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  • to Wilbur Mills, for example, on Medicare and the period of time that it took to ultimately bring it about, all the way from adamancy, Kerr-Mills and the rest. You cannot underestimate the power of Wilbur Mills. He not only
  • Clayton Powell; the censure of Tom Dodd; 1967 Elementary and Secondary Education Act and Albert Quie's opposition; Carl Perkins' leadership on the Education and Labor Committee in dealing with Edith Green; truth-in-lending legislation; campaign subsidy
  • House; Cardinal Francis Spellman's political views; debate over the inclusion of private and/or parochial schools in aid to education; Adam Clayton Powell as chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee and his relationship with John McCormack
  • - foreign correspondents At W.Hse residence Cong A . Clayton Powell - talked from mansion - referred Ret'd to Oval R m for fi ve minutes - (pick up 2 Xmas departed for mansion Mr. Sorensen Cong. Thornberry Walter Jenkins there gift) Beverages .50
  • thought that Johnson and Adam Clayton Powell respected each other as a couple of professionals. P: Yes, they did, and Adam Clayton Powell never turned the President down. Now, Adam Clayton Powell had an access to the President. The President realized how
  • consulates in the U.S. and U.S. consulates in the USSR; LBJ's relationship with Adam Clayton Powell; LBJ's relationship with Congress; LBJ's ability to persuade people; the change in expectations among African-Americans during LBJ's presidency
  • Moss Cong James O'Hara Cong Tom Steed Cong Adam Clayton Powell Mr. Andrew Biemiller, AFL-CIO Steward E. McClure, Chief Clerk, Alex Christie. United Steel Workers Senate Labor and Public Works Orville Larson. United Steel Workers Russell Derrickson
  • left. Cong Adam Clayton Powell. National -- re reappointment of Howard Gamser to the/Mediation Board Russell Wiggins and Kay Graham. McPherson (pl) To Fish Rm w/ guests to see Courtenay Washington Post July 21, 1966 Thursday n MW's office talking
  • Secretary Rober t McNamar a Secretary Dea n Rusk Mrs. Johnso Johnso nn -- -- joine joine dd JJV V an and d Presiden Presidentt i nn loung loungee George Bill Cong Reedy Moyers Adam Bill Moyers speaker John Clayton Powell McCormack w/ J V to mansion
  • Lady Bird drives around LBJ Ranch with the Malecheks; opening of the Johnson City home; Lady Bird flies back to Washington, DC; LBJ calls Congressman Adam Clayton Powell about the Elementary and Secondary Education Act; Luci Johnson is ill
  • ; pressure by Adam Clayton Powell to employ blacks in the reorganization; administering Civil Rights Act through education grants; Francis (Frank) Keppel.
  • in that committee for doing whatever we asked. It was easy, so we took our little slice. G: What role did Adam Clayton Powell play in the formation of the legislation? M: I know it went through his committee. Well, obviously he was sympathetic. I don't know
  • Biographical information; War on Poverty; Labor Department; President's Committee on Juvenile Delinquency; Model Cities; Job Corps; Neighborhood Youth Corps; personal impressions of LBJ; Adam Clayton Powell; legislation
  • liaison; workload at OEO; meetings; backload of mail and its handling; regions set-up of OEO; Adam Clayton Powell and OEO; Job Corps; Community Action; Vietnam’s effect on funding; OEO legislative battles; Head Start Program; Neighborhood Youth Corps
  • --and there are dozens of them--were adamant. They LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 8
  • with the Mr. Randolph, however, was the key figure. We also got fought by Adam Clayton Powell, who didn't want us to have them. B: I would like to go in, at an appropriate point, to your relationship with Dr. King and with Congressman Powell. I think
  • the JFK assassination; Civil Rights Bill of 1964; campaigning for LBJ in 1964; organization of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference; introducing Martin Luther King, Jr. to the concept of non-violence; a King-Powell episode regarding Rustin
  • of what it was that we had proposed, and to put to rest any reservations they might have about that wisdom. G: I wonder how Phil Landrum happened to become the sponsor of the bill in the House. H: I don't know. G: Did Adam Clayton Powell present any
  • Biographical information; War on Poverty Task Force; membership; Christopher Weeks; Adam Yarmolinsky; Sargent Shriver; structure and activities of task force Community Action; Job Corps; legislative submission
  • parliamentary knowledge; John McCormack as majority leader and friend to Rayburn and LBJ; JFK’s assassination and funeral; LBJ’s first Presidential speech to Congress; voting rights bill signing ceremony; doorkeeper’s supervisory responsibilities; Adam Clayton
  • ://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Busby -- IV -- 17 so numerous. They weren't just a handful by any means. Adam Clayton Powell came to Austin in 1946, stayed at the home
  • TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Powell -- I -- 20 spent the night at the house, and I had the young men from Marshall: Clayton Fields, Jr
  • See all online interviews with Dorris Powell
  • . Taylor's business dealings with Powell's father; Mr. Taylor's personality; Mr. Taylor helping the poor and the church; Lady Bird's brothers, Tony and Tommy Taylor; Lady Bird as a student at the University of Texas; Powell meeting LBJ: the Johnson's marriage
  • Powell, Dorris
  • Oral history transcript, Dorris Powell, interview 1 (I), 1/22/1975, by Michael L. Gillette
  • Dorris Powell
  • with Adam Clayton Powell on this. Powell seems to have been a somewhat shaky ally. C: Well, Powell always was a shaky ally and we recognized that, but increasingly, Powell was not a man of great power. He didn't have a lot of power in the House. End
  • , and when we had a meeting of the minds, usually both of us got something and the bill moved. M: What about something that doesn't involve legislation? You chaired, for example, the investigation of Adam Clayton Powell. Did the White House or Mr
  • liability; press assassinated LBJ politically; JFK legislation; investigation of Adam Clayton Powell; Hays’ feud with Romney; briefing of Foreign Affairs Committee by Secretary of State; LBJ’s hostility toward Senate Foreign Relations Committee; advice
  • though he did make a couple of speeches. There was significance to the middle-level manpower thing. (Interruption) That was for the [Jamaican] Independence Day ceremonies. There are more stories in connection with that. Adam [Clayton Powell] and I
  • attending the Jamaican Independence Day ceremonies; Adam Clayton Powell's personality; LBJ's 1962 trip to the Middle East and Reedy's involvement in the trip; LBJ's activities in Lebanon and Iran; LBJ's bad mood in Turkey; LBJ's visit to Cyprus and Greece
  • administered by this agency. G: So Mr. Goodell is not really an enemy at all. He would therefore find himself in opposition to the members of his own party and on that committee. H: Yes. G: Do you have any knowledge at all of the Shriver-Adam Clayton
  • Relationship with Shriver; Shriver leaving OEO; charge that OEO indulged in illegal lobbying practices; Shriver-Adam Clayton Powell relationship; opposition to the program; MLK; Poor People’s Campaign; program for auditing grantees; influence of BOB
  • backed off. I guess we just were adamant about it. Sometimes if they see you're adamant they back off. G: Let me ask you to just-­ M: My memory's not good on it. G: --in general to describe the kinds of give-and-take that you have when you've got
  • welfare amendments; residency requirements; JFK’s Madison Square Garden speech; JFK assassination; 1970 Nixon welfare program; 1972 election; the role of vice presidents; the Mills-Ribicoff bill; Adam Clayton Powell; meat quota bill.
  • of Congress affect the likelihood of the grant being approved, the application being approved? For example, if it were a group in Adam Clayton Powell's or Carl Perkins' district, would that influence the [decision]? H: I would say we had two types
  • ; outreach to encourage grant submission; congressmen, such as Carl Perkins and Adam Clayton Powell, getting involved in grant applications; mayors' involvement in CAP; problems with Chicago Mayor Richard Daley; White House involvement in CAP
  • to ,were [Adam] Yarmolinsky and Shriver and perhaps occasionally somebody who was responsible for the memo or speech or whatever it was, the basis of the proposal in a particular area. But the people I remember talking to mainly were Shriver
  • ; maximum feasible participation; legislation; problems; input from the Cabinet members; land reform proposal; separation of church and state; funding level; Peace Corps experience; VISTA; Adam Yarmolinsky affair; Adam Clayton Powell; Edith Green; legal
  • Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Pollak -- II -- 15 recall sessions with Congressman [Adam Clayton] Powell and his staff. Of course, it was his committee . . S: P: Helpful
  • Presidential Task Force on the War on Poverty; drafting War on Poverty bill; Shriver’s dual responsibilities; Community Action; Adam Yarmolinksy episode; problems of the new agency; Legal Service problems; return to the Justice Department
  • for night reading Joe Califano to office Bob Wallace. Special Assistant to Secry of Treasury , (b-4--only last part of call) Cong. Adam Clayton Powell- -(b-5) Returning the Congressman's call of earlier in the evening while President was still with guests
  • Mayor o f Jersey City ) -Ou t @6:1 0 p Marvin — Watso Clark Clifford n >_* ' July 22 22,, 196 5 White Hous e Secy Dean Secy Rusk McNamara Jack Valenti McGeo Bundy Cong Adam Cong To Thursday Hale the Clayton Powell Boggs Mansion
  • legislation the State Department had an interest in. Adam Yarmolinsky would fit into that category too: tremendous on substance, extremely able, but not necessarily the fellow who would be pounding on doors on the Hill. He'd be awfully good at committee
  • to Adam Clayton Powell's Education and Labor Committee; testimony before Congress from Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley and businessmen regarding the poverty bill; Job Corps; whether or not Congress understood Community Action Programs; criticism of Adam
  • be a part of the legislation. K: I bring this up, and I'm not sure that I should, but I do recall that Adam Clayton Powell, who was chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, became very upset with you over this proposed amendment, taking
  • Biographical information; teaching career; candidacy for Congress; support of JFK; Wayne Morse; impression of LBJ as a Senator; education legislation; federal aid to education; opinion of Sam Rayburn; parochial school question; Adam Clayton Powell
  • House for a party, and I talked with him. The House had just voted that afternoon on Adam Clayton Powell, on the question of whether to seat him or not, and Bob Eckhardt had voted to seat him. He said, "You know, you read the Constitution: he is twenty
  • members of Congress and how they influenced or supported or opposed particularly the Job Corps legislation. How about Adam Clayton Powell? He was chairman of the committee. M: Yes, of course Adam was a hard one to fathom because you didn't really know
  • ; Otis Singletary's leadership; factors in site selection for Job Corps centers; criticism of Adam Yarmolinsky; criticism of the cost of the Job Corps program; congressional support for, and opposition to, Job Corps legislation; the process of getting
  • with [Abraham] Ribicoff and I spent a lot of time with Adam Clayton Powell and the others and congressman [Phillip] Landrum, but as I look back on the period my greatest contribution to the whole area is the contribution which I really felt helped to unravel
  • of that and the clarifications, I had to work very closely with some of the key people on the education committee. M: And who were these people? C: In the House there was Chairman Powell--Adam Clayton Powell. The subcommittee chairman was Perkins of West Virginia--Carl
  • -state issue, segregation, and the poverty impact formula; working with Adam Clayton Powell, Carl Perkins, Phil Landrum, Emanuel Celler, Wayne Morse, John Brademas, Hugh Cary, Edith Green, Joe Clark, Jack Forsyth and Charles Lee; lobbying the Congress
  • of the Community Action Program. and I worri.ed about that. The whole Adam Yarmolinsky-southern reaction to this thing, civil rights reaction, was. involved in this, and I, of course, had been working on the civil rights legislation very actively before. so it's
  • ; implications of poverty program; Congress; Adam Yarmolinsky
  • to be a crony of Adam Clayton Powell. G: I think the Black Arts Theatre group was a part of a Project U p l i f t , which again I guess came under Har-You. In this kind of package deal, where Project U p l i f t didn't simply develop jobs but engaged
  • be interpreted as being heavy-handed. But we were comfortable with it. G: Was [Adam Clayton] Powell himself in this particular bill, working as an agent of the White House or did he have his own--? O: Basically, he was cooperating with the White House. We
  • , the Adam Clayton Powell amendment, that was always put up and always voted down. It was one of those things that brought about an obligatory several speeches on both sides, and then there would be a vote and it would be excised with the explanation
  • like the [Adam Clayton] Powell Amendment were offered to it. The Powell Amendment was what was regarded as some great black beast in those days that could destroy all kinds of good legislation. What the Powell Amendment was is what is now Title VI
  • on the committee? \;J: Oh, yes. tee. Edith Green was a very, very powerful factor on the commit- I would say after Phi.l Landrum and the committee chairman, Adam Clayton Powell, she was probably the next most powerful person on the committee, for several
  • subcommittee, so Chairman Powell, who was the head of the full committee . . . F: This is Adam Clayton. H: Yes, Adam Clayton Powell, this is one of those things which he did very well. One of the reasons why he was successful as a chairman was that he knew