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  • continue to try to apply pressure on that stand or did he abandon it? Y: There was a little pressure. There was pressure from others in the civil rights movement, Roy Wilkins, Whitney Young, and Bayard--and the labor wing, especially. The Democratic party
  • member of the Democratic National Congressional Committee. 2/8 Lend Lease Bill passed by the House. 2/10 O. J. Weber joins LBJ’s congressional staff. 2/12 FDR presents to Congress $898 million program for additional Navy ship construction
  • to this time had any direct political activity in the form of participating in campaigns and so on? A: Yes. In 1952 in Clay County, Missouri, I served as a poll watcher for the Democratic Party; in 1954 and 1960 I was active in Senator LBJ Presidential
  • THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON DECLASSIFIED E.O 123..,, sec. ·'--' NLJ 2e-cl'7/ By~ , , NARA, Date !£~f:t~ G0tfE ID:EM'f'IAL March 14, 1967 NATIONAL SECURITY ACTION MEMORANDUM NO. 361 TO: The The The The The The Secretary of State Secretary
  • National Security Action Memorandums
  • National Security Files
  • like frightened quail before The two boys, my brother and I--our mother was in bad health for a number of years, and we went to live in Alabama with relatives. Just about the time I became of school age, seven years, we returned to Texas, and I knew
  • See all scanned items from file unit "EQUALITY OF RACES / ALABAMA (HU 2/ST 1)"
  • Alabama
  • This item is from the WHCF category for Human Rights, subcategory Equality of Races/Alabama.
  • Selma, Alabama
  • This is one of a series of reports written to President Johnson by Joseph Califano, Jr., Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense, outlining the progression of a key civil rights march in Alabama in March 1965. Nearly 50 years later, Mr
  • See all scanned items from file unit "EQUALITY OF RACES / ALABAMA (HU 2/ST 1)"
  • Alabama
  • This item is from the WHCF category for Human Rights, subcategory Equality of Races/Alabama.
  • Selma, Alabama
  • This is one of a series of reports written to President Johnson by Joseph Califano, Jr., Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense, outlining the progression of a key civil rights march in Alabama in March 1965. Nearly 50 years later, Mr
  • See all scanned items from file unit "EQUALITY OF RACES / ALABAMA (HU 2/ST 1)"
  • Alabama
  • This item is from the WHCF category for Human Rights, subcategory Equality of Races/Alabama.
  • Selma, Alabama
  • This is one of a series of reports written to President Johnson by Joseph Califano, Jr., Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense, outlining the progression of a key civil rights march in Alabama in March 1965. Nearly 50 years later, Mr
  • See all scanned items from file unit "EQUALITY OF RACES / ALABAMA (HU 2/ST 1)"
  • Alabama
  • This item is from the WHCF category for Human Rights, subcategory Equality of Races/Alabama.
  • Selma, Alabama
  • This is one of a series of reports written to President Johnson by Joseph Califano, Jr., Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense, outlining the progression of a key civil rights march in Alabama in March 1965. Nearly 50 years later, Mr
  • See all scanned items from file unit "EQUALITY OF RACES / ALABAMA (HU 2/ST 1)"
  • Alabama
  • This item is from the WHCF category for Human Rights, subcategory Equality of Races/Alabama.
  • Selma, Alabama
  • This is one of a series of reports written to President Johnson by Joseph Califano, Jr., Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense, outlining the progression of a key civil rights march in Alabama in March 1965. Nearly 50 years later, Mr
  • See all scanned items from file unit "EQUALITY OF RACES / ALABAMA (HU 2/ST 1)"
  • Alabama
  • This item is from the WHCF category for Human Rights, subcategory Equality of Races/Alabama.
  • Selma, Alabama
  • This is one of a series of reports written to President Johnson by Joseph Califano, Jr., Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense, outlining the progression of a key civil rights march in Alabama in March 1965. Nearly 50 years later, Mr
  • See all scanned items from file unit "EQUALITY OF RACES / ALABAMA (HU 2/ST 1)"
  • Alabama
  • This item is from the WHCF category for Human Rights, subcategory Equality of Races/Alabama.
  • Selma, Alabama
  • This is one of a series of reports written to President Johnson by Joseph Califano, Jr., Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense, outlining the progression of a key civil rights march in Alabama in March 1965. Nearly 50 years later, Mr
  • See all scanned items from file unit "EQUALITY OF RACES / ALABAMA (HU 2/ST 1)"
  • Alabama
  • This item is from the WHCF category for Human Rights, subcategory Equality of Races/Alabama.
  • Selma, Alabama
  • This is one of a series of reports written to President Johnson by Joseph Califano, Jr., Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense, outlining the progression of a key civil rights march in Alabama in March 1965. Nearly 50 years later, Mr
  • See all scanned items from file unit "EQUALITY OF RACES / ALABAMA (HU 2/ST 1)"
  • Alabama
  • This item is from the WHCF category for Human Rights, subcategory Equality of Races/Alabama.
  • Selma, Alabama
  • This is one of a series of reports written to President Johnson by Joseph Califano, Jr., Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense, outlining the progression of a key civil rights march in Alabama in March 1965. Nearly 50 years later, Mr
  • See all scanned items from file unit "EQUALITY OF RACES / ALABAMA (HU 2/ST 1)"
  • Alabama
  • This item is from the WHCF category for Human Rights, subcategory Equality of Races/Alabama.
  • Selma, Alabama
  • This is one of a series of reports written to President Johnson by Joseph Califano, Jr., Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense, outlining the progression of a key civil rights march in Alabama in March 1965. Nearly 50 years later, Mr
  • See all scanned items from file unit "EQUALITY OF RACES / ALABAMA (HU 2/ST 1)"
  • Alabama
  • This item is from the WHCF category for Human Rights, subcategory Equality of Races/Alabama.
  • Selma, Alabama
  • This is one of a series of reports written to President Johnson by Joseph Califano, Jr., Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense, outlining the progression of a key civil rights march in Alabama in March 1965. Nearly 50 years later, Mr
  • See all scanned items from file unit "EQUALITY OF RACES / ALABAMA (HU 2/ST 1)"
  • Alabama
  • This item is from the WHCF category for Human Rights, subcategory Equality of Races/Alabama.
  • Selma, Alabama
  • This is one of a series of reports written to President Johnson by Joseph Califano, Jr., Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense, outlining the progression of a key civil rights march in Alabama in March 1965. Nearly 50 years later, Mr
  • See all scanned items from file unit "EQUALITY OF RACES / ALABAMA (HU 2/ST 1)"
  • Alabama
  • This item is from the WHCF category for Human Rights, subcategory Equality of Races/Alabama.
  • Selma, Alabama
  • This is one of a series of reports written to President Johnson by Joseph Califano, Jr., Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense, outlining the progression of a key civil rights march in Alabama in March 1965. Nearly 50 years later, Mr
  • See all scanned items from file unit "EQUALITY OF RACES / ALABAMA (HU 2/ST 1)"
  • Alabama
  • This item is from the WHCF category for Human Rights, subcategory Equality of Races/Alabama.
  • Selma, Alabama
  • This is one of a series of reports written to President Johnson by Joseph Califano, Jr., Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense, outlining the progression of a key civil rights march in Alabama in March 1965. Nearly 50 years later, Mr
  • See all scanned items from file unit "EQUALITY OF RACES / ALABAMA (HU 2/ST 1)"
  • Alabama
  • This item is from the WHCF category for Human Rights, subcategory Equality of Races/Alabama.
  • Selma, Alabama
  • This is one of a series of reports written to President Johnson by Joseph Califano, Jr., Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense, outlining the progression of a key civil rights march in Alabama in March 1965. Nearly 50 years later, Mr
  • we were coming, and I got in touch with a number of my friends in the Republican Party to tell them I was going to leave, and they said, "No, don't leave. We're going to form a party for the Democrats, but it will be a Republican group." I said
  • appointments; black attitudes toward LBJ; Hobart Taylor, Jr.; RFK, Truman, Humphrey and John Macy; Nabrit’s switch to Democratic Party in 1964; Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party’s seating fight at 1964 Convention; advising President on civil rights
  • had 100 people. They were the old folks, a few labor leaders, older farmers, and fbr the most pa.rt the patronage controlling, historic, normal,rather unexciting Democratic Party types. Nonetheless very good folks, and they do represent a residue
  • -Republicon Party Mr. Sung Hee Kim Democratic-Republican Party Mr. Sang Kook Han H.E. Mr. Yong Shik Kim and Mn. Kim Republic of Korea to the United Nations Mr. and Mn. Un Yong Kim Republic of Korea to the United Nations In view of the fact that President
  • will then be placed in the Library, to be administered by the people at the National Archives incidentally, and this will be used as Mr. Beckworth wishes. B: Thank you. That's very fine. M: This is an interview with Mr. Lindley Beckworth. outside of Gladewater
  • Home congressional office facilities; family background; father's county school superintendent campaign; 1928 Democratic convention in Houston; college education data; 1936 race for state representative; introduction to LBJ in 1936; 1938 campaign
  • at Valparaiso University today. Brown is an outspoken militant who in the past has advocated the use of dynamite to bomb the Democratic National Convention to be held in Chicago du in the Sun.1~r.of 1968. The Valparaiso Police Departmen and the Indiana State
  • A (National Security)
  • Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission)
  • in the nation's capital. I mean Senators Lister Hill and John Sparkman. I think of the top priority programs for the good of Alabama and the whole ration that these men have helped to moive: What could be more important than education and health? When we read
  • Alabama
  • Press release, "Remarks by Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, University of Alabama and American Association of University Women Leadership Conference, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, 2/25/1966"
  • disenchantment with the Democratic party? W: Not at all. No. F: This all developed later. W: Right. F: Okay. And I was there when it occurred. (Laughter). We'll come to that, because it's part of the story. Did you see Senator Johnson down here, or up
  • ~~-e~~/t}-1J--9'1 Nt,-:f9f- 3'3~ Bowi~ t Pres±clent- from W. Ro stow enH-dential ti re: Robert Bowie 2•- - -1.06/24-/66 A 1/ from Ros.tow e: (, - }i 1' Argentina N L J g 7 -I 7 - FILE LOCATION NATIONAL SECURITY FILE, Memos to the President
  • A (National Security)-SANITIZED
  • National Security Files
  • (inc!ude visited by) To the South Grounds w/ Mrs. Johnson for High School Students in Washington under sponsorship of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association Pics REMARKS Clyde Ellis, General Manager, Natl Rural Electric Cooperative
  • National Archives and Records Administration http://archives.gov National Archives Catalog https://catalog.archives.gov http://www.lbjlibrary.org/ COLLECTION DETAILS and FOLDER TITLE LIST Collection: White House Central Files Series: Confidential
  • anybody going in and encouraging persons to become active in politics. We were not encouraging them to be active in politics for the Democratic Party or the Republican Party or the Socialist Party or any party. We were trying to tell them, these are your
  • historically, that the Democratic Party had been best for the people, and "the common people" was the phrase used then without all that much pejorative as it perhaps is now, a feeling. And so, not that Adlai Stevenson was cut from the same cloth that Lyndon
  • ; the Johnsons' relationship with Senator Wayne Morse; LBJ becoming Senate Majority Leader; LBJ's secretaries; Mrs. Johnson's feelings about riding in an airplane; the Johnsons' relationship with Drew Pearson; the Johnsons' party for Bess and Tyler Abell; family
  • National Archives and Records Administration http://archives.gov National Archives Catalog https://catalog.archives.gov http://www.lbjlibrary.org COLLECTION DETAILS and FOLDER TITLE LIST Collection: Papers of Irving L. Goldberg, 1960 - 1994 [NAID
  • . HU 2/ST EQUALITY OF RACES/STATES Opened 12/72 Negligible amount of material. HU 2/ST 1 08/28/17 EQUALITY OF RACES/ALABAMA Opened 12/72 White House Central Files, Subject Files, Human Rights (HU) Boxes 24 Boxes 24-25, 27-29 2 National
  • Wildlife Refuges primarily for migratory waterfowl have been established totalling 18,000 acres and nearly 7,000 acres have been added to four existing refuges. New refuges are the Choctaw National Wildlife Refuge in Alabama, the Ravalli National Wildlife
  • atate. The r ecommeDdattoa. of the Cre- dea.tial• Committee adopted by the Couvelltion c ommit• the Democratic Party th:roup the NatlOD&l C ommittee t o atrlve toward that 1oal. The Credelltlala Committee did an •JC.C•llen.t Job coll- by the u
  • National Archives and Records Administration http://archives.gov National Archives Catalog https://catalog.archives.gov http://www.lbjlibrary.org COLLECTION DETAILS and FOLDER TITLE LIST Collection: Records of Temporary Committees, Commissions
  • Folder title list, Files of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders, 1967-1968
  • Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission)
  • at the Defense Department in charge of the National Fallout Shelter Survey Program. Of course, Adam Yarmolinsky had gone over on the task force to work with [Sargent] Shriver. I had gone through rather an interesting job experience in the National Fallout Shelter
  • in the Democratic Party, in Kennedy, and in reform politics in New York. At the lowest imaginable level I worked for both the reform political groups in New York and during the Kennedy campaign for him. F: Both preconvention and postconvention or just--? C
  • 12.80 miles, colonies, joined their Three bonds united them. language. nation came into being._ strung separate out along the Atlantic wills in a common There And there by which the citizens Two centuries and democracy of the colonies later