr. Aaron Henry and Mr. Robert Moses (November 12, 1963) Chapter 9: Lyndon B. Johnson's Special Message to the Congress: The American Promise (March 15, 1965) Chapter 10: Excerpt from Tom Wicker's Introduction to the Report of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (March 1968) Chapter 11: Where do we go from here? Part II: Debating the Civil Rights Movement: The View from the Trenches Chapter 12: Excerpt from Ella J. Baker's Bigger Than a Hamburger (June 1960) Chapter 13: Handbill, Albany Nonviolent Movement (November 9, 1961) Chapter 14: Chronology of Violence and Intimidation in Mississippi, 1961 (1963) Chapter 15: Student Voice Editorial and Cartoon on the FBI (November 25, 1964) Chapter 16: Poster from East Selma, Alabama, from the Student Voice (August 30, 1965) Chapter 17: An Interview with Eldridge Steptoe Chapter 18: This Transformation of People: An Interview with Bob Moses Chapter 19: An Interview with Mrs. Fannie Lou Hamer Selected Readings