Word: registrar
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...fragmentary records, the U.S. Civil Rights Commission ruefully estimated last September that in the South only one Negro out of every four of voting age was registered. To thwart systematic exclusion of eligible Negroes from voting lists, the commission proposed that, where investigation proved exclusion, the President appoint federal registrars to guarantee voting rights denied by local officials. Promptly denounced by Southerners, the proposal was coolly received by President Eisenhower and Attorney General William P. Rogers. One reason: the registrar plan, as a direct executive remedy, would frontally assault what remained of "states' rights'' and might ultimately...
...Washington last week, Attorney General Rogers moved to place protection of voting rights firmly "within the established judicial framework" by proposing an alternative to the registrar device. Rogers' plan: federal district courts would be authorized to appoint voting referees to certify qualified voters in federal, state and local elections who may have been deprived of their right to vote by local officials. Obvious advantages of the referee proposal: unlike the registrar plan that applied to federal elections only, it would apply to all elections; a referee need not stop at registration but would be able to follow a complaint...