by Jim Newton
Standley, William
Stanford, Leland
Starr, Kevin
Stassen, Harold
Steinbeck, John
Steinhart, Jesse
Stephans, Joseph
Stephens, William
Stern, Sam
Stevenson, Adlai
Stewart, Potter
Stimson, Henry
Stockton Record
Stone, Harlan Fiske
Stone, Irving
Stone, Oliver
Storke, Tom
Sullivan . B.
Supreme Court
as brotherhood
Court-packing proposal by Roosevelt
finality of decisions
and Watergate hearings
See also Warren Court; Warren Court, issues addressed by; specific cases
Sweatt case
Sweezy . New Hampshire
Sweigert, Bill
as assistant and adviser to Warren
in attorney general’s office
poems about Warren
as speechwriter for Dewey-Warren campaign
Swig, Benjamin H.
syndicalism
System, The (Hichborn)
Taft, Robert
Talmadge, Herman
Tauske, Edmund
Taylor, John
Taylor, Paul
Tenney, Jack
Terry . Ohio
Thirteenth Amendment
Thornberry, Homer
Thurmond, Strom
Tibbet, Bert
Time magazine
Time, Inc. . Hill
Tinker . Des Moines School District
Tippit, J. .
Tolan Committee
Topeka school board. See Brown . Board of Education
trial transcripts for indigents
Trop, Albert .
Trop case
Truman, Harry
appointment of Clark to Court
battles against Communism
death
presidential campaign
racial equality in military
Tyrrell, Edward
United Labor Party
United Nations
University of California
at Berkeley
loyalty oath
faculty resistance
ideological debate
legislative bill
settlement of controversy
text of
Uno, Edison
Uphaus, Willard
Upton Sinclair presents William Fox (Sinclair)
Vallee, Paul
Vandenberg, Arthur
Vanderbilt, Arthur
Velie, Lester
vice presidency
Warren as Dewey’s running mate ()
Warren’s refusal to run ()
Vickerson, Julia
Vietnam War
Johnson’s preoccupation with
protest
Tet offensive
Vinson, Fred
conferences on Brown
death
fellow justices’ comments at death of
graduate school cases
and Rosenberg espionage case
Voorhis, Jerry
voting rights
Fourteenth Amendment (equal protection clause)
Johnson’s bill proposal
legislative redistricting
literacy requirement
poll tax
Selma march
Voting Rights Act
Wade, Henry M.
Wallace, George (Alabama governor)
Wallace, George (defendant in Point Lobos case)
Wallace, Henry
Walsh, Lawrence
war (Vietnam) protesters
Wardell, Justus
Waring, J. Waties
Warren, Chrystal
Warren, Dorothy
Warren, Earl
association memberships
American Bar Association
American Federation of Musicians
American Legion
at Berkeley
Bohemian Club
Masons
Native Sons of the Golden West
authors, influential
childhood and youth
birth
decision to become lawyer
high school
home life
impressions and influences
jobs
love of animals
sense of justice
death and funeral
education at Berkeley
family
adoption of Jim
births of children
discipline
grandson Jim’s visit
Honey Bear’s polio
Warren, Earl (cont.)
insulation of family from politics
move to Sacramento
time with children
Virginia’s wedding
and John Kennedy
eulogy for
mutual admiration and respect
at news of assassination
lawyer, first job as
legacy
marriage
military service
nature and temperament
caution and reserve
loyalty
public versus private life
stubbornness
parents
father
mother
poetry, love of
political activity, first
political orientation
centrism
federalism
mentor and role model
nonpartisanship
Progressivism
during Prohibition
in retirement
inauguration of Bradley as mayor
office at Court
opposition to National Court of Appeals proposal
preoccupation with political issues
press conference
public esteem
speaking engagements
travel
visitors during final illness
on Watergate
writings
romance, first
on Vietnam War
See also specific topics; specific offices
Warren, Earl, Jr.
birth
in family photograph
hobbies and interests
Honey Bear’s polio
on normalcy of home life
in Sacramento
support for Brown in governor’s race
on Warren Sr.’s pursuit of Court appointment
on Warren Sr.’s response to Methias Warren’s murder
Warren, Ethel (later Ethel Plank)
Warren, Jeffrey Earl
Warren, Jim (Warren’s grandson)
Warren, Jim (Warren’s son, formerly Jim Meyers)
adoption by Warren
art hobby
birth
education
in family photograph
military service
relationship with Warren
visit to Warren during final illness
Warren, Methias
Warren, Nina Elizabeth (“Honey Bear”)
in family photograph
FBI investigation of
hobbies and activities
marriage
polio
in Sacramento
at Warren’s death
Warren, Nina (formerly Nina Palmquist Meyers)
as chief justice’s wife
childhood
end of life
friendships
as governor’s wife
as homemaker and mother
Honey Bear’s polio
marriage and child, first
marriage to Warren, and children
move to governor’s mansion
reservations about Warren’s gubernatorial candidacy
on Stevenson’s death
summer travel tradition
at Warren’s death
&nb
sp; Warren’s dependence on
Warren, Robert (“Bobby”)
Warren, Virginia (later Virginia Daly)
attractiveness
birth
in family photograph
on friendship of Warren and Black
hobby
marriage
on opposition to Warren’s health insurance initiative
in Sacramento
on Warren’s home life
on Warren’s vice presidential campaign
Warren Commission
CIA, withholding of information by
conspiracy theory, consideration of
FBI
cover-up of information by
Ford as informant for
inadequacy of assassination report
leak of assassination report to press
report on leftist affiliations of Commission staff
response to Commission findings
rumor of Oswald’s allegiance to
findings
contradiction of, by conspiracy theorists
criticism of
report
summary of
Marguerite Oswald’s testimony
Marina Oswald’s testimony
press coverage
Ruby’s testimony
scope of work
single-bullet theory
staff
appointment of Warren to lead
Commission members
general counsel
legal staff
Warren
addresses to staff
compassion and dedication
health
protection of Kennedy family
Warren Court
accomplishments
American Bar Association criticism
associate justice appointments Brennan
Fortas
Goldberg
Harlan
Marshall
Stewart
White
Whittaker
associate justices at Warren’s arrival
Black
Burton
Clark
Douglas
Frankfurter
Jackson
Minton
Reed
congressional challenges to Court’s authority
cross-burning provocation
Eisenhower’s failure to support
FBI and
judicial activism
judicial restraint
Kennedy era, promise of
Kennedy’s support
legacy of
Nixon presidency, danger of Nixon’s attempt to influence political considerations role of personalities and alliances
social rituals
Warren’s relationships within
Black
Brennan
Clark
clerks
Douglas
Frankfurter
Harlan
after Warren’s retirement announcement
See also chief justice of Supreme Court, Warren as
Warren Court, issues addressed by
American citizenship
antitrust laws
Civil Rights Act challenges
Communist subversion
confessions obtained without legal representation
Warren Court, issues addressed by (cont.)
Court and Congress, relationship between
defendant’s right to confront witnesses double jeopardy
free speech versus government interests
free symbolic speech
interracial marriage
legal practice, state regulation of
legal representation for indigents
legislative powers
legislative redistricting
libel
obscenity
police misconduct
police powers
prisoners, treatment of
privacy from intrusion by press
privacy in marriage
property rights versus equal protection
racial discrimination in public transportation
school desegregation (Brown)
announcement of decision
applicability to wider matters
cases constituting
conference deliberations
Eisenhower’s resistance to
implementation challenges
John Birch Society response
separate opinion on District of Columbia component
Southern Manifesto response
unanimity of decision
vulnerability of decision
Warren’s written opinion
school prayer
search and seizure
syndicalism
trial transcripts for indigents
voting rights
legislative redistricting
literacy requirement
poll tax
Voting Rights Act challenge
war (Vietnam) protest
Washington Post
Washington Star
Waste, William H.
Watergate
Watkins, Arthur .
Watkins . United States
Wearne, Ernest
Webb, U. S.
Wehr, Charlie
Welch, Robert
Werdel, Tom
Western Oil and Gas Association
Wheeler, General
Whitaker, Clem. See Whitaker and Baxter (consulting firm)
Whitaker and Baxter (consulting firm)
White, Byron
White, Edward
Whitney . California
Whittaker, Charles
Whittington, Banning H.
Williams, Bonnie Ray
Williams, Edward Bennett
Williams, Hosea
Wilson, J. Pendleton
Wilson, John Stit
Wilson, Roderick J.
Wilson, Woodrow
witnesses, defendant’s confrontation of
Wofford, Harris
Wolfson, Louis
World Peace Through Law
World War
aftermath
civil defense plans
end of
migration to California
military industry
Pearl Harbor attack
state of emergency
See also Japanese and Japanese-Americans
Wright, Loyd
Wyman, Louis
Yates . United States
Yoneda, Elaine Black
Yorty, Sam
Young, Andrew
+
Zapruder film
Ziffren, Kenneth
Zoot Suit riots