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  • in the Oval Office-all the brilliant colors in the photographs of presi­ dential panoply and historic occasions can eventually fade away. But an innovative preservation project by the National Archives and the LBJ Library may keep those colors bright
  • monthly concerned with right-wing extremism (some information on left wing) particularly National States Rights Party, Klan, Minutemen (pub. study) mostly fact-finding - millions to do fact-finding study FILES I. II. III. IV. Minutemen A. General
  • Records of the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence (Eisenhower Commission)
  • in Washington, n.c., was shoved aside at a meeting because he was not militant enough. Similarly, we have not considered the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People {NAACP)even as militant but news reports from the Chicago Conference of New
  • A (National Security)
  • Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission)
  • due to mail transmission or acy other form of transmission. All the people who have seen the photograph expressed strong carment for its excellence, beauty of color, and extreme sharpness. I wish to add my canpliments. rely yours, I/),-,, /1_ 11u
  • The Beck Engraving Company has printed the official photographs for Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson. Attached are sample copies of their four­ color work for the National Gallery of Art. The names and addresses of the officials contacted
  • . ~~~ l. ~ The National Archlvea A primary mlaalon of the Photo Office la to produce the flrat pboto1raphlc hlatory of a prealdency in all it• ramificatlona, in depth and wlth boneaty, a• a aervlce to the American people for 1enerationa to come. 2
  • scale supporting struggles of all people agains~ "racism, · exploitation, and oppression. 0 It seeks · "a strong nat~onwide Black Anti-Draft Program 00 to include students and Negroes of draft age. It seeks to build 09 National Freedom Organizations
  • A (National Security)
  • Nation of Islam
  • Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission)
  • people. Perhaps it would be of interest to relate how I did become involved in this. As we have discussed in the two earlier interviews, I had had association with Lyndon Johnson during the Vice Presidential days and a rather early association
  • statistics by computer; LBJ’s interest in geographic diversification, advanced degrees, youth, professional recognition, and minorities; difficulty in recruiting women; Betty Furness; short supply of women in corporate America in 1969; creation of HUD
  • should he do this? the depression years; the work he did took him in contact as a young teacher with the Mexican-American child; his work with the National Youth Administration showed him the problems of people at close hand. No sensitive
  • 1964-1968 progress for women; 1963 equal pay act; coalition of liberal forces; living standards; manpower programs; Neighborhood Youth Corp; LBJ’s role with respect to advances that women made in 1960s; Commission on the Status of Women; Citizen’s
  • nation and had been forced to the gloomy conclusions that the _.\merican people do not merely tolerate ugliness, but have a positive passion for it. I cannot agree with Mr . Mencken, but l do think that we -- as a nation - - have j_uGt begun to accept
  • Press release, "Address of Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson before the Luncheon at the Annual Convention of the Associated Press Managing Editors Association, 10/1/1965"
  • Second Topic: A NATIONAL POLICY TOWARD ENERGY Mike Naeve, Associate Direc­ tor of the LBJ Foundation for the last three years, left the Library in May to become tht> Staff Director of the Trans­ portation Subcommittee of the Senate Environment and Public
  • the agricultureof Asia, m improving 6• the medicallibrariesof your land, in b r.oadening the horizonsof learningandresearchandscientific advance. Workssuch astheseare the worksweof Americawantto do-- with your people,with the peoples of all of Asia, with the peoples
  • was a great New Dealer in my own thinking, not with any government association although I did do a little WPA project at one time. But Johnson, when he got involved with the youth-F: ._C: National Youth Administration . National Youth Administration
  • Biographical information; initial contact with LBJ; desegregation plans; 1956 Democratic National Convention; Democratic Advisory Committee; 1960 Democratic National Convention; Collins' selection and role as chairman of the convention; minority
  • in the special election for Congress. So mine was parallel there 50 years later and a lot of people expected and urged me to run for Congress at that time. I felt that I didn't know anything about national political problems and that I did have some ground
  • a number of people on our national board, of which I was a member, from the trade union movement. So I do recall Johnson saying that he had a very close association with that young redhead from Detroit, that fiery young labor leader who, when he couldn't
  • Contact with LBJ in the 1940s; Democratic Advisory Council; Rayburn's role; Ralph Yarborough; 1956 state and national Democratic conventions and labor; CIO and Texas politics; Frankie Randolph; Texas Observer; committeeman/committeewoman controversy
  • Improvement Association and led local Negroes in the Montgomery Bus Boycott that attracted national attention 0 In March of 1957, he founded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) with himself as President He still holds that position today 0 He
  • A (National Security)-SANITIZED
  • for the 1964 campaign. And so Wilson had offered six people full-time jobs at the Democratic National Committee as full-time advance men. That was the first time, really, that there had been full-time advance men; in the past it had been a part-time deal
  • How Pachios got involved with Peace Corps; JFK’s assassination; LBJ comparing himself to JFK; Eric Goldman; Pachios’ work as an advance man in the 1964 Presidential campaign; Maine governor John Reed; Eugene Pulliam; campaign stops in California
  • assumption of its responsibilities effect. on July 2, 1965, when Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 goes into Title VII prohibits discrimination or national origin, among employers, in employment based on race, color, religion, sex, labor unions
  • teach him. And so they met several times after that, and would call Belford for advice on issues, and then asked him to go to Boston with them to talk to the NAACP [National Association for the Advancement of Colored People] people up there. My husband
  • ; Theodore Kheel; the work of committee members and staff; how LBJ and JFK grew in their understanding of civil rights on a national level; Lawson's work as chairman of the civil rights section of the Kennedy-Johnson campaign and people who tried to undermine
  • for the appointment, and about ten of the nation's leading College football coaches attended the ceremony. Coach Abe Martin - National President of the Association - presented the award to the President. —— REMARKS by the President for networks and reel cameras
  • 13 I JAMES FARMER, : Director, 14 I congress of Racial Equality 15 ROY WILKINS, Executive Secretary, The National Association 16 for ·the Advancement of Colored People~ Chairman, The Leadership Conference on 17 Civil Rights 18
  • Democratic National Committee (U.S.)
  • Proceedings of the Democratic National Convention Credentials Committee, Atlantic City, NJ, August 22, 1964, DNC Papers Series 2, Box 102
  • Papers of the Democratic National Committee
  • different things. That was enough for me. I was through with Parr from then on." Looking back, Salas wonders at Parr's power over Mexican-Americans. "Why do people follow like sheep? We all did it." In 1974, when the Associated Press began an investigation
  • and t,he first to be placed physically on a university campus. The Library conducts scholarly seminars and symposia on topies of national and international interest. Its museum - t.he aspect with which most people are familiar - has pioneered in the use
  • FO~ RELEASE UPON DELIVERY WEDNESDA Y, FEBRUARY 23, 196.6 -12:30 P.M. {MST) R::MARKS BY 10..RS. LYNDON B. JOHNSON AM=RICAN ROAD BUILDERS ASSOCIATION DENVER, COLORADO Senator -- r:'lembers of the American Road Builders Association: The Preside
  • Press release, "Remarks by Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, American Road Builders Association, Denver, Colorado, 2/23/1966"
  • , of the National Association of Manufacturers, praised the enthusiasm of the Vietnamese people for the elections, and said he was certain that "this was an election of integrity." He praised our military, saying "its top management is really tops," and that he'd
  • as far as we knew, but the summer project was an organization called COFO, Council of Federated Organizations, which was made up of SNCC, NAACP [National Association for the Advancement of Colored People], Congress of Racial Equality [CORE] and, I think
  • ; the joining of Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) to form the Council of Federated
  • , 1964, Roy Wilkins, Executive Secretary of the National. Association for the Advancement of Colored People, at his request, made a hurried trip from New York to speak with Assistant Director Cartha D. DeLoach about a matter which he indicated concerned
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  • into the meeting! That was part of the Gandhian influence, that you could be completely open because you were doing what was right. It was always my job, anyway, to tell people what we were going to do in advance. For instance, when we were going into Birmingham
  • : First radio-photograph transmitted via Echo II from Jodrell Bank to U.S.S.R. HOUSING AND HOME FINANCE AGENCY OFFICE OF THE ADMINISTRATOR Federal Housinq Administration Public Housinq Administration Federal National Mortqaqe Association Community
  • afterwards, really, that I was doing a lot of work with National COPE and also with the Retail Clerks and our own people. I would go into various cities and work with the labor movement. G: You said he would reserve some of the worst ones for you
  • Biographical information; Joseph McCarthy; LBJ’s techniques; minimum wage; labor; Jim Suffridge; Dave Dubinsky; 1960 campaign and convention; Esther Coopersmith; West Virginia primary; Arizona delegation; Wyoming delegation; Kennedy machine; advance
  • is a steady expansion of our national wealth. Prosperity alone may never be a cure-all for our problems, but it is the ~e ~~for overcoming them. It enriches the lives of about 85 percent of our people directly-­ through higher pay and higher profits
  • page color photograph of the President in every national consumer magazine - - an estimated circulation of 30 million. Mr. Maroon took several poses, concentrating on a shot of the President at the doorway to his office and at his desk. Bob Kintner (pl
  • of Housing 4 and ~ommunity Development Act. 5 DECLARATION OF PURPOSE SEO. 2. The Congress hereby declares that the general_· G 7 welfare and security of the Nation and the health and living 8 standards of our people require, as a matter of national pur
  • humble and appreciative. But after m} victor}, I wanted to make sure everyone knew where I was from, because I forgot about colors-you know you see people walking around. and you forget about you're a certain com­ plexion. But after I won thi, fight (I
  • CALIFANO, Mortgage JR. Association borrowing l. The Federal National Mortgage Association has secondary market debentures in the amount of $400 million maturing on June 14, 1968. 2~ The Treasury has approved the of secondary market debentures
  • This is from the WHCF category for Federal Government Organizations, subcategory DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT-FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION.
  • Folder, "Ex FG 170-6, Federal National Mortgage Association" WHCF FG, Box 257
  • BURKE MARSHALL, Department of Justice & 2 Public Members: MONSIGNOR GEORGE G. HIGGINS, Director, National Catholic Welfare Conference NORMAN NICHOLSON, JJ'or Edgar Kaiser JUDGE MARJORIE MC KENZIE LAWSON DFAN FRANCIS B. SAYRE, ·'!'h~ washi::1g'l:on
  • for the Advancement of Colored People] is not going to be at ABA meetings drinking cocktails and going to bar association dinners and they're not going to know him or how good he is. G: Well, how significant was the fact that he was Abe Feinberg's brother
  • support programs and about having young people have the opportunity to go to college. As we worked with the American Bankers Association, a year or more after I was appointed, about the details of the Guaranteed Loan Program, which is one of the new
  • Profession Development Act; Fine Affair; Equal Education Opportunity Survey; HEW/Labor rivalry; U.S. Employment Service; Higher Education Amendments of 1968; Vocational Amendments of 1968; 1967 Title III proposals; National Education Association; major policy
  • that I'd asked you was whether or not the people on the task force had reached a consensus of agreement about what Community Action would be. I'd like to start. this tape by asking you if you knew of any task force people who were opposed, had objections