A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of

BLACK STUDIES RESEARCH SOURCES Microfilms from Major Archival and Manuscript Collections General Editors: John H. Bracey, Jr., and Sharon Harley

PAPERS OF THE NAACP

Part GENERAL OFFICE FILES, 30 1966–1972 Series A: Subject Files

A UPA Collection from Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Papers of the NAACP. [microform]

Accompanied by printed reel guides. Contents: pt. 1. Meetings of the Board of Directors, records of annual conferences, major speeches, and special reports, 1909–1950 / editorial adviser, August Meier; edited by Mark Fox—pt. 2. Personal correspondence of selected NAACP officials, 1919–1939 —[etc.]—pt. 30. General office files, 1966–1972. 1. National Association for the Advancement of Colored People—Archives. 2. Afro-Americans—Civil Rights—History—20th century—Sources. 3. Afro- Americans—History—1877–1964—Sources. 4. —Race relations—Sources. I. Meier, August, 1923– . II. Boehm, Randolph. III. Title. E185.61 [Microfilm] 973'.0496073 86-892185 ISBN 1-55655-902-X (microfilm: pt. 30, series A)

Copyright © 2003 by Congressional Information Service, Inc. All rights reserved. ISBN 1-55655-902-X.

ii BLACK STUDIES RESEARCH SOURCES Microfilms from Major Archival and Manuscript Collections General Editors: John H. Bracey, Jr., and Sharon Harley

PAPERS OF THE NAACP Part 30: General Office Files, 1966–1972

Series A: Subject Files

Edited by John H. Bracey, Jr., and Sharon Harley

Project Coordinator Randolph Boehm Guide compiled by Daniel Lewis

A UPA Collection from

4520 East-West Highway • Bethesda, MD 20814-3389 TABLE OF CONTENTS

Scope and Content Note ...... vii Source Note ...... xiii Editorial Note ...... xiii Abbreviations ...... xv Reel Index Group VI, Series A, Administrative File General Office File

Reel 1 Group VI, Box A-19 Anti-Crime Committee of the NAACP–Beadenkopf, Anne...... 1 Group VI, Box A-21 Chronology of Events–Freedom National Bank, New York City ...... 1 Government, City Birmingham, Alabama ...... 2 Los Angeles, California ...... 2 San Francisco, California ...... 2 New Haven, Connecticut ...... 2 New Britain, Connecticut...... 2 Rockford, Illinois...... 2 New York City ...... 2

Reel 2 Group VI, Box A-21 cont. Government, City cont. New York City cont...... 2 Milwaukee, Wisconsin...... 3 Group VI, Box A-22 Government, Federal Agnew, Spiro T.–Congressional Black Caucus ...... 3 Group VI, Box A-23 Government, Federal cont. Congressmen and Senators ...... 4

Reel 3 Group VI, Box A-23 cont. Government, Federal cont. Defense Department–Food Stamps...... 5 Group VI, Box A-24 Government, Federal cont. General–Health, Education, and Welfare Department ...... 6

iii Reel 4 Group VI, Box A-24 cont. Government, Federal cont. Humphrey, Hubert H.–Labor Department ...... 7 Group VI, Box A-25 Government, Federal cont. National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders–Post Office ...... 7

Reel 5 Group VI, Box A-25 cont. Government, Federal cont. Republican National Committee–Supreme Court ...... 9 Group VI, Box A-26 Government, Federal cont. Supreme Court cont...... 10

Reel 6 Group VI, Box A-26 cont. Government, Federal cont. Supreme Court cont.–Whitten Amendments...... 11 Group VI, Box A-27 Government, International Nigeria, Eastern (Biafra)–Pakistan...... 11 Government, State Alabama–West Virginia ...... 11 Group VI, Box A-28 Job Descriptions for NAACP Officers–NAACP v. Brown ...... 13

Reel 7 Group VI, Box A-28 cont. NAACP National Constitution–Organizational Charts ...... 13 Organizations, Correspondence “A”...... 14 Group VI, Box A-29 Organizations, Correspondence cont. “A” cont.–“B”...... 14

Reel 8 Group VI, Boxes A-29 cont.–A-30 Organizations, Correspondence cont. “C”–“G” ...... 15

Reel 9 Group VI, Boxes A-31–A-32 Organizations, Correspondence cont. “H”–“N” ...... 17

Reel 10 Group VI, Box A-32 cont. Organizations, Correspondence cont. “N” cont.–“O” ...... 18

iv Group VI, Box A-33 Organizations, Correspondence cont. “P”–“S”...... 19 Organizations, Name File A. Philip Randolph Institute–African-American Dialogues ...... 20

Reel 11 Group VI, Box A-33 cont. Organizations, Name File cont. African-American Institute ...... 20 Group VI, Box A-34 Organizations, Name File cont. American Committee on Africa–Association for Voluntary Sterilization...... 20

Reel 12 Group VI, Box A-35 Organizations, Name File cont. –Leadership Conference on Civil Rights ...... 21

Reel 13 Group VI, Box A-36 Organizations, Name File cont. Leadership Conference on Civil Rights cont.–National Urban Coalition ...... 23 Group VI, Box A-37 Organizations, Name File cont. National Urban Coalition cont...... 25

Reel 14 Group VI, Box A-37 cont. Organizations, Name File cont. National Urban Coalition cont.–United Nations Association of the United States of America ...... 25 Group VI, Box A-38 Press Releases–Reparations ...... 26 Staff General ...... 26 Henry Lee Moon...... 26 Group VI, Box A-39 Staff cont. John A. Morsell ...... 26

Reel 15 Group VI, Boxes A-39 cont.–A-40 Staff cont. John A. Morsell cont...... 27

Reel 16 Group VI, Box A-40 cont. Staff cont. John A. Morsell cont...... 28

v Group VI, Box A-42 Staff cont. John A. Morsell cont...... 29 Mildred Bond Roxborough ...... 29

Reel 17 Group VI, Box A-42 cont. Staff cont. Mildred Bond Roxborough cont...... 29 Group VI, Box A-44 Staff cont. June Shagaloff ...... 30 ...... 30 Group VI, Box A-45 Staff cont. Roy Wilkins cont...... 30

Reels 18–21 Group VI, Boxes A-45 cont.–A-50 Staff cont. Roy Wilkins cont...... 31

Reel 22 Group VI, Boxes A-51 and A-53 Staff cont. Roy Wilkins ...... 35

Principal Correspondents Index ...... 39 Subject Index...... 61

vi SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE

This edition of Papers of the NAACP consists of the General Office Files in Group VI of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) Records collection at the Library of Congress. Arranged alphabetically by subject, these files document several of the challenges facing the NAACP between 1966 and 1972. These include the NAACP’s relationship with organizations and leaders, new obstacles in the field of school desegregation, continuing efforts to combat discrimination in housing and employment, and confrontations with President Richard M. Nixon, particularly over school desegregation and his nominees for the U.S. Supreme Court. In June 1966 at a rally in Greenwood, Mississippi, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) chairman introduced the phrase “Black Power” into the of the 1960s. Three weeks later, NAACP executive director Roy Wilkins denounced the phrase at the NAACP’s national convention in Los Angeles. In his keynote address to the convention, Wilkins called Black Power “a reverse Mississippi, a reverse Hitler, a reverse Ku Klux Klan.” (For the text of this speech, see Reel 10, Frame 0755. For the proceedings of the 1966 NAACP national convention, see Papers of the NAACP, Supplement to Part 1, 1966–1970.) This edition of General Office Files contains significant documentation on the NAACP’s relationship with Black Power organizations and leaders. There is a file on the Black Panther Party; materials concerning the Revolutionary Action Movement and the Congress of African People; and correspondence with Roy Innis, , Stokely Carmichael, , and Floyd B. McKissick. A November 25, 1966, letter from Wilkins asking for contributions to the NAACP’s Special Contribution Fund further addresses the concept of Black Power. Wilkins commented on the goals of the NAACP and the right of to self-defense. He then wrote: “No matter how often it is defined, this slogan [Black Power] means anti-white power. In a racially pluralistic society, ‘Black Power’…has to mean separatism. We of the NAACP will have none of this” (Reel 10, Frame 0736). The NAACP’s opposition to separatism strongly influenced its reaction to the . The association’s position on separatism also affected its participation in one of the major events of the African American freedom struggle in the 1970s, the National Black Political Convention. The National Black Political Convention convened in Gary, Indiana, in 1972. The convention was chaired by poet and Congress of African People leader Amiri Baraka, Gary mayor Richard Hatcher, and Michigan congressman Charles C. Diggs

vii Jr. Several thousand people from across the political spectrum attended the convention. The convention wrote a National Black Political Agenda, also known as the Gary declaration, that was to serve as a guide for African American political involvement. Among the issues mentioned in the Gary declaration were an end to capital punishment, an end to U.S. involvement in the war in Vietnam, an adequate guaranteed annual income, national health insurance, and home rule for Washington, D.C. The NAACP originally planned to participate in the convention; however, it withdrew after considering a draft of the Gary declaration. The National Black Political Convention file (Reel 13, Frame 0508) contains NAACP statements on its withdrawal from the meeting. A 9, 1972, memorandum from NAACP assistant executive director John A. Morsell to NAACP representatives at the convention stated that the draft preamble of the agenda was “not an acceptable document for the NAACP.” Morsell wrote that a major problem with the draft preamble was that it “is rooted in the concept of separate nationhood for black Americans.” In a press release dated May 16, 1972, the NAACP announced its withdrawal from the gathering. In a letter to the three convention leaders explaining the NAACP’s decision, Roy Wilkins noted the NAACP’s support for parts of the Gary declaration; however, he criticized the “separatist and nationalist intent” of the declaration. Wilkins also stressed that the NAACP did not agree with the Gary declaration on the issue of Israel and on school busing. On busing, Wilkins wrote: “We must reject a statement of policy which gives half-hearted or meaningless endorsement to busing while in fact calling for abandonment of the fight against segregation” (Reel 13, Frames 0517–0518). The NAACP’s decision to withdraw from the National Black Political Convention in part because of the convention’s position on school desegregation and school busing indicates that, eighteen years after Brown v. Board of Education, school desegregation remained a top priority for the NAACP. Busing to achieve school desegregation began to enter the public debate in the late 1960s and became a national issue after the Supreme Court’s 1971 decision in Swann v. Charlotte- Mecklenburg Board of Education. This edition documents the NAACP’s position on school desegregation and busing. Beginning in January 1969, part of the problem faced by the NAACP in the area of school desegregation was opposition from the Nixon White House. A June 1969 letter from Roy Wilkins to President Nixon warned Nixon of the dangers of backtracking on school desegregation (Reel 4, Frame 0622). On March 24, 1970, Nixon issued a statement concerning the desegregation of elementary and secondary schools. Nixon reaffirmed his belief in the 1954 Brown decision, mentioned some of the key court decisions in the sixteen years since Brown, and discussed his administration’s policy regarding school desegregation. The NAACP reacted quickly to Nixon’s statement. In a March 25, 1970, statement, John A. Morsell proclaimed: “President Nixon’s statement on education and race…will warm the hearts of the die-hards who have fought tooth and nail for fifteen years against enforcement of the constitutional rights of all children to integrated quality education” (Reel 16, Frame 0888). The staff files of John A. Morsell and Roy

viii Wilkins contain several letters and statements by Morsell and Wilkins further enunciating the NAACP’s position on school desegregation and school busing. In addition, the files of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights (Reel 12, Frame 0282 through Reel 13, Frame 0437) contain reports on several pieces of legislation regarding school desegregation. These include the Education Amendments of 1971, the Emergency School Aid Act of 1971, the Equal Educational Opportunities Act of 1972, the Quality Integrated Education Act of 1971, and the Student Transportation Moratorium Act of 1972. School busing to achieve integrated schools was necessary because of widespread discrimination in housing. In an August 1971 memorandum to Roy Wilkins, NAACP housing director William R. Morris wrote: “Residential racial segregation virtually assures segregation in schools, recreation and community facilities, and severely limits access to better-paying job opportunities” (Reel 22, Frame 0399). This edition includes correspondence on NAACP housing initiatives, as well as documentation on white opposition to low- and moderate-income housing projects. In 1970, the NAACP established the National Housing Development Corporation (NHDC) to work with NAACP branches in sponsoring nonprofit housing projects. The Roy Wilkins correspondence files include a memorandum detailing the guidelines for sponsoring projects (Reel 18, Frame 0306). One of the projects sponsored by the NHDC was the Stanley Park project in Glen Cove, Long Island, New York. The John A. Morsell correspondence files (Reel 16, Frame 0001) contain a March 1972 memorandum from William R. Morris to Morsell regarding the project. Morris reports that the corporation created by the branch to oversee the project was not following NAACP policies regarding minority contractors. Morris told Morsell that the NAACP should consider withdrawing from the project and asked Morsell for his opinion on the matter. Morris also enclosed a letter from John P. Kle, attorney for the Glen Cove NAACP branch and for the Fair Housing Development Fund Corporation, the sponsor of the Stanley Park project. Kle informed Morris of the branch’s determination to go forward with the project and of his belief that the project met all employment standards set by the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Other housing controversies covered in this edition include housing projects in Columbus, Ohio; Forest Hills, New York; and Newark, New Jersey. NAACP efforts to expand employment opportunities for African Americans are also covered in detail in this edition. The beginning of affirmative action in employment was one of the key developments of the late 1960s. The “Philadelphia Plan” required that contractors bidding on contracts over $500,000 employ a certain percentage of minorities. A January 5, 1970, memorandum from NAACP labor director Herbert Hill to Roy Wilkins (Reel 22, Frame 0062) praised the Philadelphia Plan and encouraged Wilkins to make a statement in support of the plan at the 1970 NAACP national convention. While Hill supported the Philadelphia Plan, he criticized the so-called “New Orleans Plan.” Representatives of the Southeast Louisiana Building and Construction Trades Council, Associated General Contractors of America, the Urban League of Greater New Orleans, and the New Orleans NAACP

ix branch drafted the New Orleans Plan in order to comply with U.S. Labor Department guidelines regarding minority employment. In an August 4, 1970, letter to New Orleans NAACP branch president Arthur J. Chapital, Herbert Hill outlined his criticisms of the New Orleans Plan and instructed Chapital to reject the proposal (Reel 18, Frame 0243). Other materials concerning a variety of employment issues can be found throughout this edition. The Leadership Conference on Civil Rights files contain several reports pertaining to employment legislation, including the Emergency Employment Act of 1971 and the Equal Employment Opportunity Act of 1972. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission files (Reel 3, Frames 0252– 0636) include a transcript of hearings on equal employment opportunity. The Small Business Administration (SBA) file (Reel 5, Frame 0027) contains correspondence and statements pertaining to SBA programs for minority business enterprises. The relationship of the NAACP and African American workers with labor unions is covered in a statement by NAACP west coast regional director Leonard A. Carter (Reel 22, Frame 0171) and in a debate between Herbert Hill and Don Slaiman, director of the AFL-CIO’s Department of Civil Rights (Reel 4, Frame 0565). The NAACP’s troubled relationship with the Nixon administration is another major theme in this edition. As part of his “southern strategy” to win votes in southern states, Nixon nominated G. Harrold Carswell of Florida and Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. of South Carolina to the U.S. Supreme Court. The NAACP opposed both nominees because of their poor records on civil rights and civil liberties. This edition of General Office Files contains materials on the NAACP’s successful campaigns to defeat these two nominees. The Carswell files (Reel 5, Frames 0261–0476) include NAACP press releases and correspondence by Roy Wilkins, John A. Morsell, and NAACP Washington Bureau director Clarence M. Mitchell Jr. expressing the reasons for the association’s opposition to Carswell. The NAACP regularly referred to a 1948 speech in which Carswell defended segregation, his participation in privatizing a Florida golf course in order to circumvent a desegregation order, and the fact that several of his decisions in school desegregation cases were reversed by higher courts. The Carswell files also include a press release by , executive director of the A. Philip Randolph Institute, praising the work of the NAACP, the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, and the AFL-CIO in defeating Carswell. Files pertaining to Haynsworth’s nomination (Reel 5, Frames 0499–0986) also consist of NAACP press releases and other statements critical of Haynsworth. For example, there is an NAACP pamphlet entitled “Haynsworth is not ‘with it’” that emphasizes that several of his school desegregation decisions were overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court. In 1971, the NAACP again opposed the Nixon administration when Nixon nominated William Rehnquist for the U.S. Supreme Court. The files concerning Rehnquist’s nomination (Reel 6, Frames 0001–0109) include a report by the legislative representative of Americans for Democratic Action on several statements made by Rehnquist on school desegregation, civil rights legislation, privacy rights, demonstrators, and First Amendment rights. The report also mentions an incident in

x which Rehnquist allegedly intimidated voters at a polling place in 1964. There is also a memorandum from the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights and a statement by Clarence M. Mitchell Jr. before the Senate Judiciary Committee opposing Rehnquist’s nomination. Both the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights and Mitchell cited a Rehnquist statement regarding discrimination in public accommodations and his opposition to school desegregation. Although the NAACP failed to defeat Rehnquist, these files are indicative of their strained relationship with President Nixon. Other materials pertaining to Nixon’s record on civil rights can be found in the “Government, Federal” files, the files of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, the correspondence of John A. Morsell (Reel 16, Frame 0403), and the files of Roy Wilkins (Reel 20, Frames 0247–0340 and Reel 22, Frame 0062). Morsell’s files contain several letters from just prior to the 1972 election in which Morsell sharply denounces Nixon’s civil rights record. Other parts of UPA’s Papers of the NAACP that provide additional documentation on the period from 1966 to 1972 are the following: Supplement to Part 1, 1966–1970, Meetings of the Board of Directors, Records of Annual Conferences, Major Speeches, and Special Reports; Supplement to Part 16, Board of Directors File, 1966–1970; Supplement to Part 23, Legal Department Case Files, 1960–1972; Part 28: Special Subject Files, 1966–1970; and Part 29: Branch Department [1965–1972]. UPA’s series, The Black Power Movement, consists of Part 1: Amiri Baraka from Black Arts to Black Radicalism, Part 2: The Papers of Robert F. Williams, and Part 3: Papers of the Revolutionary Action Movement, 1962– 1996. Materials from the Nixon White House pertaining to civil rights can be found in UPA’s Civil Rights and the Nixon Administration, 1969–1974.

xi

SOURCE NOTE

All documents microfilmed for this edition are held by the Manuscript Division of the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. The files selected for this edition were drawn exclusively from Group VI (1884–1992), Series A (Administrative File, General Office File) of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) Records collection.

EDITORIAL NOTE

Professors John H. Bracey, Jr., and Sharon Harley compiled this edition of Papers of the NAACP after a thorough survey of the Administrative File, General Office File, in Group VI of the NAACP Records collection at the Library of Congress. Each file selected for this edition has been reproduced in its entirety.

xiii

ABBREVIATIONS

The following abbreviations have been used throughout this guide.

AFL-CIO American Federation of Labor–Congress of Industrial Organizations AFSCME American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees EEOC Equal Employment Opportunity Commission NAACP National Association for the Advancement of Colored People YWCA Young Women’s Christian Association

xv

REEL INDEX

The following is a listing of the folders comprising Papers of the NAACP, Part 30: General Office Files, 1966–1972, Series A: Subject Files. The four-digit number on the far left is the frame at which a particular file folder begins. This is followed by the file title, the date(s) of the file, and the total number of pages. Substantive issues are highlighted under the heading Major Topics, as are prominent correspondents under the heading Principal Correspondents.

Reel 1 Frame No. Group VI, Series A, Administrative File General Office File Group VI, Box A-19 0001 Anti-Crime Committee of the NAACP, [1968]. 4 pp. Major Topics: Crime in New York City; drug trafficking and drug abuse. 0005 Beadenkopf, Anne, 1958–1964, 1970, and Undated. 94 pp. Principal Correspondents: Anne Beadenkopf; Roy Wilkins. Group VI, Box A-21 0099 Chronology of Events, 1936–1939. 41 pp. 0140 Chronology of Events, 1940–1947. 140 pp. 0280 Chronology of Events, 1953–1957. 90 pp. 0370 Chronology of Events, 1960–1965. 56 pp. 0426 Chronology, Highlights, 1951–1973. 9 pp. 0435 Contracts, Community and Social Agency Employees, Local 1707, AFSCME, 1968– 1973. 44 pp. 0479 Contracts, Poster Advertising, 1961–1962. 10 pp. 0489 “Cotton Comes to ,” Invitation, 1970. 32 pp. Principal Correspondents: Mildred Bond; Frank Goodman; Samuel Goldwyn Jr.; Mike Hutner; Ossie Davis; Les Schecter. 0521 Current, Gloster B., Report to NAACP Executive Secretary on Travel of Staff Members During 1959, 1959. 93 pp. Principal Correspondent: Gloster B. Current. 0614 Employees’ Strike, 1972. 3 pp. Principal Correspondent: Roy Wilkins. 0617 Federal Credit Unions, 1971. 31 pp. Major Topics: Roy Wilkins speech on credit unions; NAACP Federal Credit Union of Bremerton, Washington. 0648 Freedom National Bank, New York City, 1969. 7 pp.

1 Frame No.

0655 Government, City—Birmingham, Alabama, 1969. 3 pp. Major Topic: Roy Wilkins’s Birmingham visit. Principal Correspondents: George G. Seibels Jr.; Roy Wilkins. 0658 Government, City—Los Angeles, California, 1969. 4 pp. Major Topic: Search for new Los Angeles chief of police. Principal Correspondent: Muriel M. Morse. 0662 Government, City—San Francisco, California, 1969. 6 pp. Major Topics: San Francisco Board of Supervisors; Coro Foundation. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Terry A. Francois. 0668 Government, City—New Haven, Connecticut, 1969. 4 pp. Major Topic: Mayoral candidacy of Henry Parker. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Bill Jones. 0672 Government, City—New Britain, Connecticut, 1970. 4 pp. Major Topic: New Britain Police Department. Principal Correspondent: Clifford J. Willis. 0676 Government, City—Rockford, Illinois, 1968. 4 pp. Major Topic: Rockford Commission on Human Relations. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Leslie L. Lewis Jr. 0680 Government, City—New York City, 1963–1965. 48 pp. Major Topics: New York City Commission on Human Rights; New York State AFL- CIO Building Trades Council; New York State Commission on Human Rights; employment discrimination; New York City government employees. Principal Correspondents: James H. Scheuer; Roy Wilkins. 0728 Government, City—New York City, 1966–1967. 76 pp. Major Topics: Housing; New York City Interdepartmental Committee on Integration; City Planning Commission. Principal Correspondents: Julian I. Garfield; Roy Wilkins. 0804 Government, City—New York City, 1968. 137 pp. Major Topics: New York City schools; housing; New York City economic development plan; New York City Housing and Development Administration; New York City Commission on Human Rights. Principal Correspondents: John V. Lindsay; Woodrow Wirsig; John A. Morsell; Roy Wilkins. 0941 Government, City—New York City, 1969. 71 pp. Major Topics: New York City Commission on Human Rights; New York City schools; anti-Semitism. Principal Correspondents: William H. Booth; Roy Wilkins; Gloster B. Current; John V. Lindsay; John A. Morsell. Reel 2 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-21 cont. 0001 Government, City—New York City, 1970–1975 and Undated. 99 pp. Major Topics: New York City Housing and Development Administration; construction industry employment; New York City Commission on Human Rights; Eleanor Holmes Norton; public transportation; New York City schools. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; John V. Lindsay; Roy Wilkins; Bayard Rustin; D. H. Litter.

2 Frame No.

0100 Government, City—Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 1966. 5 pp. Major Topic: Bombing of Milwaukee NAACP branch office. Principal Correspondents: James C. Newcomb; Roy Wilkins. Group VI, Box A-22 0105 Government, Federal—Agnew, Spiro T., 1971–1972. 12 pp. Major Topic: Spiro T. Agnew comments on Roy Wilkins. 0117 Government, Federal—Agriculture Department, 1962–1970. 115 pp. Major Topics: Progress report on eliminating discrimination in Agriculture Department; Agriculture Department Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service; food assistance programs. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; William M. Seabron; Orville L. Freeman; Silas Craft; John B. Holden. 0232 Government, Federal—Bell, Griffin B, 1976–1977. 35 pp. Major Topic: NAACP opposition to nomination of Griffin B. Bell for attorney general. Principal Correspondent: Nathaniel R. Jones. 0267 Government, Federal—Bills, 1962–1966. 47 pp. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; John A. Morsell; Gloster B. Current. 0314 Government, Federal—Bills, 1968. 74 pp. Major Topics: 1968 Civil Rights bill; Commission on Negro History and Culture; Freedom of Information Act. Principal Correspondents: Clarence M. Mitchell Jr.; Birch Bayh. 0388 Government, Federal—Bills, 1969. 69 pp. Major Topic: Tax Reform Act of 1969. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; A. Philip Randolph; Bayard Rustin; John J. Williams; Herman E. Talmadge; Fred R. Harris; Alan Cranston; James B. Pearson; Thomas F. Eagleton; Milton R. Young; Daniel K. Inouye; Harold E. Hughes; Birch Bayh; Ernest F. Hollings; Albert Gore Sr.; William B. Spong Jr.; Charles Mathias Jr.; Thomas J. Dodd; Frank E. Moss; Vance Hartke; Ralph Tyler Smith; Hugh Scott; Edmund S. Muskie; Eugene J. McCarthy; Frank Horton; William O. Cowger; Charles H. Percy; William L. Hungate; Mark O. Hatfield; Mario Biaggi; William B. Saxbe; Gaylord Nelson; William Proxmire; Fred Schwengel; Edward M. Kennedy. 0457 Government, Federal—Bills, 1970. 26 pp. Major Topics: Tax Reform Act of 1969; District of Columbia Court Reform and Criminal Procedure Act of 1970. Principal Correspondents: Frank Church; Henry Bellmon; Russell B. Long; Ralph W. Yarborough; Charles E. Goodell; Edward W. Brooke; Philip A. Hart; Marlow W. Cook; Thomas J. Dodd; Roy Wilkins; Edward M. Kennedy; John A. Morsell; Frank E. Moss; John Sherman Cooper; Warren G. Magnuson. 0483 Government, Federal—Bills, 1971. 33 pp. Major Topics: Tax exemptions; Emergency Employment Act of 1971; Employment and Training Opportunities Act of 1970; EEOC legislation; Universal Voter Registration Act of 1971. Principal Correspondents: Lawton Chiles; Alan Bible; Roy Wilkins; Edmund S. Muskie; Homer Early; D. V. Sturdivant; Gaylord Nelson; Bella S. Abzug; ; Patsy T. Mink; Clarence M. Mitchell Jr.

3 Frame No.

0516 Government, Federal—Bills, 1972–1974. 74 pp. Major Topics: EEOC legislation; school busing; Student Transportation Moratorium Act of 1972; Equal Educational Opportunities Act of 1972; Social Security Amendments of 1972; Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Protection Act of 1973. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Howard W. Cannon; Edmund S. Muskie; Alan Cranston; Edward W. Brooke; Peter H. B. Frelinghuysen; Richard S. Schweiker; Adlai E. Stevenson III; Fred R. Harris; J. Glenn Beall Jr.; Birch Bayh; Herman E. Talmadge; Joseph M. Montoya; George McGovern; Hubert H. Humphrey; Edward M. Kennedy; J. Caleb Boggs; Clifford P. Case; Lowell P. Weicker Jr.; Roy Wilkins; Leonard Woodcock; William R. Roy; Charles W. Whalen Jr. 0590 Government, Federal—Chamber of Commerce, 1968–1969. 19 pp. Major Topic: Urban Action Exchange program. Principal Correspondents: Allan Shivers; James G. Watt; Arch N. Booth; Roy Wilkins. 0609 Government, Federal—Civil Service Commission, 1968–1973. 22 pp. Major Topic: Discrimination complaint procedure for federal employees. Principal Correspondents: John W. Macy Jr.; Anthony M. Rachal Jr.; S. L. Deckard; C. C. Houston; James Frazier Jr.; Nicholas J. Oganovic; John A. Buggs. 0631 Government, Federal—Commerce Department, 1961–1971. 106 pp. Major Topics: 1970 U.S. census; small businesses; Office of Minority Business Enterprise; National Bankers Association. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; John A. Morsell; Richard C. Harney; Elizabeth W. Stone; Leroy Collins; Conrad Taeuber; Gloster B. Current; Abraham S. Venable. 0737 Government, Federal—Commission on Civil Rights, 1968–1974. 64 pp. Major Topics: School desegregation; school busing; Law Enforcement Assistance Administration, Justice Department. Principal Correspondents: Howard A. Glickstein; Roy Wilkins; James D. Williams; John A. Buggs. 0801 Government, Federal—Congressional Black Caucus, 1971–1973. 24 pp. Principal Correspondents: Louis Stokes; Parren J. Mitchell; John A. Morsell; Charles C. Diggs Jr. Group VI, Box A-23 0825 Government, Federal—Congressmen and Senators, 1968–1970. 59 pp. Major Topics: Social Security Amendments of 1967; 1970 census; 1970 congressional elections. Principal Correspondents: Robert F. Kennedy; Roy Wilkins; Emanuel Celler; Gloster B. Current; John A. Morsell; Richard H. Ichord; Abe Ribicoff; Daniel K. Inouye; George McGovern. 0884 Government, Federal—Congressmen and Senators, 1971. 65 pp. Major Topics: War in Vietnam and Cambodia; National Conference of Christians and Jews; Citizens Committee for Government Reorganization; Opportunities Industrialization Centers; vocational training; equal housing opportunity; EEOC; U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; George McGovern; William L. Clay; Roy Wilkins; Philip A. Hart; Charles H. Percy; Edmund S. Muskie; Hubert H. Humphrey; Stephen Gill Spottswood; Charles B. Rangel; Charles E. Bennett; John G. Dow.

4 Frame No.

0949 Government, Federal—Congressmen and Senators, 1972–1974. 39 pp. Major Topics: U.S. relations with Rhodesia; Export-Import Bank loan to Portugal; Vietnam War. Principal Correspondents: Charles C. Diggs Jr.; Allard K. Lowenstein; Howard N. Lee; William Bradford Huie. Reel 3 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-23 cont. 0001 Government, Federal—Defense Department, 1961–1969. 15 pp. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; L. Howard Bennett; James C. Evans. 0016 Government, Federal—Defense Department, 1971. 112 pp. Major Topic: African American military personnel. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; John G. Kester; Roy Wilkins; Harris W. Hollis; Donald L. Miller. 0128 Government, Federal—Defense Department, 1973–1974. 39 pp. Major Topic: Volunteer military enlistments and end of draft. 0167 Government, Federal—Democratic National Committee, 1968–1976. 85 pp. Major Topics: 1968 Democratic National Convention; Democratic Party of the State of Mississippi. Principal Correspondents: Clarence M. Mitchell Jr.; Joseph L. Rauh Jr.; Roy Wilkins. 0252 Government, Federal—Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, 1962–1965. 6 pp. Major Topic: Housing discrimination. Principal Correspondents: Robert L. Carter; Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. 0258 Government, Federal—Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, May 1967. 117 pp. Major Topics: U.S. Senate hearings on equal employment opportunity; discrimination by labor unions. 0375 Government, Federal—Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, June– November 1967. 66 pp. Major Topics: Construction industry employment; unemployment and employment statistics. Principal Correspondent: Gordon Chase. 0441 Government, Federal—Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, 1968. 92 pp. Major Topics: Assessment of EEOC strengths and weaknesses; EEOC annual report on employment discrimination investigations and cases. Principal Correspondents: Samuel C. Jackson; Luther Holcomb; Clifford L. Alexander Jr. 0533 Government, Federal—Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, 1969–1971. 103 pp. Major Topics: Motion picture industry employment; EEOC annual report on employment discrimination investigations and cases and EEOC programs; building trades unions; California government employees. Principal Correspondents: Clifford L. Alexander Jr.; Roy Wilkins; Luther Holcomb; William H. Brown III.

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0636 Government, Federal—Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, 1972–1974. 7 pp. Principal Correspondent: John A. Morsell. 0643 Government, Federal—Federal Communications Commission, 1968–1973. 42 pp. Major Topic: Mass media. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Yvonne Price. 0685 Government, Federal—Food Stamps, 1970–1974. 13 pp. Principal Correspondents: Harriet Jean; Nelson A. Rockefeller; Kenneth L. Buford. Group VI, Box A-24 0698 Government, Federal—General, 1961–1971 and Undated. 159 pp. Major Topics: Disarmament; equal opportunity in government employment; civil rights policies of Nixon administration; energy resources and consumption. Principal Correspondents: John J. McCloy; Roy Wilkins; Harris Wofford; Frank H. Cassell; Patrick F. Crowley; Sol Tekulsky; Edwin E. Willis; Stephen J. Pollak; Fred R. Harris; Gloster B. Current; George Romney; Clarence M. Mitchell Jr.; John A. Morsell; Mildred Bond Roxborough; Samuel H. Johnson. 0857 Government, Federal—Head Start Program, 1968. 8 pp. Principal Correspondents: Peter H. Dominick; John Brademas; Jacob K. Javits. 0865 Government, Federal—Health, Education, and Welfare Department, 1968–1969. 52 pp. Major Topics: Elementary and Secondary Education Act extension; vocational education and training; student aid programs. Principal Correspondents: Harold Howe II; Frank L. Parker; Peter A. Krenkel; Edward L. Thackston; Ruby G. Martin; Roy Wilkins; Leon E. Panetta; Grant Venn; William M. Usdane. 0917 Government, Federal—Health, Education, and Welfare Department, 1971. 45 pp. Major Topics: Federal aid to education; Bullock County, Alabama, schools; NAACP v. Bullock County, Alabama, Board of Education; sickle cell anemia. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Elliot Richardson; S. P. Marland Jr.; Amos H. Carnegie; Patricia Reilly Hitt. 0962 Government, Federal—Health, Education, and Welfare Department, 1972. 44 pp. Major Topics: Tuskegee syphilis study; economic conditions in Fayette County, Tennessee. Principal Correspondents: Eugene T. Reed; Mildred Bond Roxborough; Edward Zigler; Gloster B. Current; Roy Wilkins; Clarence A. Laws; Edward Newman; Hayward C. Brown. 1006 Government, Federal—Health, Education, and Welfare Department, 1973–1974. 34 pp. Major Topics: Sterilization; family planning; Planned Parenthood Federation of America. Principal Correspondents: John D. Twiname; John A. Morsell; Peter E. Holmes; Robin A. Elliot; Alan F. Guttmacher.

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Reel 4 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-24 cont. 0001 Government, Federal—Humphrey, Hubert H., 1968–1969. 50 pp. Major Topics: 1968 presidential campaign; public welfare programs; federal programs for minority business enterprises. Principal Correspondents: Hubert H. Humphrey; Roy Wilkins. 0051 Government, Federal—Information Agency, 1967–1971. 29 pp. Major Topics: Black Power; human rights. Principal Correspondents: J. Arthur Hickerson; Norman C. McKenna; Roy Wilkins; John A. Morsell. 0080 Government, Federal—Interior Department, 1969. 52 pp. Principal Correspondents: James C. Britton; J. P. Jones; Roy Wilkins; Walter J. Hickel. 0132 Government, Federal—Internal Revenue Service, 1968–1973. 12 pp. Major Topic: Tax-exempt schools. Principal Correspondents: Alice A. Dart; Randolph W. Thrower; John A. Morsell. 0144 Government, Federal—Johnson, Lyndon B., 1964–1970. 79 pp. Major Topics: Political appointments by Johnson administration; federal civil rights legislation; Johnson administration economic policies. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Lyndon B. Johnson. 0223 Government, Federal—Justice Department, 1968–1971. 101 pp. Major Topics: Firearms; discrimination in public accommodations; criminal justice system; murders of African Americans in Mississippi. Principal Correspondents: Chuck Stone; John H. Glenn Jr.; Jerris Leonard; Robert B. Hocutt; Roy Wilkins; John N. Mitchell; Ben Holman; Earl E. Raines Sr.; James F. Greene; Vernon D. Meyer; J. Dennis Scrivens; Aaron E. Henry. 0324 Government, Federal—Justice Department, 1972–1974. 72 pp. Major Topics: Military personnel; American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, AFL-CIO; equal employment opportunity in radio and television broadcasting; Haitian refugees. Principal Correspondents: Robert Gnaizda; John A. Morsell; Charles E. Cobb; Mary Houston; Bertram Levine; Gloster B. Current; James F. Greene; Ben Holman; J. Stanley Pottinger; George Felton; Mildred Bond Roxborough; Roy Wilkins; William M. Birenbaum. 0396 Government, Federal—Justice Department, 1975–1977. 84 pp. Major Topics: Voting Rights Act extension; school desegregation; school busing. Principal Correspondents: Mildred Bond Roxborough; Roy Wilkins; Edward H. Levi; Gilbert G. Pompa. 0480 Government, Federal—Labor Department, 1973–1978. 47 pp. Principal Correspondents: Arthur O. Maxwell; Julian O. Colquitt; Roy Wilkins; Glorietta E. Gaston; Roscoe Jones; Ernest G. Green; Robert Anderson. Group VI, Box A-25 0527 Government, Federal—National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders, 1968– 1969. 21 pp. Principal Correspondents: David Ginsburg; Andrew J. Biemiller; Claudette Johnson; Lawrence A. Still; Sam Elfert; Otto Kerner; James L. Harrison; Caroline K. Simon.

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0548 Government, Federal—Ninety-first Congress, 1969–1972. 56 pp. Major Topics: Leadership Conference on Civil Rights legislative program for 1969– 1970; Senate filibuster rule; federal civil rights legislation; employment; agricultural labor; minimum wage legislation; public welfare programs; hunger; Freedom Budget for All Americans; African Americans and labor unions; Democratic National Committee; U.S. foreign relations with Africa; Education Amendments of 1971; Community Coalitions for a Clean Environment Act of 1971; Comprehensive Home Health and Preventive Medicine Act of 1972; Transportation Systems Improvement Act of 1972; Department of Education. 0604 Government, Federal—Nixon, Richard M., 1968–1970. 61 pp. Major Topics: 1968 presidential campaign; civil rights policies of Nixon administration; school desegregation; vocational training; Agriculture Department food assistance programs; Voting Rights Act extension; Family Assistance Act of 1970. Principal Correspondents: Harry C. McPherson Jr.; Sherman W. Smith; Gloster B. Current; Henry Lee Moon; Roy Wilkins; Robert Choate; John A. Morsell; Jean Mayer; Daniel P. Moynihan; Charles H. Lawson III; Richard M. Nixon; John R. Price. 0665 Government, Federal—Nixon, Richard M., 1971. 60 pp. Major Topics: Judicial appointments; Emergency Employment Act of 1971; school busing. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Daniel T. Kingsley; Richard M. Nixon; Ernest Sprinkles. 0725 Government, Federal—Nixon, Richard M., 1972–1974 and Undated. 72 pp. Major Topics: Civil rights policies of Nixon administration; Small Business Administration; Housing and Urban Development Department; Health, Education, and Welfare Department; political appointments; Agriculture Department; EEOC; Civil Service Commission; Department of Labor; racial disturbance on USS Kitty Hawk. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Edwin T. Sexton Jr.; George T. Bell; Gloster B. Current; Stanley S. Scott. 0797 Government, Federal—Office of Economic Opportunity, 1964–1970. 54 pp. Major Topics: Urban riots; War on Poverty; emergency food and medical aid; police brutality. Principal Correspondents: Otis A. Singletary; Julius B. Richmond; Maurice A. Dawkins; Charlotte Lewis; Donald Rumsfeld; Thomas E. Bryant; Kenneth L. Buford; Frank C. Kent; Mildred Bond Roxborough; Richard L. Dockery; Lonnie Rhodes; Leonard Curl; Leon Bruton. 0851 Government, Federal—Post Office, 1960–1963. 57 pp. Major Topic: National Alliance of Postal Employees. Principal Correspondents: A. E. Manell; Lucille Black; Roy Wilkins; Ashby G. Smith; Clarence M. Mitchell Jr.; John A. Morsell. 0908 Government, Federal—Post Office, 1965–1971. 76 pp. Major Topic: Equal employment opportunities among postal workers. Principal Correspondents: Henry L. Dixon; John A. Morsell; Thomas H. Allen; Lawrence F. O’Brien; Roy Wilkins; Clarence M. Mitchell Jr.; Arthur J. Chapital Sr.; Reuben D. Holder; Ronald B. Lee; Elijah Coleman; Howard Love; Andrew Fingers; T. E. Patterson; William H. Townsend; Jerry D. Jewell; Leonard H. Carter.

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Reel 5 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-25 cont. 0001 Government, Federal—Republican National Committee, 1968. 19 pp. Major Topic: 1968 Republican National Convention. Principal Correspondents: Arthur L. Peterson; William H. Draper Jr.; Clarence L. Townes Jr. 0020 Government, Federal—Selective Service System, 1971. 7 pp. Principal Correspondents: Reynaldo P. Maduro; Julius E. Williams. 0027 Government, Federal—Small Business Administration, 1965–1973. 85 pp. Major Topic: Small Business Administration minority business enterprise programs. Principal Correspondents: Randall L. Tyus; Eugene P. Foley; John A. Morsell; Howard J. Samuels; Robert W. Easley; Arthur McZier; Hilary Sandoval Jr.; Thomas S. Kleppe; Roy Wilkins. 0112 Government, Federal—State Department, 1964–1965. 36 pp. Major Topic: International Cooperation Year (1965). 0148 Government, Federal—State Department, 1968–1969. 32 pp. Major Topic: International Conference on Human Rights (1968). Principal Correspondents: Harry W. Seamans; Bruno V. Bitker. 0180 Government, Federal—State Department, 1970. 74 pp. Major Topic: U.S.–Africa relations. 0254 Government, Federal—State Department, 1972–1973. 7 pp. 0261 Government, Federal—Supreme Court, G. Harrold Carswell, January 1970. 52 pp. Major Topic: Nomination of G. Harrold Carswell for U.S. Supreme Court. Principal Correspondents: Edmund S. Muskie; Roy Wilkins; Clarence M. Mitchell Jr.; John A. Morsell; Thomas W. Matthew; Mabel Robinson; Will Maslow; ; Bayard Rustin; Whitney M. Young Jr.; Ralph D. Abernathy; A. Philip Randolph; Arnold Aronson; William C. Jones; J. Caleb Boggs. 0313 Government, Federal—Supreme Court, G. Harrold Carswell, February 1970. 52 pp. Major Topic: Nomination of G. Harrold Carswell for U.S. Supreme Court. Principal Correspondents: Robert P. Griffin; Wallace F. Bennett; George McGovern; Winston Prouty; Abe Ribicoff; Vance Hartke; Albert Gore Sr.; Milton R. Young; William B. Spong Jr.; James B. Pearson; Spessard L. Holland; William M. Hoiles; Clinton P. Anderson; Frank E. Moss; Frank Church; Daniel K. Inouye; Jack Miller; Gaylord Nelson; Harrison A. Williams Jr.; Arnold Aronson; Thomas J. Dodd; William B. Saxbe; Ralph W. Yarborough; Mike Gravel; Mark O. Hatfield; Eugene J. McCarthy; Charles E. Goodell; Marlow W. Cook; John A. Morsell; Joseph W. B. Clark. 0365 Government, Federal—Supreme Court, G. Harrold Carswell, March–May 1970 and Undated. 112 pp. Major Topic: Nomination of G. Harrold Carswell for U.S. Supreme Court. Principal Correspondents: Daniel K. Inouye; Walter F. Mondale; Peter H. Dominick; Alan Cranston; Edward W. Brooke; Arnold Aronson; Philip A. Hart; Edward Handman; Jacob K. Javits; Clifford P. Case; Charles L. Kellar; Frank Church; Charles H. Percy; Edmund S. Muskie; Hughes Alonzo Robinson Sr.; Clarence M. Mitchell Jr.; Richard G. Kleindienst; John A. Morsell; Samuel C. Coleman; Roy Wilkins.

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0477 Government, Federal—Supreme Court, General, 1968–1973. 22 pp. Major Topics: Desegregation of public accommodations; community control of schools. Principal Correspondents: Malvin R. Goode; John A. Morsell; Roy Wilkins; Clarence M. Mitchell Jr. Group VI, Box A-26 0499 Government, Federal—Supreme Court, Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., July 1969. 3 pp. Major Topic: Nomination of Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. for U.S. Supreme Court. Principal Correspondent: Roy Wilkins. 0502 Government, Federal—Supreme Court, Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., August 6–21, 1969. 68 pp. Major Topic: Nomination of Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. for U.S. Supreme Court. Principal Correspondents: Charles E. Brown; W. Lester Banks; Roy Wilkins; Daniel G. Grove; Louis M. Natali Jr. 0570 Government, Federal—Supreme Court, Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., August 22–30, 1969. 187 pp. Major Topic: Nomination of Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. for U.S. Supreme Court. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Leon T. Nelson; Karl E. Mundt; Joseph W. B. Clark; Ina Boon; George McGovern; Robert P. Griffin; Arthur J. Lelyveld; Barbee William Durham; Vance Hartke; John Sherman Cooper. 0757 Government, Federal—Supreme Court, Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., September 1969. 73 pp. Major Topic: Nomination of Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. for U.S. Supreme Court. Principal Correspondents: Woodrow Grant; Joseph M. Montoya; Marion Reynolds; Sallie Allmore; Harrison A. Williams Jr.; Richard S. Schweiker; Tom Fairclough; Margaret Davis; Barbee William Durham; Thomas J. Dodd; Claiborne Pell; Strom Thurmond; Kathryn Thornton; John L. McClellan; Frank E. Moss; Wallace F. Bennett; Herman E. Talmadge; Jacob K. Javits; Eugene J. McCarthy; Rosearle Garner; John K. Stout; Edward W. Brooke; Charles H. Percy. 0830 Government, Federal—Supreme Court, Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., October 1969. 35 pp. Major Topic: Nomination of Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. for U.S. Supreme Court. Principal Correspondents: Mark O. Hatfield; James J. Steele; Thomas F. Eagleton; C. Anderson Davis; Peter H. Dominick; Charles C. Lucas; Birch Bayh. 0865 Government, Federal—Supreme Court, Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., November 1969. 96 pp. Major Topic: Nomination of Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. for U.S. Supreme Court. Principal Correspondents: Arnold Aronson; W. Lester Banks; Edmund S. Muskie; Roy Wilkins; Janice Johnson; Charles L. Kellar. 0961 Government, Federal—Supreme Court, Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., December 1969. 25 pp. Major Topic: Nomination of Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. for U.S. Supreme Court. Principal Correspondents: Andrew J. Biemiller; John J. James; George McGovern; Richard S. Schweiker; William Proxmire; Walter F. Mondale; Clifford P. Case; Edward M. Kennedy; Charles E. Goodell; Joseph M. Montoya; Thomas J. McIntyre; Birch Bayh; John A. Morsell; Charles H. Percy; Jacob K. Javits. 0986 Government, Federal—Supreme Court, Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., 1970 and Undated. 34 pp. Major Topic: Nomination of Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. for U.S. Supreme Court. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Roy Wilkins.

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Reel 6 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-26 cont. 0001 Government, Federal—Supreme Court, William Rehnquist, October–November 1971. 50 pp. Major Topic: Nomination of William Rehnquist for U.S. Supreme Court. Principal Correspondents: Arnold Aronson; Lynn Pearle; Jerry M. Guess; Charles Sheer; Clarence M. Mitchell Jr.; Roy Wilkins. 0051 Government, Federal—Supreme Court, William Rehnquist, December 1971 and Undated. 59 pp. Major Topic: Nomination of William Rehnquist for U.S. Supreme Court. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; William Proxmire; Mark O. Hatfield; Charles H. Percy; Jerry M. Guess. 0110 Government, Federal—Transportation Department, 1968–1972. 19 pp. Major Topic: Interstate highways. Principal Correspondent: Lowell K. Bridwell. 0129 Government, Federal—White House Conferences, 1965–1966. 6 pp. 0135 Government, Federal—White House Conferences, 1969–1971. 71 pp. Major Topics: White House Conference on Food, Nutrition, and Health; NAACP request for conference on housing; White House Conference on Aging. Principal Correspondents: Jean Mayer; William R. Morris; Arthur S. Flemming; Wilma Donahue; Stephen Hess; Gloster B. Current. 0206 Government, Federal—Whitten Amendments, 1969. 117 pp. Major Topic: Amendments to appropriations bill for Departments of Labor and Health, Education, and Welfare. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Ralph Anthony; S. E. Biggers; Donis Myers; Azalee Johnson; Russell J. Burton; Bertha J. White; Roland Alexander; Stephen M. Young; Lawrence E. Lewis; Brisco Huff; J. R. Delley; James A. Malone; Robert C. Johnson; Robert L. Clark; Frank Townsend; Juanita Bell; Michael Wimbish; Walter Moore; Franklin Jones; Linda Ware; Thelma M. Wilson; G. L. Byrd; T. V. Goree; Byron Q. Carter; Smith Belcher; Paul Covington; Robert V. Teague; Al Walker Johnson; Gladys R. Kent; Joseph Johnson; Anne G. McElfresh; Albert Jackson; John H. Parrish. Group VI, Box A-27 0323 Government, International—Nigeria, Eastern (Biafra), 1967–1970 and Undated. 49 pp. Major Topic: Nigeria-Biafra War. Principal Correspondents: A. Dudley Ward; J. Y. F. Iyalla; Phyllis McClure; Nicholas Perna; John A. Morsell; Charles Kenyatta; Shirley Washington; Roy Wilkins; Don W. Jordan. 0372 Government, International—Iran, 1968. 3 pp. 0375 Government, International—Pakistan, 1971. 33 pp. Major Topics: Disaster relief; Pakistan Relief Committee. Principal Correspondent: Robert D. Murphy. 0408 Government, State—Alabama, 1970. 5 pp. Major Topic: National Democratic Party of Alabama. Principal Correspondent: John L. Cashin Jr.

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0413 Government, State—Alaska, 1969. 2 pp. Principal Correspondent: Leonard H. Carter. 0415 Government, State—Arizona, 1968. 2 pp. Principal Correspondent: Barry Goldwater. 0417 Government, State—Arkansas, 1969–1970. 6 pp. Principal Correspondents: Winthrop Rockefeller; Darnell Thomas Sr. 0423 Government, State—California, 1963–1970. 41 pp. Major Topics: Los Angeles NAACP branch; Coro Foundation; California Board of Education; California school choice legislation. Principal Correspondents: Thomas Bradley; Joseph W. Doll; Ronald Reagan; Terry A. Francois; Roy Wilkins; Virna M. Canson; John A. Morsell; Chester M. Wright. 0464 Government, State—California, 1971. 46 pp. Major Topics: Medi-Cal funding cuts; California Department of Health Care Services; California Code of Fair Practices. Principal Correspondents: Sam Yorty; Roy Wilkins; Leonard H. Carter. 0510 Government, State—Connecticut, 1968. 3 pp. 0513 Government, State—District of Columbia, 1968. 10 pp. Major Topic: Roy Wilkins speech on urban areas. 0523 Government, State—Georgia, 1968–1970. 7 pp. Principal Correspondents: W. W. Law; Esther Garrison; ; Lester Maddox. 0530 Government, State—Illinois, 1971. 6 pp. Principal Correspondents: Richard B. Ogilvie; Leon N. Perry. 0536 Government, State—Kentucky, 1972. 14 pp. Principal Correspondents: Galen Martin; Roy Wilkins. 0550 Government, State—Maine, 1968. 35 pp. Major Topic: Maine Human Rights Commission proposal. 0585 Government, State—Massachusetts, 1968. 4 pp. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Julian D. Steele. 0589 Government, State—Michigan, 1968–1969. 7 pp. Principal Correspondents: Damon J. Keith; John A. Morsell; Nancy Waters. 0596 Government, State—Minnesota, 1970–1973. 6 pp. 0602 Government, State—Mississippi, 1968–1971. 21 pp. Major Topics: ’ 1968 congressional campaign; Democratic Party of the State of Mississippi. Principal Correspondents: Paul H. Douglas; Roy Wilkins; Aaron E. Henry; Earl S. Lucas. 0623 Government, State—Missouri, 1969–1972. 9 pp. Major Topic: Missouri Highway Patrol. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Girard T. Bryant; James A. Gray. 0632 Government, State—New Jersey, 1968–1971. 8 pp. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; William R. Morris; Frank J. Guarini. 0640 Government, State—New Mexico, 1970. 2 pp. 0642 Government, State—New York, 1967. 54 pp. Major Topic: New York State Insurance Department report on fire insurance. Principal Correspondent: Richard E. Stewart. 0696 Government, State—New York, 1968. 9 pp. Major Topic: State fire insurance legislation.

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0705 Government, State—New York, 1969. 27 pp. Major Topic: State civil rights legislation. Principal Correspondents: John D. Silvera; Robert J. Mangum; Louis J. Lefkowitz; George D. Zuckerman. 0732 Government, State—New York, 1971. 77 pp. Major Topics: Attica Correctional Facility uprising; insurance companies; affirmative action in employment. Principal Correspondents: Earl W. Brydges; John E. Kingston; Jack M. Sable; William D. Wells. 0809 Government, State—New York, 1975 and Undated. 4 pp. 0813 Government, State—North Carolina, 1970. 3 pp. 0816 Government, State—Ohio, 1971 and Undated. 21 pp. Major Topic: Police brutality. 0837 Government, State—Oregon, 1970. 4 pp. 0841 Government, State—Pennsylvania, 1968–1969. 7 pp. Principal Correspondents: Bruce Fessenden; Roy Wilkins; Norman V. Lourie. 0848 Government, State—Rhode Island, 1972. 3 pp. 0851 Government, State—Virginia, 1970. 25 pp. Major Topics: Peninsula Chamber of Commerce; African American elected officials in Virginia. Principal Correspondents: B. N. Puryear; Jerome H. Holland; Elizabeth C. Jordan. 0876 Government, State—West Virginia, 1970. 2 pp. Group VI, Box A-28 0878 Job Descriptions for NAACP Officers, 1946, 1967–1969, and Undated. 12 pp. 0890 Legal Defense Department, Awards and Certificates, 1949–1954. 4 pp. 0894 Legal Defense Department, List of Names Supporting Investigation of Discriminatory Army Courts-Martial Practices, 1951. 2 pp. 0896 King, Hinton, 1977. 3 pp. 0899 King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1968–1973 and Undated. 20 pp. Major Topics: Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.; Roy Wilkins speech on Martin Luther King Jr.; birthday celebration; Martin Luther King Living Memorial Foundation. Principal Correspondents: George M. Davis Jr.; Aaron R. Graham. 0919 Music, 1971–1972. 14 pp. Principal Correspondents: Julius Dixon; Curtis Knight; Wendell P. Robinson. 0933 NAACP v. Brown, 1968. 3 pp. Major Topic: Community and Social Agency Employees, Local 1707, AFSCME. Reel 7 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-28 cont. 0001 NAACP National Constitution, Amendments, 1945–1955. 65 pp. Principal Correspondent: Walter White. 0066 NAACP National Constitution, Amendments, 1956–1967. 75 pp. Principal Correspondents: Arthur L. Johnson; William J. Lake; Gloster B. Current; Roy Wilkins; Robert L. Carter; ; Althea T. L. Simmons; Stephen Gill Spottswood.

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0141 NAACP National Constitution, Text, 1945, 1968. 24 pp. 0165 Organizational Charts, 1968 and Undated. 5 pp. 0170 Organizations, Correspondence, “A,” 1968–1970. 121 pp. Major Topics: American Black Culture and Opportunity Exposition; America-Israel Cultural Foundation; terrorism; Afro-American Distributors, Ltd.; American Jewish Museum of Art and Culture; Association of Arab-American University Graduates; American Negro Leadership Conference on Africa. Principal Correspondents: Ernest Kolowrat; John B. Dowling; Edward R. Kayatt; John A. Morsell; Roy Wilkins; Roy S. Nicks; Karl Baehr; Robert G. Porter; Laura Ober; K. A. Diana; Sam Sobel; Robert L. Carter; Bob Hope; Billy Graham; Margaret Pennar; Ibrahim Abu-Lughod. 0291 Organizations, Correspondence, “A,” 1971. 107 pp. Major Topics: Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith; apartheid in South Africa; Americans for Democratic Action; California prison conditions. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Jaddie R. Stewart; Jesse Heredia; Sylvia W. Bourne; Carolyn Anderson; John A. Morsell; Kenyon C. Burke; Jack E. Robinson; Joseph C. Dey Jr.; Mildred Bond Roxborough; W. Beverly Carter Jr.; Gary Player; Reuben M. Payne; George Meany; William P. Rogers; Charles C. Diggs Jr.; Allard K. Lowenstein; James L. McWilliams. Group VI, Box A-29 0398 Organizations, Correspondence, “A,” January–July 1972. 70 pp. Major Topics: Afro-American Cultural Foundation; Americans for Democratic Action; A. Philip Randolph Institute; Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen of North America, AFL-CIO; American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, AFL-CIO. Principal Correspondents: John H. Harmon; Mildred Bond Roxborough; David Cullings; Allard K. Lowenstein; Roy Wilkins; Bayard Rustin; Sanford I. Wolff. 0468 Organizations, Correspondence, “A,” September–December 1972. 88 pp. Major Topics: 1972 NAACP national convention; food stamps; African National Congress; All African People’s Revolutionary Party. Principal Correspondents: Kenyon C. Burke; Frank Mabry Jr.; Alan Reitman; Thami Mhlambiso; Roy Wilkins; Aryeh Neier; Stokely Carmichael. 0556 Organizations, Correspondence, “A,” 1973. 125 pp. Major Topics: African Progressive Coalition; affirmative action in employment; Anti- Defamation League of B’nai B’rith; John Henrik Clarke; Christian Echoes National Ministry, Inc. v. United States (regarding tax exemption as religious organization); African-American Nation; Active Black Brothers, National Inmate Fund; AFL-CIO at A. Philip Randolph Institute conference; George Meany speech on economic conditions. Principal Correspondents: Afolabi A. Bakare; Kenyon C. Burke; Milton A. Seymour; Roy Wilkins; Elliot Rothenberg; Samuel Rabinove; John A. Morsell; Frank W. Burrell; Donald Slaiman; Susan Fratkin; Herbert Tenzer; Nellie Terwilliger; Kivie Kaplan. 0681 Organizations, Correspondence, “A,” 1974 and Undated. 15 pp. Major Topics: A. Philip Randolph Institute; Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations. Principal Correspondents: Bayard Rustin; Charles H. Wesley.

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0696 Organizations, Correspondence, “B,” 1967–1968. 73 pp. Major Topics: Black People for Progress; Big Brothers Inc.; Brotherhood In Action; Black Liberation Alliance. Principal Correspondents: Linda R. Tolbert; Jay H. Rossbach Jr.; Norman H. Perlstein; Robert L. Calvert; Leonard H. Carter; Roy Wilkins; Robert L. Lucas. 0769 Organizations, Correspondence, “B,” 1969. 62 pp. Major Topics: Boy Scouts of America; B’nai B’rith Women; Brothers United for National Development; Bridgehampton Child Care and Recreational Center, Inc. [New York]; Wilberforce University. Principal Correspondents: Ruth Mondschein; Sydney S. Baron; Richard Allen Hildebrand; Roy Wilkins; Leland E. Stokes; Robert North; John A. Morsell; Vernon R. Alden. 0831 Organizations, Correspondence, “B,” 1970–1971. 73 pp. Major Topics: Black Women’s Institute (National Council of Negro Women); Boy Scouts of America; Mary McLeod Bethune Memorial Committee; Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. Principal Correspondents: Gerald F. Beal; John A. Morsell; Norman H. Perlstein; Roy Wilkins; Marian Anderson; Absalom Jordan; John B. Stewart Jr.; Alden G. Barber; Ruth A. Logan. 0904 Organizations, Correspondence, “B,” 1972–1973 and Undated. 69 pp. Major Topics: Interreligious Coalition for Housing; National Rural Housing Coalition; Farmers Home Administration; Housing and Urban Development Department; Boy Scouts of America. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Roy Wilkins; Robert E. Johnson; Frank B. Mesiah; Owen T. Wilkerson. Reel 8 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-29 cont. 0001 Organizations, Correspondence, “C,” 1967. 64 pp. Major Topics: Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate; Citizens Against Legalized Murder; Challenge International; economic development; Urban Innovations. Principal Correspondents: Joseph B. Brunini; Clarence C. Walton; Philip J. Peters; Joseph H. Hodges; Richard Kennedy; Douglas Lyons; John A. Morsell; Roy Wilkins. 0065 Organizations, Correspondence, “C,” 1970. 109 pp. Major Topics: Commission for Racial Justice of the United Church of Christ; assassination of Black Panther Party leaders and Mark Clark; Citizens for Justice with Order; national health insurance. Principal Correspondents: Walter P. Reuther; John W. Porter; Charles E. Cobb; Donald Duster; Roy Wilkins; Geraldine Rickman; Leonard Mitchell; W. Howard Chase; John W. Gardner.

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Group VI, Box A-30 0174 Organizations, Correspondence, “C,” 1971. 108 pp. Major Topics: National health insurance; Citizens Committee for Government Reorganization; Congress of African People; Citizens Committee for Equal Justice for Public Employees; collective bargaining; Congress of Racial Equality. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; John A. Morsell; Jim Finch; Charles C. Diggs Jr.; Cheo Elimu; . 0282 Organizations, Correspondence, “C,” 1972–1973. 185 pp. Major Topics: Concerned Professional Association of Boys’ Club Workers; Civitan International; Coalition for Human Needs and Budget Priorities; Congress of Racial Equality. Principal Correspondents: Jule M. Sugarman; Therese W. Lansburgh; Daniel W. Swope; Roy Wilkins; Howard E. Prunty; Loretta Taylor Avent; John A. Morsell; Edward Brown; David Harris Jr.; Marcus Garvey Wilcher; Joan Marie Passalacqua; Harry Applewhite. 0467 Organizations, Correspondence, “D,” 1968–1973. 118 pp. Major Topics: Deliverance Gospel Mission; Day Care and Child Development Council of America; Delta Sigma Theta sorority; Michigan Democratic Party. Principal Correspondents: Shirley Washington; John A. Morsell; Roy Wilkins; Nwosu Onukwube; Frankie M. Freeman. 0585 Organizations, Correspondence, “E,” 1968–1970. 102 pp. Major Topics: Esperanto League for North America; Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States; Episcopal Society for Cultural and Racial Unity. Principal Correspondents: Leonard H. Carter; Elma Lewis; Alfred Duckett; Roy Wilkins; Ernest Sprinkles. 0687 Organizations, Correspondence, “E,” 1971–1973 and Undated. 54 pp. Major Topics: Encampment for Citizenship; Employment Specialist Corporation. Principal Correspondents: Robert H. Thomason; John A. Morsell; Douglas Kelley; William H. Oliver; F. L. Vaughns. 0741 Organizations, Correspondence, “F,” 1970. 134 pp. Major Topics: The Forum, Inc.; Fresh Air Fund; Food for All; Fellowship of Concerned University Students (FOCUS); Free Enterprise Association; Operation Crossroads Africa. Principal Correspondents: Thomas H. Pettigrew Jr.; Frederick H. Lewis; Dorothy Height; Richard Granger; Don C. Shaw; Roy Wilkins; Lawrence B. Weeks; McGeorge Bundy; Jane Baker. 0875 Organizations, Correspondence, “F,” 1971–1973. 58 pp. Major Topics: Friends Seminary; food stamps; Food for All; Fayette County Cooperative Stamping and Manufacturing Co., Inc. Principal Correspondents: Ernest F. Seegers; Roy Wilkins; John A. Morsell. 0933 Organizations, Correspondence, “G,” 1968–1973. 90 pp. Major Topics: Greater North Augusta Council on Human Relations (South Carolina); Galaxy Conference on Adult Education. Principal Correspondents: Mario Biaggi; A. G. Gaston; Harry L. Jackson; Willard L. Thompson; John A. Morsell; Forrest A. Walker; Roy Wilkins; Muhammad Kenyatta.

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Reel 9 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-31 0001 Organizations, Correspondence, “H,” 1968–1974. 51 pp. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Gus Tyler; Arthur J. Goldberg; J. Willard Marriott; Roy Wilkins; Harold L. Oram. 0052 Organizations, Correspondence, “I,” 1970. 140 pp. Major Topics: Institute for American Democracy; Stanley M. Isaacs Neighborhood Center (New York City). Principal Correspondents: Leo Cherne; John A. Morsell; Carey Grier Jr.; Herschel Halbert; Marcus Garvey Wilcher; Charles I. Katze. 0192 Organizations, Correspondence, “I,” 1971. 66 pp. Major Topics: Stanley M. Isaacs Neighborhood Center; International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (World Bank); International Development Association; Institute for American Democracy; International Business Communications. Principal Correspondents: Donald J. Pryor; Charles R. Baker; John Carey; Thomas H. Burress III; Roy Wilkins; John A. Morsell. 0258 Organizations, Correspondence, “I,” 1972–1973. 67 pp. Major Topics: International Development Conference; Interracial Colloquy; affirmative action in employment and education; Indiana Interreligious Commission on Human Equality; International League for the Rights of Man. Principal Correspondents: Israel Miller; Paul G. Hoffman; John A. Morsell; Warren Howard; Shaleak Ben Yehuda; William H. Oliver; Jerome J. Shestack. 0325 Organizations, Correspondence, “J,” 1968–1971. 80 pp. Major Topics: John Fitzgerald Kennedy Library; Junta of Militant Organizations (JOMO); congressional and state legislative districts; Joint Center for Political Studies. Principal Correspondents: Edward M. Kennedy; Joseph Waller Jr.; Roy Wilkins. 0405 Organizations, Correspondence, “J,” 1972–1973. 83 pp. Major Topics: Jewish Community Center of Cincinnati (Ohio); Original Hebrew Israelite Nation of Jerusalem; Jewish Labor Committee. Principal Correspondents: C. E. Israel; Roy Wilkins; Shaleak Ben Yehuda; Jacob T. Zukerman; Emanuel Muravchik. 0488 Organizations, Correspondence, “K,” 1969–1973. 32 pp. Principal Correspondents: Gladstone Ntlabati; James E. Cheek; John A. Morsell. 0520 Organizations, Correspondence, “L,” 1966–1973. 100 pp. Major Topics: Riots after assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.; Rutgers University student housing; League of Women Voters; Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. Principal Correspondents: Alvin Davis; John W. Gardner; Lucy Wilson Benson; Carroll Gundersen; Martha M. Wood; John A. Morsell; Peter J. Connell; Matthew Guinan; A. Philip Randolph; Louis Stulberg.

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0620 Organizations, Correspondence, “M,” 1968–1969. 111 pp. Major Topics: Metropolitan New York Project Equality; Floyd B. McKissick Enterprises, Inc.; Soul City, North Carolina; Fund, Inc. Principal Correspondents: B. Bruce Whittemore; C. J. Duckworth; Roy Wilkins; John A. Morsell; Floyd B. McKissick; William A. Rutherford. 0731 Organizations, Correspondence, “M,” 1970–1972. 102 pp. Major Topics: Metropolitan New York Project Equality; Miss Black America Beauty Pageant; Tom Mboya Memorial Fund; Medgar Evers Fund, Inc. Principal Correspondents: George K. Walters; John A. Morsell; William R. Morris. 0833 Organizations, Correspondence, “M,” 1973 and Undated. 40 pp. Group VI, Box A-32 0873 Organizations, Correspondence, “N,” 1965–1969. 18 pp. Major Topics: National Civil Liberties Clearing House; National Citizens Committee for Broadcasting. Principal Correspondents: Mary Alice Baldinger; Joseph Weber; Roy Wilkins; Bernard O. Westler; Ben Kubasik. 0891 Organizations, Correspondence, “N,” January–June 1970. 44 pp. Major Topics: National Committee for Responsible Patriotism; National Council of the Churches of Christ; National Committee of Black Churchmen. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; John A. Morsell; Donald M. Kendall; Thomas P. F. Hoving; Samuel B. Ethridge; Robert C. Chapman; Alan Swenson. 0935 Organizations, Correspondence, “N,” July–November 1970. 85 pp. Major Topics: National Association of Social Workers; National Black Automobile Dealers Association; National Citizens Committee for Broadcasting; National Committee of Black Churchmen; National Assembly for Social Policy and Development; affirmative action in employment; National Citizens’ Committee to Aid the Families of G.M. Strikers. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; John A. Morsell; Josephine S. Weiner; Aileen C. Hernandez; Stanley G. Petzel; Ossie Davis; Ruby Dee; Robert L. White. Reel 10 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-32 cont. 0001 Organizations, Correspondence, “N,” January–April 1971. 97 pp. Major Topics: National Assembly for Social Policy and Development; National Organization for Women; National Association of Railroad Passengers; National Peace Action Coalition; National Committee for Commitment to Brotherhood in 1971; National Center for Voluntary Action. Principal Correspondents: C. F. McNeil; Lucy Komisar; Jerry Gordon; Jim Lafferty; Ruth Gage-Colby; John T. Williams; Don Gurewitz; Roy Wilkins; William T. Gossett; John A. Morsell; H. Bruce Palmer; Carl M. Loeb Jr. 0098 Organizations, Correspondence, “N,” May–December 1971. 62 pp. Major Topics: National Welfare Rights Organization; National Newspaper Publishers Association; military personnel; National Civil Service League. Principal Correspondents: Virna M. Canson; George A. Wiley; Ira Glasser; Edward A. Griggs; Parren J. Mitchell.

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0160 Organizations, Correspondence, “N,” January–May 1972. 110 pp. Major Topics: Recreational facilities and services; National Jewish Community Relations Advisory Council; Economic Opportunity Act extension; National Council of Women of the United States; National Center for Voluntary Action. Principal Correspondents: Samuel D. Freeman; Parren J. Mitchell; Leo Brown; Reginald Johnson; Clarence M. Pendleton Jr.; John A. Morsell; James F. Oates Jr.; Joseph Vranich. 0270 Organizations, Correspondence, “N,” June–December 1972. 72 pp. Major Topics: National Association for Sickle Cell Disease, Inc.; National Association of Human Rights Workers; National Afro-American Labor Council; National Organization for Women. Principal Correspondents: Vernon E. Jordan Jr.; Helen Nelson; Leo Perlis; Shirley D. McCune; James O. Mann; Roy Wilkins; John A. Morsell; Cleveland Robinson; Calvin Williams; William Quinn Sorsby; Joseph C. Paige; Ernest A. Dow; Wilma Scott Heide. 0342 Organizations, Correspondence, “N,” January–July 1973. 67 pp. Major Topics: Namibia Support Group; National Center for Voluntary Action. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; John A. Morsell; Sol M. Linowitz; Rosemary Higgins Cass. 0409 Organizations, Correspondence, “N,” August–December 1973 and Undated. 67 pp. Major Topics: National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice; National Organization for Women. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Chauncey A. Alexander; John A. Morsell; Samuel D. Freeman; Berkeley G. Burrell; Aileen C. Hernandez. 0476 Organizations, Correspondence, “O,” 1968–1972. 62 pp. Major Topics: Operation Family; Opportunities Industrialization Centers. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Roy Wilkins; Michael H. Dalton; Ralph D. Abernathy; Leon H. Sullivan; Charles H. Smith. Group VI, Box A-33 0538 Organizations, Correspondence, “P,” 1969–1970. 51 pp. Major Topic: Pan-African Solidarity Committee. Principal Correspondents: Paul D. Brown; Marvin Brown; C. C. Gales; John A. Morsell; Theodore Jakaboski; Andrew P. O’Meara. 0589 Organizations, Correspondence, “P,” 1971–1972. 119 pp. Major Topics: PATH Association (Plan of Action for Tomorrow’s Housing, Cleveland, Ohio); Operation PUSH (People United to Save Humanity). Principal Correspondents: Don Clarke; Franklin H. Williams; Charles A. Beard; Leonard H. Carter; Peter Long; Richard C. Thomas. 0708 Organizations, Correspondence, “Q,” 1969. 26 pp. Major Topics: Quality-In Manufacturing Company; Bob Rothman Contract Services, Inc. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Bob Rothman. 0734 Organizations, Correspondence, “R,” 1966–1972. 114 pp. Major Topics: Revolutionary Action Movement; Black Power; Eleanor Roosevelt Memorial Foundation; Riverdale Children’s Association; Restitution for Involuntary Servitude. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Jodie C. Sanford; Leonard H. Carter; Anthony C. Campbell; Dorothy Lewis; Edwin T. Sexton Jr.; John A. Morsell.

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0848 Organizations, Correspondence, “S,” 1960–1963. 16 pp. Major Topic: Southern Christian Leadership Conference. Principal Correspondent: James C. Gilliam. 0864 Organizations, Name File—A. Philip Randolph Institute, 1970–1976. 83 pp. Major Topics: Wages of New York City school personnel; Arab-Israeli conflict; 1970 U.S. Senate elections; New York City Commission on Human Rights; building trades unions; seniority in employment. Principal Correspondents: Bayard Rustin; A. Philip Randolph; Charles Hightower; Ernest Wilkerson. 0947 Organizations, Name File—African-American Dialogues, 1971. 18 pp. Major Topic: U.S. relations with Africa. Reel 11 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-33 cont. 0001 Organizations, Name File—African-American Institute, 1967–1968. 79 pp. Principal Correspondents: Dana S. Creel; Oscar M. Ruebhausen; E. Jefferson Murphy; Waldemar A. Nielsen; Jane W. Jacqz. 0080 Organizations, Name File—African-American Institute, 1969. 32 pp. Principal Correspondents: Dana S. Creel; David K. Kadane. 0112 Organizations, Name File—African-American Institute, 1970. 83 pp. Major Topic: U.S. relations with Africa. Principal Correspondents: Dana S. Creel; William P. Rogers; Richard M. Nixon; Harriet H. Miller; Jane W. Jacqz; William R. Cotter; Roy Wilkins. 0195 Organizations, Name File—African-American Institute, 1971–1974. 41 pp. Major Topic: U.S. relations with Africa. Principal Correspondents: William R. Cotter; Roy Wilkins; Mildred Bond Roxborough. Group VI, Box A-34 0236 Organizations, Name File—American Committee on Africa, 1968–1971. 99 pp. Major Topics: U.S. relations with southern Africa; terrorism trial in South Africa; assassination of Eduardo Mondlane; Nigeria-Biafra War; South African Airways; Arab-Israeli conflict; Republic of Guinea; Polaroid Corporation operations in South Africa. Principal Correspondents: Willis Logan; George M. Houser; John A. Morsell; Janet MacLaughlin; Gary Gappert; Charles Hightower; Roy Wilkins; Janet Hooper. 0335 Organizations, Name File—American Committee on Africa, 1972–1973. 115 pp. Major Topics: African People’s Democratic Union of South Africa; Unity Movement of South Africa; terrorism trial in South Africa; police brutality in South Africa; U.S. business operations in South Africa; United Nations Special Committee on Apartheid; United Nations sanctions on Rhodesia; liberation struggles in Africa; South African students; U.S. relations with southern Africa; Amilcar Cabral; proposed boycott of South African Open Games; bank loans to government of South Africa; boycott of Gulf Oil Corporation. Principal Correspondents: Gloster B. Current; George M. Houser; William H. Booth. 0450 Organizations, Name File—American Bar Association, 1969–1973. 60 pp. Major Topic: Electoral College reform. Principal Correspondents: William T. Gossett; William J. D. Boyd; Roy Wilkins.

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0510 Organizations, Name File—American Jewish Committee, 1969–1971. 96 pp. Major Topics: School desegregation; Akron, Ohio, fair housing ordinance; National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence; National Alliance for Safer Cities; Family Assistance Act of 1970. Principal Correspondents: George J. Grumbach Jr.; Paul Hartman; Stanley Wexler; Sonya F. Kaufer; Haskell L. Lazere; Harry Fleischman; Milton Rector; Kivie Kaplan; Irving M. Engel; Nelson A. Rockefeller; Isaiah Terman; Alexander E. Holstein Jr.; Samuel Rabinove; Roy Wilkins. 0606 Organizations, Name File—American Jewish Committee, 1972. 166 pp. Major Topics: School busing; attitudes regarding desegregation; Equal Employment Opportunity Act of 1972; affirmative action in employment and education; Jews in Soviet Union; murder of Israeli athletes at 1972 Olympic Games. Principal Correspondents: Hyman Bookbinder; Paul Hartman; Samuel Rabinove; Richard M. Nixon; George McGovern; Haskell L. Lazere; Harry Fleischman; John A. Morsell. 0772 Organizations, Name File—American Jewish Committee, 1973–1975. 125 pp. Major Topics: Christian Echoes National Ministry, Inc. v. United States (federal tax exemption as religious organization); Otero v. New York City Housing Authority (urban renewal and new public housing); Long v. Ford Motor Company (employment discrimination); affirmative action in employment and education; Jesus Christ Superstar (film); Frontiero v. Richardson (employment benefits for female military personnel); National Alliance for Safer Cities; Palestine. Principal Correspondents: Elliot Rothenberg; Samuel Rabinove; Bertram H. Gold; Marc H. Tanenbaum. 0897 Organizations, Name File—American Jewish Congress, 1969–1973. 44 pp. Major Topics: Project Transfer (transfer of New York City business to African American owners); New York City schools; school busing; state and federal civil rights legislation; affirmative action in employment and education. Principal Correspondents: Arthur J. Lelyveld; Will Maslow; Theodore J. Kolish; Joseph B. Robison; Roy Wilkins; John A. Morsell; Bertram H. Gold; Naomi Levine. 0941 Organizations, Name File—American Committee to Keep Biafra Alive, 1968. 23 pp. Major Topics: Nigeria-Biafra War; famine in Biafra. Principal Correspondents: Daniel W. Wright III; Paul Connett; Roy Wilkins. 0964 Organizations, Name File—Association for Voluntary Sterilization, 1969. 40 pp. Major Topics: Birth control; sterilization. Principal Correspondents: Doand H. Higgins; Roy Wilkins. Reel 12 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-35 0001 Organizations, Name File—Black Panther Party, 1969–1970. 96 pp. Major Topic: Black Panther Party and law enforcement officials. Principal Correspondents: Gloster B. Current; Bobby Seale; Roy Wilkins; Ruth W. Katz; Roy Innis; Sandra Webster; James Williams; Mabel Robinson; Ossie Davis; John A. Morsell; Leonard R. Sussman; John L. Martin. 0097 Organizations, Name File—Committee on Black-Jewish Relations, 1969. 26 pp. Principal Correspondents: Jack Greenberg; Peter L. Malkin.

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0123 Organizations, Name File—Congress of Racial Equality, 1968–1969 and Undated. 15 pp. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Roy Innis; Victor A. Solomon; Jerome Smith. 0138 Organizations, Name File—Cyesis Programs Consortium, 1969. 144 pp. Major Topics: Adolescent parents; teenage pregnancy; educational, health, and counseling services for pregnant adolescent girls. Principal Correspondent: Marion Howard. 0282 Organizations, Name File—Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, 1962–1969. 87 pp. Major Topics: U.S. Senate filibuster rule; school desegregation; Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs; Elementary and Secondary Education Act extension; Omnibus Civil Rights Act of 1969; Voting Rights Act extension; nomination of Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. for U.S. Supreme Court. Principal Correspondents: Samuel H. Beer; Joseph L. Rauh Jr.; John deJ. Pemberton; ; Walter P. Reuther; William F. Schnitzler; Dorothy Hutchinson; Frank P. Chuman; Edmund S. Muskie; John Slawson; Arthur B. Spingarn; Stephen Gill Spottswood; Hugh Scott; Ashby G. Smith; Kenneth B. Keating; William W. Scranton; Henry E. Schultz; Arnold Aronson; James Hamilton; Roy Wilkins; Marvin Caplan. 0369 Organizations, Name File—Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, January–June 1970. 118 pp. Major Topics: Nomination of G. Harrold Carswell for U.S. Supreme Court; school desegregation; Elementary and Secondary Education Act extension; Voting Rights Act extension; school busing; voting rights for eighteen year olds; Equal Rights Amendment; Congress of Racial Equality. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Arnold Aronson; Joseph L. Rauh Jr.; Clarence M. Mitchell Jr.; Marvin Caplan. 0487 Organizations, Name File—Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, July– December 1970. 68 pp. Major Topics: Voting rights for eighteen year olds; school desegregation; EEOC legislation; U.S. Commission on Civil Rights; District of Columbia Court Reform and Criminal Procedure Act of 1970; Employment and Training Opportunities Act of 1970; food stamps. Principal Correspondents: Arnold Aronson; Marvin Caplan; Cleveland Robinson; Roy Wilkins; Jacob K. Javits; Joseph L. Rauh Jr.; Marian Wright Edelman; Ellen C. Lagemann; Clarence M. Mitchell Jr.; James Hamilton. 0555 Organizations, Name File—Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, January– February 1971. 91 pp. Major Topics: Democratic Party of the State of Mississippi challenge regarding seating of Mississippi congressional delegation; enforcement of federal civil rights legislation; U.S. Senate filibuster rule; Emergency School Aid Act of 1971; Office of Economic Opportunity spending cuts; federal housing policies and programs. Principal Correspondents: Arnold Aronson; Roy Wilkins; Harvey Webb Jr.; James P. Twomey; Clarence M. Mitchell Jr.

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0646 Organizations, Name File—Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, March–May 1971. 99 pp. Major Topics: U.S. Senate filibuster rule; Emergency School Aid Act of 1971; Quality Integrated Education Act of 1971; death of Whitney M. Young Jr.; public investment programs; integration; federal-state revenue sharing; Office of Economic Opportunity legislation; voting rights for eighteen year olds; EEOC legislation; Freedom Budget for All Americans; Emergency Employment Act of 1971; Emergency School Aid and Quality Integrated Education Act of 1971. Principal Correspondents: Arnold Aronson; Roy Wilkins; Bayard Rustin; Walter F. Mondale; Marvin Caplan. 0745 Organizations, Name File—Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, June– September 1971. 91 pp. Major Topics: Leadership Conference on Civil Rights financial pressures; social security and welfare reform legislation; Emergency Employment Act of 1971; federal housing policies and programs; EEOC legislation; antipoverty programs; minimum wage legislation; Washington, D.C., home rule; Office of Economic Opportunity legislation. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Bayard Rustin; Arnold Aronson; James Hamilton; James H. Harvey; Bill Taylor; Lucy Komisar; Clarence M. Mitchell Jr. 0836 Organizations, Name File—Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, October– December 1971. 121 pp. Major Topics: EEOC legislation; nomination of William Rehnquist and Lewis Powell for U.S. Supreme Court; minimum wage legislation; child day care; Office of Economic Opportunity legislation. Principal Correspondents: George P. Shultz; Yvonne Price; Arnold Aronson; Bayard Rustin; Roy Wilkins; James H. Harvey; Cleveland Robinson. Reel 13 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-36 0001 Organizations, Name File—Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, January–March 1972. 87 pp. Major Topics: EEOC legislation; school desegregation and school busing; enforcement of civil rights legislation; equal employment opportunity; wage controls under Economic Stabilization Act; Education Amendments of 1971; Student Transportation Moratorium Act of 1972; Equal Educational Opportunities Act of 1972; health care facilities and services; minimum wage legislation. Principal Correspondents: Yvonne Price; Arnold Aronson; Marvin Caplan; Roy Wilkins; Robert M. Crocker; Samuel J. Simmons; Bayard Rustin; James Hamilton. 0088 Organizations, Name File—Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, April–July 1972. 93 pp. Major Topics: Democratic Party code of political behavior regarding discrimination; minimum wage legislation; school busing. Principal Correspondents: Arnold Aronson; Roy Wilkins; Bayard Rustin; John A. Morsell; Howard A. Glickstein; R. J. Henle; John H. Fischer; James M. Hester; Theodore M. Hesburgh; Vernon E. Jordan Jr.

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0181 Organizations, Name File—Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, August– December 1972. 63 pp. Major Topics: School desegregation and school busing; Project One Nation; minimum wage legislation; Equal Educational Opportunities Act of 1972. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Bayard Rustin; Vernon E. Jordan Jr.; Marvin Caplan; Arnold Aronson; Joseph H. Kanter; Howard A. Glickstein; James H. Harvey. 0244 Organizations, Name File—Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, January–May 1973. 90 pp. Major Topics: Enforcement of federal civil rights legislation; licenses for radio and television stations; Equal Pay Act extension; housing discrimination; civil rights policies of Nixon administration; impoundment of funds by President Nixon and Impoundment Review legislation; minimum wage legislation; voter registration legislation. Principal Correspondents: Richard M. Nixon; Roy Wilkins; David Livingston; Cleveland Robinson; Frank Brown; Arnold Aronson; Maury Fagan; David Brody; Yvonne Price; Robert L. Hagan; Bayard Rustin. 0334 Organizations, Name File—Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, June– December 1973. 103 pp. Major Topics: Minimum wage legislation; legal services for the poor; anti- impoundment legislation; President Nixon’s civil rights enforcement budget for 1974; Office of Economic Opportunity extension; public housing; school desegregation; Elementary and Secondary Education Act extension; Washington, D.C., home rule; school busing; Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Principal Correspondents: Arnold Aronson; Marvin Caplan; Roy Wilkins; Everett C. Parker; Yvonne Price; John A. Morsell. 0437 Organizations, Name File—Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, 1975–1977. 20 pp. Major Topics: Home Mortgage Disclosure Act of 1975; food stamps; enforcement of federal civil rights legislation; voter registration legislation; consumer protection; school desegregation and school busing; Zionism. Principal Correspondents: Arnold Aronson; Roy Wilkins. 0457 Organizations, Name File—Miscellaneous Organizations, 1964–1972 and Undated. 51 pp. Major Topics: American Missionary Association; Jewish Rights Council’s opposition to affirmative action; National Council for Equal Business Opportunity. 0508 Organizations, Name File—National Black Political Convention, 1972. 71 pp. Major Topics: NAACP criticism of Gary declaration; NAACP withdrawal from National Black Political Convention; Amiri Baraka on National Black Political Assembly. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Roy Wilkins; Gloster B. Current; Jackie Robinson; Eugene W. Feldman; Arthur Hertzberg; Ossie Davis; Sidney M. Weinstein; Dan Asher; Abe Harshman; Marshall M. Jacobson; Albert D. Chernin; Marcus Gildin. 0579 Organizations, Name File—National Urban Coalition, 1967–1968. 17 pp. Principal Correspondents: John W. Gardner; Robert C. Weaver.

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0596 Organizations, Name File—National Urban Coalition, 1969. 129 pp. Major Topics: Education; summer employment for youth; employment; police; child day care; construction industry employment; voter registration. Principal Correspondents: James A. Kelly; Mildred Bond; John W. Gardner; M. Carl Holman; Roy Wilkins; Peter Libassi; Lowell R. Beck. Group VI, Box A-37 0725 Organizations, Name File—National Urban Coalition, January–April 1970. 83 pp. Major Topics: Income maintenance legislation; Family Assistance Act of 1970 (welfare reform); Voting Rights Act extension; nomination of G. Harrold Carswell for U.S. Supreme Court; food stamps; merger of Urban Coalition and Urban America into National Urban Coalition. Principal Correspondents: Robert J. Mangum; Peter Libassi; Gaylord Nelson; John W. Gardner; Lowell R. Beck. 0808 Organizations, Name File—National Urban Coalition, May–September 1970. 84 pp. Major Topics: Welfare reform legislation; Voting Rights Act extension; food stamps; poverty; District of Columbia Court Reform and Criminal Procedure Act of 1970; construction industry; housing; consumer protection; health care services. Principal Correspondents: Peter Libassi; Lowell R. Beck; Roy Wilkins; Jerome F. Donovan; John W. Gardner; M. Carl Holman. Reel 14 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-37 cont. 0001 Organizations, Name File—National Urban Coalition, October 1970. 155 pp. Major Topics: Federal budget suggestions; employment; vocational training; social security; income maintenance programs; health care services; education; urban areas; housing; transportation; environmental protection; population growth; agricultural subsidies; law enforcement and criminal justice system; consumer protection; defense spending; foreign economic assistance; research and development. Principal Correspondents: Robert S. Benson; M. Carl Holman; ; C. T. Vivian. 0156 Organizations, Name File—National Urban Coalition, November–December 1970. 185 pp. Major Topic: Federal budget suggestions. Principal Correspondents: Jack H. Vaughn; John A. Morsell; Sol M. Linowitz. 0341 Organizations, Name File—National Urban Coalition, 1971–1972. 69 pp. Major Topics: Office of Economic Opportunity; public transportation; murder of Clifton Wright, leader of school boycott in Wilmington, North Carolina; urban redevelopment; affirmative action in employment. Principal Correspondents: Sol M. Linowitz; M. Carl Holman; Ruby G. Martin; John A. Morsell; Roy Wilkins; Laurence T. Murphy. 0410 Organizations, Name File—National Urban Coalition, 1973. 124 pp. Major Topics: Federal budget proposals; urban redevelopment; housing; minimum wage legislation; criminal justice system. Principal Correspondents: M. Carl Holman; Sol M. Linowitz; Roy Wilkins; Glenn Claytor; John A. Morsell; William J. Kaufman; Charles N. Jackson II; Vernon E. Jordan Jr.

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0534 Organizations, Name File—Peace Corps, 1970–1971. 17 pp. Principal Correspondents: Carroll Buchanan; Bruce Mazzie; John A. Morsell. 0551 Organizations, Name File—Planned Parenthood Association of San Diego County, 1969. 6 pp. Principal Correspondents: Willard Johnson; Roy Wilkins. 0557 Organizations, Name File—United Nations Association of the United States of America, 1965–1972. 69 pp. Major Topics: Human rights; urban riots; Black Power. Principal Correspondents: David J. Exley; John A. Morsell; Roy Wilkins; Arthur J. Goldberg; Ralph J. Bunche; Marcial Tamayo; Porter McKeever; Kurt Waldheim. Group VI, Box A-38 0626 Press Releases, 1964–1973. 91 pp. Major Topics: Memorial march for ; NAACP position regarding Adam Clayton Powell Jr. and U.S. House of Representatives; assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.; NAACP support for Poor People’s Campaign; nomination of G. Harrold Carswell for U.S. Supreme Court; NAACP tour of European housing; closing of U.S. consulate in Rhodesia; building trades unions; 1970 NAACP national convention; denial of visa to Shirley Graham DuBois; voting rights for eighteen year olds; school desegregation case; employment discrimination; Farmers Home Administration; civil rights policies of Nixon administration; child day care; tour of military bases in West Germany; death of Whitney M. Young Jr.; death of Lonnie E. Smith (plaintiff in Smith v. Allwright); New York City Transit Authority; Transport Workers Union. 0717 Questionnaire for Staff, 1963. 6 pp. Principal Correspondent: Gloster B. Current. 0723 Reparations, 1969–1970. 63 pp. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Carl R. Pritchett; Pauli Murray; John A. Morsell; Thomas E. Carpenter III; John E. Hines. 0786 Staff—General, 1971. 61 pp. Principal Correspondents: Lamar Crawford; William H. Cobb Jr.; W. R. Bruce Porter; Miriam Wheeler; Allen Lee. 0847 Staff—Henry Lee Moon, 1964–1972. 9 pp. Major Topic: School desegregation. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Paul A. Newsome; Esther L. Spann; Emmitt J. Douglas. Group VI, Box A-39 0856 Staff—John A. Morsell, Articles, 1965 and 1973. 34 pp. Major Topics: NAACP programs; ethnic groups; identity politics; African American– Jewish relations. 0890 Staff—John A. Morsell, Correspondence, 1960–1969. 39 pp. Major Topics: African coffee; Volta River Dam (Ghana); Black Power. Principal Correspondents: Ella Ruth Chapman; John A. Morsell; George W. Davis; John B. Foote.

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Reel 15 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-39 cont. 0001 Staff—John A. Morsell, Correspondence, January–March 1970. 119 pp. Major Topics: School desegregation; youth employment; voter registration; Voting Rights Act extension; African American students at Ohio State University; National Alliance for Safer Cities; NAACP Emergency Relief Fund. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Jean Mayer; W. Lester Banks; Kenneth L. Buford; Victor Glasberg; Samuel D. Freeman; Leonard H. Carter; Frederick Koury; James Brown Jr.; William A. Ross; Warren Howard; Robert A. Wright. 0120 Staff—John A. Morsell, Correspondence, April–May 1970. 62 pp. Major Topics: Reparations; NAACP Emergency Relief Fund. Principal Correspondents: Arthur J. Chapital Sr.; William C. Jones; John A. Morsell; Kenneth L. Buford; Minnie Townsend; Leonard H. Carter; Mable Jackson; Roy Wilkins; Arthur D. Sullivan. 0182 Staff—John A. Morsell, Correspondence, June–August 1970. 98 pp. Major Topics: Construction industry employment; building trades unions; “New Orleans Plan.” Principal Correspondents: Leonard H. Carter; Richard L. Dockery; Roy Wilkins; Donald R. Lee; John A. Morsell; Allen Scult; Arthur J. Chapital Sr.; Henry E. Braden IV; Nathaniel R. Jones; Sally G. Carroll. 0280 Staff—John A. Morsell, Correspondence, September–December 1970. 101 pp. Major Topics: West Philadelphia NAACP branch; Association for the Study of Negro Life and History; Afroamerican Institute; NAACP Special Contribution Fund. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; William J. Greene; Aaron E. Henry; Marvin Davies; Bertram Harris; Roy Wilkins; Robert A. Wright; Leonard H. Carter; Phillip H. Savage; Carl C. McCraven; John Hope Franklin; Harvey Ronald H. Britton. 0381 Staff—John A. Morsell, Correspondence, January–March 1971. 80 pp. Major Topics: Black Construction Workers’ Manifesto; United Community Construction Workers; NAACP Special Contribution Fund. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Kenneth I. Guscott; Leo Fletcher; W. A. McMillan; Leonard H. Carter; Isaac W. Williams. 0461 Staff—John A. Morsell, Correspondence, April 1971. 95 pp. Major Topics: Food stamps; Human Rights Party. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Harvey Ronald H. Britton; Tommy Roberts. 0556 Staff—John A. Morsell, Correspondence, May 1971. 99 pp. Principal Correspondents: Elsie F. Carrington; John A. Morsell; Robert A. Wright; Jesse H. Turner; Jacquelyn Petersen. Group VI, Box A-40 0655 Staff—John A. Morsell, Correspondence, June 1971. 131 pp. Major Topics: Progressive Labour Party (Bermuda); Food For All; social conditions in Houston, Texas; medical personnel. Principal Correspondents: Charles S. Gregg; John A. Morsell; Grace Olivarez; Kenyon C. Burke; Carl A. Fuqua; Gary R. Thompson; Nathaniel S. Colley.

27 Frame No.

0786 Staff—John A. Morsell, Correspondence, July–December 1971. 134 pp. Major Topics: Press coverage of 1971 NAACP national convention; contribution to ; NAACP Special Contribution Fund. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Robert Williams; Mildred Bond Roxborough; C. Anderson Davis; Kivie Kaplan; Roy Wilkins. Reel 16 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-40 cont. 0001 Staff—John A. Morsell, Correspondence, January–March 1972. 153 pp. Major Topics: 1970 census; low- and moderate-income housing; racial discrimination by Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks; family planning; voter registration; use of words “Negro” and “black”; school desegregation and school busing; Stanley Park housing project, Glen Cove, New York; NAACP Emergency Relief Fund; food stamps. Principal Correspondents: William Randall; James N. McCutcheon; Chauncey E. Spencer; John A. Morsell; Nathaniel R. Jones; Robert A. Wright; Charles B. Rangel; Virna M. Canson; John M. Brooks; Kivie Kaplan; William R. Morris; Leonard H. Carter; Gloster B. Current; Ruby Hurley. 0154 Staff—John A. Morsell, Correspondence, April–August 1972. 108 pp. Major Topics: Fund-raising; school desegregation; school busing; NAACP Emergency Relief Fund. Principal Correspondents: W. C. Patton; John A. Morsell; Kivie Kaplan; Lula Brown; Eugene T. Reed; R. L. Mackey; Nathaniel R. Jones. 0262 Staff—John A. Morsell, Correspondence, September 1972. 141 pp. Major Topics: All-black college dormitories; Council on Interracial Books for Children; 1972 presidential election; job placement services. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; William O. Woodson. 0403 Staff—John A. Morsell, Correspondence, October 1972. 92 pp. Major Topics: Council on Interracial Books for Children; 1972 presidential election; use of words “Negro” and “black”; civil rights policies of Nixon administration; school busing; Minority Business Opportunities Program. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Mercedes A. Wright; David Brinkley; Peter Libassi. 0495 Staff—John A. Morsell, Correspondence, November–December 1972. 152 pp. Major Topics: 1972 presidential election; Empire Mortgage and Investment Company, Inc.; construction industry; Bob Jones University; National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Chester I. Lewis.

28 Frame No.

Group VI, Box A-42 0647 Staff—John A. Morsell, Memoranda, 1961–1970. 147 pp. Major Topics: Legal fees and expenses for Amos v. Board of School Directors, City of Milwaukee; Taconic Foundation meeting on housing; nomination of G. Harrold Carswell to U.S. Supreme Court; school desegregation; Voting Rights Act extension; Newark, New Jersey, NAACP branch; National Urban Coalition; YWCA; 1970 NAACP national convention. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Nathaniel R. Jones; Joan Franklin; Beverly J. Pearson; William R. Morris; Gloster B. Current; Henry W. Floyd; Jerry M. Guess; Ruby Hurley; Warren Howard. 0794 Staff—John A. Morsell, Memoranda, 1971–1972. 93 pp. Major Topics: NAACP budget for 1971; disaster relief; school desegregation; Ford Foundation grant to NAACP Special Contribution Fund. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Richard W. McClain; Gloster B. Current; William R. Morris; June Shagaloff Alexander; Althea T. L. Simmons; J. Francis Pohlhaus. 0887 Staff—John A. Morsell, Speeches and Statements, 1970–1972. 45 pp. Major Topics: School desegregation and school busing; nomination of G. Harrold Carswell for U.S. Supreme Court; speech to Platform Committee of Democratic National Convention; housing; employment; criminal justice system; speech to Platform Committee of Republican National Convention. 0932 Staff—Mildred Bond, Correspondence, 1963–1969. 31 pp. Principal Correspondents: Mildred Bond; John A. Morsell. 0963 Staff—Mildred Bond Roxborough, Correspondence, 1970. 36 pp. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Mildred Bond Roxborough; Leonard H. Carter; Kenneth I. Guscott; Harvey Ronald H. Britton. Reel 17 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-42 cont. 0001 Staff—Mildred Bond Roxborough, Correspondence, 1971. 109 pp. Major Topics: Negro History Week; Jefferson County Committee for Economic Opportunity (Community Action Program); Spingarn Medal. Principal Correspondents: W. C. Patton; Roy Wilkins; Mildred Bond Roxborough; Samuel Marcus. 0110 Staff—Mildred Bond Roxborough, Correspondence, January–September 1972. 139 pp. Major Topics: Crime and African Americans; strike by clothing workers at Farah Manufacturing Company; Citizens Committee for Justice for Farah Workers; employment discrimination; housing discrimination; school desegregation. Principal Correspondents: Mildred Bond Roxborough; William H. Penn Sr.; Gaylord Nelson; Roy Wilkins.

29 Frame No.

0249 Staff—Mildred Bond Roxborough, Correspondence, October–December 1972. 104 pp. Major Topics: Ad Hoc Committee for Intellectual Freedom; Coalition for Job Equality in the Construction Industry. Principal Correspondents: Mildred Bond Roxborough; Saul Bellow; Michael Harrington; H. Stuart Hughes; Norman Podhoretz; Bayard Rustin; Arthur Schlesinger; David Selden; C. Vann Woodward; Charles S. Zimmerman; Leonard H. Carter; Gloster B. Current; W. Montague Cobb; Greg Wallance. Group VI, Box A-44 0353 Staff—June Shagaloff, Correspondence, 1961–1972. 14 pp. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Ellis H. Casson; Leonard H. Carter; Charles K. Jones. 0367 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Articles, 1969–1973 and Undated. 82 pp. Major Topics: Permissions requests; public reaction to articles by Wilkins; White House Conference on Children; 1970 census; suburban areas; civil rights policies of Harry Truman; school desegregation; civil rights movement in 1960s. Principal Correspondents: Henry Lee Moon; Roy Wilkins; Mildred Bond Roxborough. Group VI, Box A-45 0449 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Awards and Tributes, ca. 1941–1945 and 1967–1971. 122 pp. Major Topics: Freedom House, 1967 Freedom Award; American Jewish Committee, American Liberties Medallion; League for Industrial Democracy, 1970 Annual Award; Jules Cohen Memorial Award; Akron, Ohio, NAACP branch. Principal Correspondents: John A. Morsell; Irving M. Engel; James T. Harris Jr.; Alvin J. McNeil; Hubert H. Humphrey; Luther Holcomb; ; Walter P. Reuther; George Meany; Edmund S. Muskie; Earl Warren; Nelson A. Rockefeller; Edward M. Kennedy; Whitney M. Young Jr.; George McGovern; Roy Wilkins; Robert K. Greenfield; Theodore R. Mann; Albert D. Chernin; Glen R. Driscoll; Hyman B. Grinstein; Carl B. Stokes. 0571 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Awards and Tributes, 1972–1973. 88 pp. Major Topics: NAACP programs; military personnel; voting rights for eighteen year olds; school desegregation; employment discrimination; housing discrimination; Omega Psi Phi fraternity, Mu Omicron Chapter, Man of the Year; United Auto Workers honorary membership; Roy Wilkins Community School (Flint, Michigan); City College of New York, John H. Finley Medal. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Emil Mazey. 0659 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Columns, Text, 1967–1980. 66 pp. Major Topics: New York City school decentralization; repression; crime and African Americans; language; police brutality; Equal Rights Amendment; African American middle class; race relations on college and university campuses; school desegregation; affirmative action in employment and education; interracial adoption; school busing. 0725 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, 1961–1969. 192 pp. Major Topics: Southern Regional Council; Negro History Week; separatism; Atlanta city employees’ strike; NAACP opposition to Governor Ronald Reagan’s appointee to California Human Relations Agency; school busing; nomination of G. Harrold Carswell for U.S. Supreme Court. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Leslie W. Dunbar; Tarea Hall Pittman; William H. Booth; Louis I. Goldin; Barbee William Durham; Hugh H. Smythe; Hosea L. Williams; Leonard H. Carter; William E. Pitt; Edward M. Kennedy.

30 Frame No.

0917 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, January–April 1970. 54 pp. Major Topics: National Rural Housing Coalition; state government programs for urban areas; Vietnam War; NAACP Special Contribution Fund. Principal Correspondents: Amanda Bryant; Clay L. Cochran; George McGovern; Wallace L. Young Jr.; Albert Shanker; Roy Innis; Roy Wilkins. Reel 18 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-45 cont. 0001 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, May–June 1970. 153 pp. Major Topics: Ohio State University, Ad Hoc Committee for Campus Rights demand for black studies program; retail store boycott in Perry, Georgia, regarding employment discrimination and school desegregation; police brutality; Los Angeles NAACP branch; West Coast Regional Office constitution. Principal Correspondents: Dorothy L. Schneider; Arthur J. Goldberg; Barbee William Durham; William D. Barnwell; Edmund S. Muskie; Jerry M. Guess; James Brown Jr.; Leonard H. Carter. Group VI, Box A-46 0154 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, July 1970. 76 pp. Major Topics: Family Assistance Act of 1970; voter registration; criminal justice system. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Daniel P. Moynihan; Gillespie C. Wilson; John A. Morsell; Helen Coleman Gigger; Kumeo Yoshinari; Noboru Honda; Kay Yamashita; Richard L. Dockery. 0230 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, August–September 1970. 126 pp. Major Topics: Nonprofit housing programs; “New Orleans Plan” (affirmative action in construction industry employment); Agriculture Department; employment discrimination; Family Assistance Act of 1970; boycott of Dallas Safeway stores; NAACP National Housing Development Corporation; International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Asbestos Workers. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Harvey Ronald H. Britton; Herbert Hill; William R. Morris; Sigmund Arywitz; Leonard H. Carter; Mary L. Harper; Jerry M. Guess; Althea T. L. Simmons; John E. Cosgrove; Irving Brown; James E. Stewart; Richard L. Dockery; Calvin O. L. Henry; James Brown Jr.; Marvin Davies; Virna M. Canson; W. C. Patton. 0356 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, October–November 1970. 138 pp. Major Topics: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, NAACP branches; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, NAACP branch; Camden, New Jersey, NAACP branch; Newark, New Jersey, NAACP branch; Wilmington, Delaware, NAACP branch; White House Conference on Aging; affirmative action in employment; New York NAACP State Conference; suburban zoning ordinances; Los Angeles NAACP branch; “Call to Conscience” conference sponsored by NAACP and National Council of Negro Women. Principal Correspondents: Robert Williams; Phillip H. Savage; Henry Lee Moon; John A. Morsell; O. W. Ingram; William H. Oliver; William E. Pollard; Gloster B. Current; A. Philip Randolph; Roy Wilkins; Leonard H. Carter; Virna M. Canson.

31 Frame No.

0494 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, December 1970. 86 pp. Major Topics: Nonprofit housing programs; voter registration; Anchorage, Alaska, NAACP branch; California health care services; Medi-Cal; California Rural Legal Assistance. Principal Correspondents: Lloyd N. Pearson Jr.; Leonard H. Carter; William R. Morris; Gloster B. Current. 0580 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, January–February 1971. 109 pp. Major Topics: Responsible Corporate Action, “Corporate Apartheid—California, U.S.A. Style (The Exclusion of Blacks, Mexican-Americans, and Females from Corporate Power)”; arrest of Philadelphia police officers on charges of conspiracy and assault and battery; murder of Philadelphia police officer. Principal Correspondents: Nathaniel R. Jones; Andrew Rollins Jr.; Leonard H. Carter; Roy Wilkins; Sanford L. Wright; David Ginsburg; Marvin Davies; Phillip H. Savage. 0689 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, March 1971. 147 pp. Major Topics: Negro History Week; 1970 state and congressional elections; voter registration; “Call to Conscience” sponsored by NAACP and National Council of Negro Women; education; employment; Interracial Council for Business Opportunity. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; W. Lester Banks; Leonard H. Carter; Curtis J. Way; Harrison A. Williams Jr.; Ronald Reagan. 0836 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, April 1971. 101 pp. Major Topics: NAACP youth councils; Hispanic Americans; school desegregation; employment discrimination. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; James I. Meyerson; Thomas J. Harris. Group VI, Box A-47 0937 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, May 1971. 102 pp. Major Topics: Language; urban areas; Richard M. Nixon’s revenue sharing proposal; boycott of retail stores by Twiggs County, Georgia, NAACP branch. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Alfred Baker Lewis; Louis E. Wolfson; Nathaniel R. Jones; Charles C. Diggs Jr.; William L. Clay. Reel 19 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-47 cont. 0001 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, June–July 1971. 149 pp. Major Topics: Voter registration; National Newspaper Publishers Association; American Negro Leadership Conference on Africa; medical services in Nigeria; 1971 NAACP national convention. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; W. C. Patton; Robert B. Wiley; Melford W. Walker; W. Lester Banks. 0150 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, August 1971. 57 pp. Major Topic: Amarillo, Texas, schools. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Frank Church.

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0207 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, September–October 1971. 166 pp. Major Topics: Fortieth anniversary of Wilkins’ involvement in NAACP; voting rights for eighteen year olds; construction industry employment; Attica Correctional Facility uprising; Opportunities Industrialization Centers. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; David Dorn; Philip J. Brock; Herrick S. Roth; Frank W. Burrell. 0373 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, November–December 1971. 121 pp. Major Topics: Soul City, North Carolina; U.S. Department of Justice, Law Enforcement Assistance Administration. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Elizabeth R. Smith; Floyd B. McKissick; Kivie Kaplan; Jesse L. Jackson. 0494 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, January–March 1972. 163 pp. Major Topics: Forest Hills housing project; school busing; , Inc. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Clarence M. Mitchell Jr.; Frank C. Carlucci; James H. Robinson; Mildred Bond Roxborough; Nathaniel R. Jones; Leonard H. Carter; Leonard Garment. 0657 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, April–June 1972. 125 pp. Major Topics: National Black Political Convention; Forest Hills housing project. Principal Correspondents: Tom Kahn; Roy Wilkins; W. C. Patton; Barbee William Durham; U Thant; John D. Rockefeller III; Edward B. Muse; Floyd B. McKissick. Group VI, Box A-48 0782 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, July–August 1972. 102 pp. Major Topics: NAACP policy on South Africa; health care services in Harlem, New York. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; David Selden. 0884 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, September 1972. 105 pp. Major Topics: NAACP programs regarding prisons and prisoners; Forest Hills housing project; discrimination in construction industry employment; Coalition for Job Equality in the Construction Industry. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Marvin Lee Witcher; John A. Morsell; August Meier; Melinease Hutchinson. Reel 20 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-48 cont. 0001 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, October 1972. 123 pp. Major Topics: Head Start, Parent and Child Centers; school busing. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Marvin Caplan; Ruth E. Rucker; Virna M. Canson; Barbee William Durham. 0124 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, November 1972. 123 pp. Major Topics: School desegregation in Canarsie, Brooklyn, New York; criminal justice system; education; environmental protection; health care services; automobile insurance; public transportation; cosmetics industry; race relations in New York City; Council of Churches of the City of New York; United Church of Christ, Commission for Racial Justice; separatism. Principal Correspondents: Kenneth L. Buford; Roy Wilkins; Nelson A. Rockefeller; Stokely Carmichael; Walter F. Mondale.

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0247 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, December 1972. 93 pp. Major Topics: Tax Action Campaign; civil rights policies of Nixon administration; Art of Black Music Society. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Fred R. Harris; Roy Innis. 0340 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, January 1973. 132 pp. Major Topics: Fund-raising; civil rights policies of Nixon administration; ALPHA School (drug rehabilitation program). Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Jesse L. Jackson; Gloster B. Current; John A. Morsell. 0472 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, February 1973. 105 pp. Major Topic: Nixon administration budget proposals. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; William W. Parker; John A. Morsell; Kivie Kaplan; Stephen Gill Spottswood. 0577 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, March 1973. 189 pp. Major Topics: Employment; education; political participation; memberships; fund- raising; symposium on civil rights at Lyndon Baines Johnson Library; South African Open Games. Principal Correspondents: Leonard H. Carter; Roy Wilkins. Group VI, Box A-49 0766 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, April 1973. 133 pp. Major Topics: Protest in San Diego of South African apartheid; Saint Mark’s Educational Foundation of South Africa (education for people of color in South Africa); school desegregation. Principal Correspondents: Henry Ford II; Emmett C. Burns; Emory O. Jackson; Roy Wilkins; Frank M. McCraw; Bayard Rustin. 0899 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, May–June 1973. 180 pp. Major Topics: Extradition of Donald Lewis Cox to Alabama for rape case; employment in broadcasting; fund-raising; Forest Hills housing project; school busing. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Earl Warren; Milton J. Shapp. Reel 21 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-49 cont. 0001 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, July 1973. 134 pp. Major Topics: Employment discrimination; 1973 NAACP national convention; extradition to Alabama of Donald Lewis Cox for rape case. Principal Correspondents: Robert C. Weaver; Jack Terzia; Gene R. Renslow; Eugene T. Reed; Roy Wilkins; Eleanor Holmes Norton. 0135 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, August 1973. 131 pp. Major Topics: School desegregation; Atlanta NAACP branch; African Americans in Cairo, Illinois; Connecticut NAACP legal defense activities. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Ernest Gruening; Laurance S. Rockefeller; Elsie F. Carrington. 0266 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, September 1973. 72 pp. Principal Correspondents: W. Marvin Watson; Roy Wilkins; Tom White; Lady Bird Johnson.

34 Frame No.

0338 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, October–November 1973. 142 pp. Major Topics: Soul City, North Carolina; school desegregation proposal; extradition to Alabama of Donald Lewis Cox for rape case. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Floyd B. McKissick. 0480 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Correspondence, December 1973. 50 pp. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Herman D. Flowers; John D. deButts; Vernon E. Jordan Jr.; James Brown Jr. Group VI, Box A-50 0530 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Interviews, 1968–1974 and Undated. 68 pp. Major Topics: Black Power; independent black political party; Civil Rights Documentation Project; school desegregation and school busing; Martin Luther King Jr.; Mary McLeod Bethune. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Robert E. Wright. 0598 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Invitations, 1969. 13 pp. Principal Correspondents: Larry C. Greene; Roy Wilkins; Donald D. Haley. 0611 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Invitations, 1970. 137 pp. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Browlia West; Charles S. Crook Jr.; Kumeo Yoshinari; Melba Taylor; Ersa Poston; ; ; Julian Bond; Ramsey Clark; Dore Schary; William H. Oliver; Kay Yamashita; Noboru Honda; Hilda Stokely; Mel Patrick; Fannye J. Benford; Theodore M. Hesburgh; Birch Bayh; John V. Lindsay; Clarence M. Mitchell Jr.; A. Philip Randolph; Berkeley G. Burrell; Lowell R. Beck; Raymond Pace Alexander; Richard J. Schwartz; Sarah H. Goddard; Willis W. Atwell. 0748 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Invitations, 1971. 109 pp. Principal Correspondents: William R. Cotter; Paul Jennings; Lloyd Von Blaine; Sylvia Quarker; Donald F. Simpson; Roy Wilkins; Joseph Duffey; Robert F. Wagner; Richard V. Clarke; Herbert J. Farber; Holmes Brown; Roy Innis; Ohene Darko; Lester Crown; Roy Schoessling. 0857 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Invitations, 1972–1978. 79 pp. Principal Correspondents: Edward I. Koch; Roy Wilkins; C. Stanley Lowell; John Durant Cooke; Edgar M. Bronfman; Arthur H. Coleman. Reel 22 Group VI, Series A, Administrative File cont. General Office File cont. Group VI, Box A-51 0001 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Letters to Editor, 1971. 10 pp. Major Topic: African American leaders. Principal Correspondent: Roy Wilkins. 0011 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library, Austin, Texas, 1972. 11 pp. Major Topic: Civil Rights Symposium. Principal Correspondent: Harry Middleton. 0022 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Memoranda, 1959–1969. 40 pp. Major Topics: Travel expenses; NAACP youth councils; memberships; Augusta, Georgia, riot (1970); construction industry; NAACP National Youth Work Committee. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Gloster B. Current; Sydney Finley; James Brown Jr.; Edward B. Muse; Alfred Baker Lewis.

35 Frame No.

0062 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Memoranda, 1970. 168 pp. Major Topics: Philadelphia Plan; school desegregation; conviction of San Fernando Valley State College students; San Francisco NAACP branch; Los Angeles NAACP branch; construction industry; murder of students at Jackson State College; civil rights policies of Nixon administration; African Americans and labor unions; race relations on college and university campuses. Principal Correspondents: Herbert Hill; L. C. Bates; James Brown Jr.; June Shagaloff; Leonard H. Carter; Mable Jackson; Henry Lee Moon; Stephen Gill Spottswood; Leonard Garment; Carl C. McGraven; Edward B. Muse; Gloster B. Current; James Hamilton; William R. Morris. 0230 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Memoranda, January–March 1971. 128 pp. Major Topics: Voter registration; NAACP Special Contribution Fund; NAACP programs; African Americans and labor unions; NAACP National Youth Work Committee; demonstration in Columbus, Ohio, regarding schools. Principal Correspondents: James Brown Jr.; Edward B. Muse; Roy Wilkins; Richard W. McClain; Henry Lee Moon; Nathaniel R. Jones; Herbert Hill. 0358 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Memoranda, April–December 1971. 87 pp. Major Topics: Voter registration; low-income housing; housing discrimination. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; James C. Taylor; James Brown Jr.; William R. Morris; Richard W. McClain; Henry Lee Moon. 0445 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Memoranda, 1972. 69 pp. Major Topics: Stanley Park housing project, Glen Cove, Long Island, New York; assassination of Fred Hampton and Mark Clark; employment; Kawaida Towers housing project. Principal Correspondents: H. K. Reid; Roy Wilkins; William R. Morris; Stephen Gill Spottswood; John A. Morsell; Henry Lee Moon; Nathaniel R. Jones; Kathleen Cleaver; Gloster B. Current. 0514 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Memoranda, January–March 1973. 124 pp. Major Topics: Southern University student protests; extradition to Alabama of Donald Lewis Cox for rape case; employment discrimination. Principal Correspondents: Herbert Hill; James Brown Jr.; Roy Wilkins; Henry Lee Moon; Edward B. Muse; William R. Morris; Harvard Ronald H. Britton; Gloster B. Current; Alphonso Deal. 0638 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Memoranda, April–July 1973. 135 pp. Major Topics: Canarsie, Brooklyn, schools; memberships; Atlanta NAACP branch’s support for school desegregation plan. Principal Correspondents: Roy Wilkins; Mercedes A. Wright; John A. Morsell; Herbert Hill; William R. Morris; James Brown Jr.; Gloster B. Current; Edward B. Muse. 0773 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Memoranda, August–December 1973. 164 pp. Major Topics: Military personnel; memberships; corporate contributions to NAACP; Canarsie, Brooklyn, schools; Atlanta, Georgia, school desegregation; conviction of sailor in Kitty Hawk racial disturbance case; Pan African Congress. Principal Correspondents: Edward B. Muse; Roy Wilkins; William R. Morris; Henry Lee Moon; Nathaniel R. Jones; James Brown Jr.; Gloster B. Current; John A. Morsell; Harvey Ronald H. Britton. Group VI, Box A-53 0937 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Trips, Germany. 1972. 41 pp. Major Topic: Observation of U.S. military facilities in Germany. Principal Correspondents: Curtis R. Smothers; Roy Wilkins.

36 Frame No.

0978 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Trips, Iran, 1968. 20 pp. Major Topic: International Conference on Human Rights in Tehran. Principal Correspondent: Roy Wilkins. 0998 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Trips, [Israel], 1971–1972. 12 pp. Principal Correspondent: Roy Wilkins. 1010 Staff—Roy Wilkins, Trips, South Africa, 1972. 40 pp. Major Topics: Association for the Educational and Cultural Advancement for Africans; separatism; Black Power; U.S. corporations in South Africa. Principal Correspondents: Oscar D. Shade; John A. Morsell; Mildred Bond Roxborough.

37 PRINCIPAL CORRESPONDENTS INDEX

The following index is a guide to the major correspondents in this microform publication. The first number after each entry refers to the reel, while the four-digit number following the colon refers to the frame number at which a particular file folder containing correspondence by the person begins. Hence, 5: 0261 refers to the folder that begins at Frame 0261 of Reel 5. By referring to the Reel Index, which constitutes to the initial section of this guide, the researcher will find the folder title, inclusive dates, and a list of Major Topics and Principal Correspondents, arranged in the order in which they appear on the film.

Abernathy, Ralph D. Anthony, Ralph 5: 0261; 10: 0476 6: 0206 Abu-Lughod, Ibrahim Applewhite, Harry 7: 0170 8: 0282 Abzug, Bella S. Aronson, Arnold 2: 0483 5: 0261–0365, 0865; 6: 0001; 12: 0282– Alden, Vernon R. 0836; 13: 0001–0437 7: 0769 Arywitz, Sigmund Alexander, Chauncey A. 18: 0230 10: 0409 Asher, Dan Alexander, Clifford L., Jr. 13: 0508 3: 0441–0533 Atwell, Willis W. Alexander, June Shagaloff 21: 0611 16: 0794 Avent, Loretta Taylor see also Shagaloff, June 8: 0282 Alexander, Raymond Pace Baehr, Karl 21: 0611 7: 0170 Alexander, Roland Bakare, Afolabi A. 6: 0206 7: 0556 Allen, Thomas H. Baker, Charles R. 4: 0908 9: 0192 Allmore, Sallie Baker, Jane 5: 0757 8: 0741 Anderson, Carolyn Baldinger, Mary Alice 7: 0291 9: 0873 Anderson, Clinton P. Banks, W. Lester 5: 0313 5: 0502, 0865; 15: 0001; 18: 0689; Anderson, Marian 19: 0001 7: 0831 Barber, Alden G. Anderson, Robert 7: 0831 4: 0480 Barnwell, William D. 18: 0001

39 Baron, Sydney S. Biggers, S. E. 7: 0769 6: 0206 Bates, L. C. Birenbaum, William M. 22: 0062 4: 0324 Bayh, Birch Bitker, Bruno V. 2: 0314–0388, 0516; 5: 0830, 0961; 5: 0148 21: 0611 Black, Lucille Beadenkopf, Anne 4: 0851 1: 0005 Blaine, Lloyd Von Beal, Gerald F. 21: 0748 7: 0831 Boggs, J. Caleb Beall, J. Glenn, Jr. 2: 0516; 5: 0261 2: 0516 Bond, Julian Beard, Charles A. 6: 0523; 21: 0611 10: 0589 Bond, Mildred Beck, Lowell R. 1: 0489; 13: 0596; 16: 0932 13: 0596–0808; 21: 0611 see also Roxborough, Mildred Bond Beer, Samuel H. Bookbinder, Hyman 12: 0282 11: 0606 Belafonte, Harry Boon, Ina 21: 0611 5: 0570 Belcher, Smith Booth, Arch N. 6: 0206 2: 0590 Bell, George T. Booth, William H. 4: 0725 1: 0941; 11: 0335; 17: 0725 Bell, Juanita Bourne, Sylvia W. 6: 0206 7: 0291 Bellmon, Henry Boyd, William J. D. 2: 0457 11: 0450 Bellow, Saul Brademas, John 17: 0249 3: 0857 Benford, Fannye J. Braden, Henry E., IV 21: 0611 15: 0182 Bennett, Charles E. Bradley, Thomas 2: 0884 6: 0423 Bennett, L. Howard Bridwell, Lowell K. 3: 0001 6: 0110 Bennett, Wallace F. Brinkley, David 5: 0313, 0757 16: 0403 Benson, Lucy Wilson Britton, Harvey Ronald H. 9: 0520 15: 0280, 0461; 16: 0963; 18: 0230; Benson, Robert S. 22: 0514, 0773 14: 0001 Britton, James C. Biaggi, Mario 4: 0080 2: 0388; 8: 0933 Brock, Philip J. Bible, Alan 19: 0207 2: 0483 Brody, David Biemiller, Andrew J. 13: 0244 4: 0527; 5: 0961 Bronfman, Edgar M. 21: 0857

40 Brooke, Edward W. Bundy, McGeorge 2: 0457, 0516; 5: 0365, 0757 8: 0741 Brooks, John M. Burke, Kenyon C. 16: 0001 7: 0291, 0468–0556; 15: 0655 Brown, Charles E. Burns, Emmett C. 5: 0502 20: 0766 Brown, Edward Burrell, Berkeley G. 8: 0282 10: 0409; 21: 0611 Brown, Frank Burrell, Frank W. 13: 0244 7: 0556; 19: 0207 Brown, Hayward C. Burress, Thomas H., III 3: 0962 9: 0192 Brown, Holmes Burton, Russell J. 21: 0748 6: 0206 Brown, Irving Byrd, G. L. 18: 0230 6: 0206 Brown, James, Jr. Calvert, Robert L. 15: 0001; 18: 0001, 0230; 21: 0480; 7: 0696 22: 0022–0358, 0514–0773 Campbell, Anthony C. Brown, Leo 10: 0734 10: 0160 Cannon, Howard W. Brown, Lula 2: 0516 16: 0154 Canson, Virna M. Brown, Marvin 6: 0423; 10: 0098; 16: 0001; 18: 0230– 10: 0538 0356; 20: 0001 Brown, Paul D. Caplan, Marvin 10: 0538 12: 0282–0487, 0646; 13: 0001, 0181, Brown, William H., III 0334; 20: 0001 3: 0533 Carey, John Brunini, Joseph B. 9: 0192 8: 0001 Carlucci, Frank C. Bruton, Leon 19: 0494 4: 0797 Carmichael, Stokely Bryant, Amanda 7: 0468; 20: 0124 17: 0917 Carnegie, Amos H. Bryant, Girard T. 3: 0917 6: 0623 Carpenter, Thomas E., III Bryant, Thomas E. 14: 0723 4: 0797 Carrington, Elsie F. Brydges, Earl W. 15: 0556; 21: 0135 6: 0732 Carroll, Sally G. Buchanan, Carroll 15: 0182 14: 0534 Carter, Byron Q. Buford, Kenneth L. 6: 0206 3: 0685; 4: 0797; 15: 0001–0120; Carter, Leonard H. 20: 0124 4: 0908; 6: 0413, 0464; 7: 0696; Buggs, John A. 8: 0585; 10: 0589, 0734; 15: 0001– 2: 0609, 0737 0381; 16: 0001, 0963; 17: 0249– Bunche, Ralph J. 0353, 0725; 18: 0001, 0230–0689; 14: 0557 19: 0494; 20: 0577; 22: 0062

41 Carter, Robert L. Clarke, Richard V. 3: 0252; 7: 0066, 0170 21: 0748 Carter, W. Beverly, Jr. Clay, William L. 7: 0291 2: 0884; 18: 0937 Case, Clifford P. Claytor, Glenn 2: 0516; 5: 0365, 0961 14: 0410 Cashin, John L., Jr. Cleaver, Kathleen 6: 0408 22: 0445 Cass, Rosemary Higgins Cobb, Charles E. 10: 0342 4: 0324; 8: 0065 Cassell, Frank H. Cobb, W. Montague 3: 0698 17: 0249 Casson, Ellis H. Cobb, William H., Jr. 17: 0353 14: 0786 Celler, Emanuel Cochran, Clay L. 2: 0825 17: 0917 Chapital, Arthur J., Sr. Coleman, Arthur H. 4: 0908; 15: 0120–0182 21: 0857 Chapman, Ella Ruth Coleman, Elijah 14: 0890 4: 0908 Chapman, Robert C. Coleman, Samuel C. 9: 0891 5: 0365 Chase, Gordon Colley, Nathaniel S. 3: 0375 15: 0655 Chase, W. Howard Collins, Leroy 8: 0065 2: 0631 Cheek, James E. Colquitt, Julian O. 9: 0488 4: 0480 Cherne, Leo Connell, Peter J. 9: 0052 9: 0520 Chernin, Albert D. Connett, Paul 13: 0508; 17: 0449 11: 0941 Chiles, Lawton Cook, Marlow W. 2: 0483 2: 0457; 5: 0313 Chisholm, Shirley Cooke, John Durant 2: 0483 21: 0857 Choate, Robert Cooper, John Sherman 4: 0604 2: 0457; 5: 0570 Chuman, Frank P. Cosgrove, John E. 12: 0282 18: 0230 Church, Frank Cotter, William R. 2: 0457; 5: 0313–0365; 19: 0150 11: 0112–0195; 21: 0748 Clark, Joseph W. B. Covington, Paul 5: 0313, 0570 6: 0206 Clark, Ramsey Cowger, William O. 8: 0174; 21: 0611 2: 0388 Clark, Robert L. Craft, Silas 6: 0206 2: 0117 Clarke, Don Cranston, Alan 10: 0589 2: 0388, 0516; 5: 0365

42 Crawford, Lamar Deckard, S. L. 14: 0786 2: 0609 Creel, Dana S. Dee, Ruby 11: 0001–0112 9: 0935 Crocker, Robert M. Delley, J. R. 13: 0001 6: 0206 Crook, Charles S., Jr. Dey, Joseph C., Jr. 21: 0611 7: 0291 Crowley, Patrick F. Diana, K. A. 3: 0698 7: 0170 Crown, Lester Diggs, Charles C., Jr. 21: 0748 2: 0801, 0949; 7: 0291; 8: 0174; Cullings, David 18: 0937 7: 0398 Dixon, Henry L. Curl, Leonard 4: 0908 4: 0797 Dixon, Julius Current, Gloster B. 6: 0919 1: 0521, 0941; 2: 0267, 0631, 0825; Dockery, Richard L. 3: 0698, 0962; 4: 0324, 0604, 0725; 4: 0797; 15: 0182; 18: 0154–0230 6: 0135; 7: 0066; 11: 0335; Dodd, Thomas J. 12: 0001; 13: 0508; 14: 0717; 2: 0388–0457; 5: 0313, 0757 16: 0001, 0647–0794; 17: 0249; Doll, Joseph W. 18: 0356–0494; 20: 0340; 22: 0022– 6: 0423 0062, 0445–0773 Dominick, Peter H. Dalton, Michael H. 3: 0857; 5: 0365, 0830 10: 0476 Donahue, Wilma Darko, Ohene 6: 0135 21: 0748 Donovan, Jerome F. Dart, Alice A. 13: 0808 4: 0132 Dorn, David Davies, Marvin 19: 0207 15: 0280; 18: 0230, 0580 Douglas, Emmitt J. Davis, Alvin 14: 0847 9: 0520 Douglas, Paul H. Davis, C. Anderson 6: 0602 5: 0830; 15: 0786 Dow, Ernest A. Davis, George M., Jr. 10: 0270 6: 0899 Dow, John G. Davis, George W. 2: 0884 14: 0890 Dowling, John B. Davis, Margaret 7: 0170 5: 0757 Draper, William H., Jr. Davis, Ossie 5: 0001 1: 0489; 9: 0935; 12: 0001; 13: 0508 Driscoll, Glen R. Dawkins, Maurice A. 17: 0449 4: 0797 Duckett, Alfred Deal, Alphonso 8: 0585 22: 0514 Duckworth, C. J. deButts, John D. 9: 0620 21: 0480

43 Duffey, Joseph Finley, Sydney 21: 0748 22: 0022 Dunbar, Leslie W. Fischer, John H. 17: 0725 13: 0088 Durham, Barbee William Fleischman, Harry 5: 0570–0757; 17: 0725; 18: 0001; 11: 0510–0606 19: 0657; 20: 0001 Flemming, Arthur S. Duster, Donald 6: 0135 8: 0065 Fletcher, Leo Eagleton, Thomas F. 15: 0381 2: 0388; 5: 0830 Flowers, Herman D. Early, Homer 21: 0480 2: 0483 Floyd, Henry W. Easley, Robert W. 16: 0647 5: 0027 Foley, Eugene P. Edelman, Marian Wright 5: 0027 12: 0487 Foote, John B. Elfert, Sam 14: 0890 4: 0527 Ford, Henry, II Elimu, Cheo 20: 0766 8: 0174 Francois, Terry A. Elliot, Robin A. 1: 0662; 6: 0423 3: 1006 Franklin, Joan Engel, Irving M. 16: 0647 11: 0510; 17: 0449 Franklin, John Hope Ethridge, Samuel B. 15: 0280 9: 0891 Fratkin, Susan Evans, James C. 7: 0556 3: 0001 Frazier, James, Jr. Exley, David J. 2: 0609 14: 0557 Freeman, Frankie M. Fagan, Maury 8: 0467 13: 0244 Freeman, Orville L. Fairclough, Tom 2: 0117 5: 0757 Freeman, Samuel D. Farber, Herbert J. 10: 0160, 0409; 15: 0001 21: 0748 Frelinghuysen, Peter H. B. Farmer, James 2: 0516 12: 0282 Fuqua, Carl A. Feldman, Eugene W. 15: 0655 13: 0508 Gage-Colby, Ruth Felton, George 10: 0001 4: 0324 Gales, C. C. Fessenden, Bruce 10: 0538 6: 0841 Gappert, Gary Finch, Jim 11: 0236 8: 0174 Gardner, John W. Fingers, Andrew 8: 0065; 9: 0520; 13: 0579–0808 4: 0908 Garfield, Julian I. 1: 0728

44 Garment, Leonard Goree, T. V. 19: 0494; 22: 0062 6: 0206 Garner, Rosearle Gossett, William T. 5: 0757 10: 0001; 11: 0450 Garrison, Esther Graham, Aaron R. 6: 0523 6: 0899 Gaston, A. G. Graham, Billy 8: 0933 7: 0170 Gaston, Glorietta E. Granger, Richard 4: 0480 8: 0741 Gigger, Helen Coleman Grant, Woodrow 18: 0154 5: 0757 Gildin, Marcus Gravel, Mike 13: 0508 5: 0313 Gilliam, James C. Gray, James A. 10: 0848 6: 0623 Ginsburg, David Green, Ernest G. 4: 0527; 18: 0580 4: 0480 Glasberg, Victor Greenberg, Jack 15: 0001 12: 0097 Glasser, Ira Greene, James F. 10: 0098 4: 0223–0324 Glenn, John H., Jr. Greene, Larry C. 4: 0223 21: 0598 Glickstein, Howard A. Greene, William J. 2: 0737; 13: 0088–0181 15: 0280 Gnaizda, Robert Greenfield, Robert K. 4: 0324 17: 0449 Goddard, Sarah H. Gregg, Charles S. 21: 0611 15: 0655 Gold, Bertram H. Grier, Carey, Jr. 11: 0772–0897 9: 0052 Goldberg, Arthur J. Griffin, Robert P. 9: 0001; 14: 0557; 18: 0001 5: 0313, 0570 Goldin, Louis I. Griggs, Edward A. 17: 0725 10: 0098 Goldwater, Barry Grinstein, Hyman B. 6: 0415 17: 0449 Goldwyn, Samuel, Jr. Grove, Daniel G. 1: 0489 5: 0502 Goode, Malvin R. Gruening, Ernest 5: 0477 21: 0135 Goodell, Charles E. Grumbach, George J., Jr. 2: 0457; 5: 0313, 0961 11: 0510 Goodman, Frank Guarini, Frank J. 1: 0489 6: 0632 Gordon, Jerry Guess, Jerry M. 10: 0001 6: 0001–0051; 16: 0647; 18: 0001, 0230 Gore, Albert, Sr. Guinan, Matthew 2: 0388; 5: 0313 9: 0520

45 Gundersen, Carroll Harvey, James H. 9: 0520 12: 0745–0836; 13: 0181 Gurewitz, Don Hatfield, Mark O. 10: 0001 2: 0388; 5: 0313, 0830; 6: 0051 Guscott, Kenneth I. Heide, Wilma Scott 15: 0381; 16: 0963 10: 0270 Guttmacher, Alan F. Height, Dorothy 3: 1006 5: 0261; 8: 0741 Hagan, Robert L. Henle, R. J. 13: 0244 13: 0088 Halbert, Herschel Henry, Aaron E. 9: 0052 4: 0223; 6: 0602; 15: 0280 Haley, Donald D. Henry, Calvin O. L. 21: 0598 18: 0230 Hamilton, James Heredia, Jesse 12: 0282, 0487, 0745; 13: 0001; 7: 0291 22: 0062 Hernandez, Aileen C. Handman, Edward 9: 0935; 10: 0409 5: 0365 Hertzberg, Arthur Harding, Vincent 13: 0508 14: 0001 Hesburgh, Theodore M. Harmon, John H. 13: 0088; 21: 0611 7: 0398 Hess, Stephen Harney, Richard C. 6: 0135 2: 0631 Hester, James M. Harper, Mary L. 13: 0088 18: 0230 Hickel, Walter J. Harrington, Michael 4: 0080 17: 0249 Hickerson, J. Arthur Harris, Bertram 4: 0051 15: 0280 Higgins, Doand H. Harris, David, Jr. 11: 0964 8: 0282 Hightower, Charles Harris, Fred R. 10: 0864; 11: 0236 2: 0388, 0516; 3: 0698; 20: 0247 Hildebrand, Richard Allen Harris, James T., Jr. 7: 0769 17: 0449 Hill, Herbert Harris, Thomas J. 18: 0230; 22: 0062–0230, 0514–0638 18: 0836 Hines, John E. Harrison, James L. 14: 0723 4: 0527 Hitt, Patricia Reilly Harshman, Abe 3: 0917 13: 0508 Hocutt, Robert B. Hart, Philip A. 4: 0223 2: 0457, 0884; 5: 0365 Hodges, Joseph H. Hartke, Vance 8: 0001 2: 0388; 5: 0313, 0570 Hoffman, Paul G. Hartman, Paul 9: 0258 11: 0510–0606 Hoiles, William M. 5: 0313

46 Holcomb, Luther Huie, William Bradford 3: 0441–0533; 17: 0449 2: 0949 Holden, John B. Humphrey, Hubert H. 2: 0117 2: 0516, 0884; 4: 0001; 17: 0449 Holder, Reuben D. Hungate, William L. 4: 0908 2: 0388 Holland, Jerome H. Hurley, Ruby 6: 0851 7: 0066; 16: 0001, 0647 Holland, Spessard L. Hutchinson, Dorothy 5: 0313 12: 0282 Hollings, Ernest F. Hutchinson, Melinease 2: 0388 19: 0884 Hollis, Harris W. Hutner, Mike 3: 0016 1: 0489 Holman, Ben Ichord, Richard H. 4: 0223–0324 2: 0825 Holman, M. Carl Ingram, O. W. 13: 0596, 0808; 14: 0001, 0341–0410 18: 0356 Holmes, Peter E. Innis, Roy 3: 1006 12: 0001, 0123; 17: 0917; 20: 0247; Holstein, Alexander E., Jr. 21: 0748 11: 0510 Inouye, Daniel K. Honda, Noboru 2: 0388, 0825; 5: 0313–0365 18: 0154; 21: 0611 Israel, C. E. Hooper, Janet 9: 0405 11: 0236 Iyalla, J. Y. F. Hope, Bob 6: 0323 7: 0170 Jackson, Albert Horton, Frank 6: 0206 2: 0388 Jackson, Charles N., II Houser, George M. 14: 0410 11: 0236–0335 Jackson, Emory O. Houston, C. C. 20: 0766 2: 0609 Jackson, Harry L. Houston, Mary 8: 0933 4: 0324 Jackson, Jesse L. Hoving, Thomas P. F. 19: 0373; 20: 0340 9: 0891 Jackson, Mable Howard, Marion 15: 0120; 22: 0062 12: 0138 Jackson, Samuel C. Howard, Warren 3: 0441 9: 0258; 15: 0001; 16: 0647 Jacobson, Marshall M. Howe, Harold, II 13: 0508 3: 0865 Jacqz, Jane W. Huff, Brisco 11: 0001, 0112 6: 0206 Jakaboski, Theodore Hughes, H. Stuart 10: 0538 17: 0249 James, John J. Hughes, Harold E. 5: 0961 2: 0388

47 Javits, Jacob K. Jordan, Absalom 3: 0857; 5: 0365, 0757, 0961; 12: 0487 7: 0831 Jean, Harriet Jordan, Don W. 3: 0685 6: 0323 Jennings, Paul Jordan, Elizabeth C. 21: 0748 6: 0851 Jewell, Jerry D. Jordan, Vernon E., Jr. 4: 0908 10: 0270; 13: 0088–0181; 14: 0410; Johnson, Al Walker 21: 0480 6: 0206 Kadane, David K. Johnson, Arthur L. 11: 0080 7: 0066 Kahn, Tom Johnson, Azalee 17: 0449; 19: 0657 6: 0206 Kanter, Joseph H. Johnson, Claudette 13: 0181 4: 0527 Kaplan, Kivie Johnson, Janice 7: 0556; 11: 0510; 15: 0786; 16: 0001– 5: 0865 0154; 19: 0373; 20: 0472 Johnson, Joseph Katz, Ruth W. 6: 0206 12: 0001 Johnson, Lady Bird Katze, Charles I. 21: 0266 9: 0052 Johnson, Lyndon B. Kaufer, Sonya F. 4: 0144 11: 0510 Johnson, Reginald Kaufman, William J. 10: 0160 14: 0410 Johnson, Robert C. Kayatt, Edward R. 6: 0206 7: 0170 Johnson, Robert E. Keating, Kenneth B. 7: 0904 12: 0282 Johnson, Samuel H. Keith, Damon J. 3: 0698 6: 0589 Johnson, Willard Kellar, Charles L. 14: 0551 5: 0365, 0865 Jones, Bill Kelley, Douglas 1: 0668 8: 0687 Jones, Charles K. Kelly, James A. 17: 0353 13: 0596 Jones, Franklin Kendall, Donald M. 6: 0206 9: 0891 Jones, J. P. Kennedy, Edward M. 4: 0080 2: 0388–0457, 0516; 5: 0961; 9: 0325; Jones, Nathaniel R. 17: 0449, 0725 2: 0232; 15: 0182; 16: 0001–0154, Kennedy, Richard 0647; 18: 0580, 0937; 19: 0494; 8: 0001 22: 0230, 0445, 0773 Kennedy, Robert F. Jones, Roscoe 2: 0825 4: 0480 Kent, Frank C. Jones, William C. 4: 0797 5: 0261; 15: 0120

48 Kent, Gladys R. Lazere, Haskell L. 6: 0206 11: 0510–0606 Kenyatta, Charles Lee, Allen 6: 0323 14: 0786 Kenyatta, Muhammad Lee, Donald R. 8: 0933 15: 0182 Kerner, Otto Lee, Howard N. 4: 0527 2: 0949 Kester, John G. Lee, Ronald B. 3: 0016 4: 0908 King, Coretta Scott Lefkowitz, Louis J. 21: 0611 6: 0705 Kingsley, Daniel T. Lelyveld, Arthur J. 4: 0665 5: 0570; 11: 0897 Kingston, John E. Leonard, Jerris 6: 0732 4: 0223 Kleindienst, Richard G. Levi, Edward H. 5: 0365 4: 0396 Kleppe, Thomas S. Levine, Bertram 5: 0027 4: 0324 Knight, Curtis Levine, Naomi 6: 0919 11: 0897 Koch, Edward I. Lewis, Alfred Baker 21: 0857 18: 0937; 22: 0022 Kolish, Theodore J. Lewis, Charlotte 11: 0897 4: 0797 Kolowrat, Ernest Lewis, Chester I. 7: 0170 16: 0495 Komisar, Lucy Lewis, Dorothy 10: 0001; 12: 0745 10: 0734 Koury, Frederick Lewis, Elma 15: 0001 8: 0585 Krenkel, Peter A. Lewis, Frederick H. 3: 0865 8: 0741 Kubasik, Ben Lewis, Lawrence E. 9: 0873 6: 0206 Lafferty, Jim Lewis, Leslie L., Jr. 10: 0001 1: 0676 Lagemann, Ellen C. Libassi, Peter 12: 0487 13: 0596–0808; 16: 0403 Lake, William J. Lindsay, John V. 7: 0066 1: 0804–0941; 2: 0001; 21: 0611 Lansburgh, Therese W. Linowitz, Sol M. 8: 0282 10: 0342; 14: 0156–0410 Law, W. W. Litter, D. H. 6: 0523 2: 0001 Laws, Clarence A. Livingston, David 3: 0962 13: 0244 Lawson, Charles H., III Loeb, Carl M., Jr. 4: 0604 10: 0001

49 Logan, Ruth A. Marcus, Samuel 7: 0831 17: 0001 Logan, Willis Marland, S. P., Jr. 11: 0236 3: 0917 Long, Peter Marriott, J. Willard 10: 0589 9: 0001 Long, Russell B. Martin, Galen 2: 0457 6: 0536 Lourie, Norman V. Martin, John L. 6: 0841 12: 0001 Love, Howard Martin, Ruby G. 4: 0908 3: 0865; 14: 0341 Lowell, C. Stanley Maslow, Will 21: 0857 5: 0261; 11: 0897 Lowenstein, Allard K. Mathias, Charles, Jr. 2: 0949; 7: 0291–0398 2: 0388 Lucas, Charles C. Matthew, Thomas W. 5: 0830 5: 0261 Lucas, Earl S. Maxwell, Arthur O. 6: 0602 4: 0480 Lucas, Robert L. Mayer, Jean 7: 0696 4: 0604; 6: 0135; 15: 0001 Lyons, Douglas Mazey, Emil 8: 0001 17: 0571 Mabry, Frank, Jr. Mazzie, Bruce 7: 0468 14: 0534 Mackey, R. L. McCarthy, Eugene J. 16: 0154 2: 0388; 5: 0313, 0757 MacLaughlin, Janet McClain, Richard W. 11: 0236 16: 0794; 22: 0230–0358 Macy, John W., Jr. McClellan, John L. 2: 0609 5: 0757 Maddox, Lester McCloy, John J. 6: 0523 3: 0698 Maduro, Reynaldo P. McClure, Phyllis 5: 0020 6: 0323 Magnuson, Warren G. McCraven, Carl C. 2: 0457 15: 0280 Malkin, Peter L. McCraw, Frank M. 12: 0097 20: 0766 Malone, James A. McCune, Shirley D. 6: 0206 10: 0270 Manell, A. E. McCutcheon, James N. 4: 0851 16: 0001 Mangum, Robert J. McElfresh, Anne G. 6: 0705; 13: 0725 6: 0206 Mann, James O. McGovern, George 10: 0270 2: 0516, 0825–0884; 5: 0313, 0570, Mann, Theodore R. 0961; 11: 0606; 17: 0449, 0917 17: 0449

50 McGraven, Carl C. 12: 0369–0555, 0745; 19: 0494; 22: 0062 21: 0611 McIntyre, Thomas J. Mitchell, John N. 5: 0961 4: 0223 McKeever, Porter Mitchell, Leonard 14: 0557 8: 0065 McKenna, Norman C. Mitchell, Parren J. 4: 0051 2: 0801; 10: 0098–0160 McKissick, Floyd B. Mondale, Walter F. 9: 0620; 19: 0373, 0657; 21: 0338 5: 0365, 0961; 12: 0646; 20: 0124 McMillan, W. A. Mondschein, Ruth 15: 0381 7: 0769 McNeil, Alvin J. Montoya, Joseph M. 17: 0449 2: 0516; 5: 0757, 0961 McNeil, C. F. Moon, Henry Lee 10: 0001 4: 0604; 17: 0367; 18: 0356; 22: 0062– McPherson, Harry C., Jr. 0514, 0773 4: 0604 Moore, Walter McWilliams, James L. 6: 0206 7: 0291 Morris, William R. McZier, Arthur 6: 0135, 0632; 9: 0731; 16: 0001, 0647– 5: 0027 0794; 18: 0230, 0494; 22: 0062, Meany, George 0358–0773 7: 0291; 17: 0449 Morse, Muriel M. Meier, August 1: 0658 19: 0884 Morsell, John A. Mesiah, Frank B. 1: 0668, 0804–0941; 2: 0001, 0267, 7: 0904 0457, 0516, 0631, 0801–0884; Meyer, Vernon D. 3: 0016, 0636–0643, 0698, 0917, 4: 0223 1006; 4: 0051, 0132, 0324, 0604, Meyerson, James I. 0851–0908; 5: 0027, 0261–0477, 18: 0836 0961–0986; 6: 0323, 0423, 0589; Mhlambiso, Thami 7: 0170–0291, 0556, 0769–0904; 7: 0468 8: 0001, 0174–0467, 0687, 0875– Middleton, Harry 0933; 9: 0001–0258, 0488–0731, 22: 0011 0891–0935; 10: 0001, 0160–0538, Miller, Donald L. 0708–0734; 11: 0236, 0606, 0897; 3: 0016 12: 0001; 13: 0088, 0334, 0508; Miller, Harriet H. 14: 0156–0534, 0557, 0723, 0890; 11: 0112 15: 0001–0786; 16: 0001–0932; Miller, Israel 17: 0449; 18: 0154, 0356; 19: 0884; 9: 0258 20: 0340–0472; 22: 0445, 0638– Miller, Jack 0773, 1010 5: 0313 Moss, Frank E. Mink, Patsy T. 2: 0388–0457; 5: 0313, 0757 2: 0483 Moynihan, Daniel P. Mitchell, Clarence M., Jr. 4: 0604; 18: 0154 2: 0314, 0483; 3: 0167, 0698; 4: 0851– Mundt, Karl E. 0908; 5: 0261, 0365–0477; 6: 0001; 5: 0570

51 Muravchik, Emanuel Ober, Laura 9: 0405 7: 0170 Murphy, E. Jefferson O’Brien, Lawrence F. 11: 0001 4: 0908 Murphy, Laurence T. Oganovic, Nicholas J. 14: 0341 2: 0609 Murphy, Robert D. Ogilvie, Richard B. 6: 0375 6: 0530 Murray, Pauli Olivarez, Grace 14: 0723 15: 0655 Muse, Edward B. Oliver, William H. 19: 0657; 22: 0022–0230, 0514–0773 8: 0687; 9: 0258; 18: 0356; 21: 0611 Muskie, Edmund S. O’Meara, Andrew P. 2: 0388, 0483–0516, 0884; 5: 0261, 10: 0538 0365, 0865; 12: 0282; 17: 0449; Onukwube, Nwosu 18: 0001 8: 0467 Myers, Donis Oram, Harold L. 6: 0206 9: 0001 Natali, Louis M., Jr. Paige, Joseph C. 5: 0502 10: 0270 Neier, Aryeh Palmer, H. Bruce 7: 0468 10: 0001 Nelson, Gaylord Panetta, Leon E. 2: 0388, 0483; 5: 0313; 13: 0725; 3: 0865 17: 0110 Parker, Everett C. Nelson, Helen 13: 0334 10: 0270 Parker, Frank L. Nelson, Leon T. 3: 0865 5: 0570 Parker, William W. Newcomb, James C. 20: 0472 2: 0100 Parrish, John H. Newman, Edward 6: 0206 3: 0962 Passalacqua, Joan Marie Newsome, Paul A. 8: 0282 14: 0847 Patrick, Mel Nicks, Roy S. 21: 0611 7: 0170 Patterson, T. E. Nielsen, Waldemar A. 4: 0908 11: 0001 Patton, W. C. Nixon, Richard M. 16: 0154; 17: 0001; 18: 0230; 19: 0001, 4: 0604–0665; 11: 0112, 0606; 13: 0244 0657 North, Robert Payne, Reuben M. 7: 0769 7: 0291 Norton, Eleanor Holmes Pearle, Lynn 21: 0001 6: 0001 Ntlabati, Gladstone Pearson, Beverly J. 9: 0488 16: 0647 Oates, James F., Jr. Pearson, James B. 10: 0160 2: 0388; 5: 0313

52 Pearson, Lloyd N., Jr. Porter, John W. 18: 0494 8: 0065 Pell, Claiborne Porter, Robert G. 5: 0757 7: 0170 Pemberton, John deJ. Porter, W. R. Bruce 12: 0282 14: 0786 Pendleton, Clarence M., Jr. Poston, Ersa 10: 0160 21: 0611 Penn, William H., Sr. Pottinger, J. Stanley 17: 0110 4: 0324 Pennar, Margaret Price, John R. 7: 0170 4: 0604 Percy, Charles H. Price, Yvonne 2: 0388, 0884; 5: 0365, 0757, 0961; 3: 0643; 12: 0836; 13: 0001, 0244–0334 6: 0051 Pritchett, Carl R. Perlis, Leo 14: 0723 10: 0270 Prouty, Winston Perlstein, Norman H. 5: 0313 7: 0696, 0831 Proxmire, William Perna, Nicholas 2: 0388; 5: 0961; 6: 0051 6: 0323 Prunty, Howard E. Perry, Leon N. 8: 0282 6: 0530 Pryor, Donald J. Peters, Philip J. 9: 0192 8: 0001 Puryear, B. N. Petersen, Jacquelyn 6: 0851 15: 0556 Quarker, Sylvia Peterson, Arthur L. 21: 0748 5: 0001 Rabinove, Samuel Pettigrew, Thomas H., Jr. 7: 0556; 11: 0510–0772 8: 0741 Rachal, Anthony M., Jr. Petzel, Stanley G. 2: 0609 9: 0935 Raines, Earl E., Sr. Pitt, William E. 4: 0223 17: 0725 Randall, William Pittman, Tarea Hall 16: 0001 17: 0725 Randolph, A. Philip Player, Gary 2: 0388; 5: 0261; 9: 0520; 10: 0864; 7: 0291 18: 0356; 21: 0611 Podhoretz, Norman Rangel, Charles B. 17: 0249 2: 0884; 16: 0001 Pohlhaus, J. Francis Rauh, Joseph L., Jr. 16: 0794 3: 0167; 12: 0282–0487 Pollak, Stephen J. Reagan, Ronald 3: 0698 6: 0423; 18: 0689 Pollard, William E. Rector, Milton 18: 0356 11: 0510 Pompa, Gilbert G. Reed, Eugene T. 4: 0396 3: 0962; 16: 0154; 21: 0001

53 Reid, H. K. Romney, George 22: 0445 3: 0698 Reitman, Alan Roosevelt, Franklin D., Jr. 7: 0468 3: 0252 Renslow, Gene R. Ross, William A. 21: 0001 15: 0001 Reuther, Walter P. Rossbach, Jay H., Jr. 8: 0065; 12: 0282; 17: 0449 7: 0696 Reynolds, Marion Roth, Herrick S. 5: 0757 19: 0207 Rhodes, Lonnie Rothenberg, Elliot 4: 0797 7: 0556; 11: 0772 Ribicoff, Abe Rothman, Bob 2: 0825; 5: 0313 10: 0708 Richardson, Elliot Roxborough, Mildred Bond 3: 0917 3: 0698, 0962; 4: 0324–0396, 0797; Richmond, Julius B. 7: 0291–0398; 11: 0195; 15: 0786; 4: 0797 16: 0963; 17: 0001–0249, 0367; Rickman, Geraldine 19: 0494; 22: 1010 8: 0065 see also Bond, Mildred Roberts, Tommy Roy, William R. 15: 0461 2: 0516 Robinson, Cleveland Rucker, Ruth E. 10: 0270; 12: 0487, 0836; 13: 0244 20: 0001 Robinson, Hughes Alonzo, Sr. Ruebhausen, Oscar M. 5: 0365 11: 0001 Robinson, Jack E. Rumsfeld, Donald 7: 0291 4: 0797 Robinson, Jackie Rustin, Bayard 13: 0508 2: 0001, 0388; 5: 0261; 7: 0398, 0681; Robinson, James H. 10: 0864; 12: 0646–0836; 13: 0001– 19: 0494 0244; 17: 0249; 20: 0766 Robinson, Mabel Rutherford, William A. 5: 0261; 12: 0001 9: 0620 Robinson, Wendell P. Sable, Jack M. 6: 0919 6: 0732 Robison, Joseph B. Samuels, Howard J. 11: 0897 5: 0027 Rockefeller, John D., III Sandoval, Hilary, Jr. 19: 0657 5: 0027 Rockefeller, Laurance S. Sanford, Jodie C. 21: 0135 10: 0734 Rockefeller, Nelson A. Savage, Phillip H. 3: 0685; 11: 0510; 17: 0449; 20: 0124 15: 0280; 18: 0356, 0580 Rockefeller, Winthrop Saxbe, William B. 6: 0417 2: 0388; 5: 0313 Rogers, William P. Schary, Dore 7: 0291; 11: 0112 21: 0611 Rollins, Andrew, Jr. Schecter, Les 18: 0580 1: 0489

54 Scheuer, James H. Shanker, Albert 1: 0680 17: 0917 Schlesinger, Arthur Shapp, Milton J. 17: 0249 20: 0899 Schneider, Dorothy L. Shaw, Don C. 18: 0001 8: 0741 Schnitzler, William F. Sheer, Charles 12: 0282 6: 0001 Schoessling, Roy Shestack, Jerome J. 21: 0748 9: 0258 Schultz, Henry E. Shivers, Allan 12: 0282 2: 0590 Schwartz, Richard J. Shultz, George P. 21: 0611 12: 0836 Schweiker, Richard S. Silvera, John D. 2: 0516; 5: 0757, 0961 6: 0705 Schwengel, Fred Simmons, Althea T. L. 2: 0388 7: 0066; 16: 0794; 18: 0230 Scott, Hugh Simmons, Samuel J. 2: 0388; 12: 0282 13: 0001 Scott, Stanley S. Simon, Caroline K. 4: 0725 4: 0527 Scranton, William W. Simpson, Donald F. 12: 0282 21: 0748 Scrivens, J. Dennis Singletary, Otis A. 4: 0223 4: 0797 Scult, Allen Slaiman, Donald 15: 0182 7: 0556 Seabron, William M. Slawson, John 2: 0117 12: 0282 Seale, Bobby Smith, Ashby G. 12: 0001 4: 0851; 12: 0282 Seamans, Harry W. Smith, Charles H. 5: 0148 10: 0476 Seegers, Ernest F. Smith, Elizabeth R. 8: 0875 19: 0373 Seibels, George G., Jr. Smith, Jerome 1: 0655 12: 0123 Selden, David Smith, Ralph Tyler 17: 0249; 19: 0782 2: 0388 Sexton, Edwin T., Jr. Smith, Sherman W. 4: 0725; 10: 0734 4: 0604 Seymour, Milton A. Smothers, Curtis R. 7: 0556 22: 0937 Shade, Oscar D. Smythe, Hugh H. 22: 1010 17: 0725 Shagaloff, June Sobel, Sam 22: 0062 7: 0170 see also Alexander, June Shagaloff Solomon, Victor A. 12: 0123

55 Sorsby, William Quinn Sugarman, Jule M. 10: 0270 8: 0282 Spann, Esther L. Sullivan, Arthur D. 14: 0847 15: 0120 Spencer, Chauncey E. Sullivan, Leon H. 16: 0001 10: 0476 Spingarn, Arthur B. Sussman, Leonard R. 12: 0282 12: 0001 Spong, William B., Jr. Swenson, Alan 2: 0388; 5: 0313 9: 0891 Spottswood, Stephen Gill Swope, Daniel W. 2: 0884; 7: 0066; 12: 0282; 20: 0472; 8: 0282 22: 0062, 0445 Taeuber, Conrad Sprinkles, Ernest 2: 0631 4: 0665; 8: 0585 Talmadge, Herman E. Steele, James J. 2: 0388, 0516; 5: 0757 5: 0830 Tamayo, Marcial Steele, Julian D. 14: 0557 6: 0585 Tanenbaum, Marc H. Stevenson, Adlai E., III 11: 0772 2: 0516 Taylor, Bill Stewart, Jaddie R. 12: 0745 7: 0291 Taylor, James C. Stewart, James E. 22: 0358 18: 0230 Taylor, Melba Stewart, John B., Jr. 21: 0611 7: 0831 Teague, Robert V. Stewart, Richard E. 6: 0206 6: 0642 Tekulsky, Sol Still, Lawrence A. 3: 0698 4: 0527 Tenzer, Herbert Stokely, Hilda 7: 0556 21: 0611 Terman, Isaiah Stokes, Carl B. 11: 0510 17: 0449 Terwilliger, Nellie Stokes, Leland E. 7: 0556 7: 0769 Terzia, Jack Stokes, Louis 21: 0001 2: 0801 Thackston, Edward L. Stone, Chuck 3: 0865 4: 0223 Thant, U Stone, Elizabeth W. 19: 0657 2: 0631 Thomas, Darnell, Sr. Stout, John K. 6: 0417 5: 0757 Thomas, Richard C. Stulberg, Louis 10: 0589 9: 0520 Thomason, Robert H. Sturdivant, D. V. 8: 0687 2: 0483 Thompson, Gary R. 15: 0655

56 Thompson, Willard L. Wallance, Greg 8: 0933 17: 0249 Thornton, Kathryn Waller, Joseph, Jr. 5: 0757 9: 0325 Thrower, Randolph W. Walters, George K. 4: 0132 9: 0731 Thurmond, Strom Walton, Clarence C. 5: 0757 8: 0001 Tolbert, Linda R. Ward, A. Dudley 7: 0696 6: 0323 Townes, Clarence L., Jr. Ware, Linda 5: 0001 6: 0206 Townsend, Frank Warren, Earl 6: 0206 17: 0449; 20: 0899 Townsend, Minnie Washington, Shirley 15: 0120 6: 0323; 8: 0467 Townsend, William H. Waters, Nancy 4: 0908 6: 0589 Turner, Jesse H. Watson, W. Marvin 15: 0556 21: 0266 Twiname, John D. Watt, James G. 3: 1006 2: 0590 Twomey, James P. Way, Curtis J. 12: 0555 18: 0689 Tyler, Gus Weaver, Robert C. 9: 0001 13: 0579; 21: 0001 Tyus, Randall L. Webb, Harvey, Jr. 5: 0027 12: 0555 Usdane, William M. Weber, Joseph 3: 0865 9: 0873 Vaughn, Jack H. Webster, Sandra 14: 0156 12: 0001 Vaughns, F. L. Weeks, Lawrence B. 8: 0687 8: 0741 Venable, Abraham S. Weicker, Lowell P., Jr. 2: 0631 2: 0516 Venn, Grant Weiner, Josephine S. 3: 0865 9: 0935 Vivian, C. T. Weinstein, Sidney M. 14: 0001 13: 0508 Vranich, Joseph Wells, William D. 10: 0160 6: 0732 Wagner, Robert F. Wesley, Charles H. 21: 0748 7: 0681 Waldheim, Kurt West, Browlia 14: 0557 21: 0611 Walker, Forrest A. Westler, Bernard O. 8: 0933 9: 0873 Walker, Melford W. Wexler, Stanley 19: 0001 11: 0510

57 Whalen, Charles W., Jr. Williams, Franklin H. 2: 0516 10: 0589 Wheeler, Miriam Williams, Harrison A., Jr. 14: 0786 5: 0313, 0757; 18: 0689 White, Bertha J. Williams, Hosea L. 6: 0206 17: 0725 White, Robert L. Williams, Isaac W. 9: 0935 15: 0381 White, Tom Williams, James 21: 0266 12: 0001 White, Walter Williams, James D. 7: 0001 2: 0737 Whittemore, B. Bruce Williams, John J. 9: 0620 2: 0388 Wilcher, Marcus Garvey Williams, John T. 8: 0282; 9: 0052 10: 0001 Wiley, George A. Williams, Julius E. 10: 0098 5: 0020 Wiley, Robert B. Williams, Robert 19: 0001 15: 0786; 18: 0356 Wilkerson, Ernest Willis, Clifford J. 10: 0864 1: 0672 Wilkerson, Owen T. Willis, Edwin E. 7: 0904 3: 0698 Wilkins, Roy Wilson, Gillespie C. 1: 0005, 0614, 0655, 0662, 0676–0941; 18: 0154 2: 0001–0100, 0117, 0267, 0388– Wilson, Thelma M. 0590, 0631–0737, 0825–0884; 6: 0206 3: 0001–0016, 0167, 0533, 0698, Wimbish, Michael 0865, 0962; 4: 0001–0080, 0144– 6: 0206 0480, 0604–0725, 0851–0908; Wirsig, Woodrow 5: 0027, 0261, 0365–0570, 0865, 1: 0804 0986; 6: 0001–0051, 0206–0323, Witcher, Marvin Lee 0423–0464, 0536, 0585, 0602– 19: 0884 0632, 0841; 7: 0066, 0170–0556, Wofford, Harris 0696–0904; 8: 0001–0585, 0741– 3: 0698 0933; 9: 0001, 0192, 0325–0405, Wolff, Sanford I. 0620, 0873–0935; 10: 0001, 0270– 7: 0398 0476, 0734; 11: 0112–0236, 0450– Wolfson, Louis E. 0510, 0897–0964; 12: 0001, 0123, 18: 0937 0282–0836; 13: 0001–0437, 0508, Wood, Martha M. 0596, 0808; 14: 0341–0410, 0551– 9: 0520 0557, 0723, 0847; 15: 0120–0280, Woodcock, Leonard 0786; 16: 0963; 17: 0001–0110, 2: 0516 0353–0571, 0725–0917; 18: 0154– Woodson, William O. 0356, 0580–0937; 19: 0001–0884; 16: 0262 20: 0001–0899; 21: 0001–0857; Woodward, C. Vann 22: 0001, 0022, 0230–0998 17: 0249 Williams, Calvin Wright, Chester M. 10: 0270 6: 0423

58 Wright, Daniel W., III Yoshinari, Kumeo 11: 0941 18: 0154; 21: 0611 Wright, Mercedes A. Young, Milton R. 16: 0403; 22: 0638 2: 0388; 5: 0313 Wright, Robert A. Young, Stephen M. 15: 0001, 0280, 0556; 16: 0001 6: 0206 Wright, Robert E. Young, Wallace L., Jr. 21: 0530 17: 0917 Wright, Sanford L. Young, Whitney M., Jr. 18: 0580 5: 0261; 17: 0449 Yamashita, Kay Zigler, Edward 18: 0154; 21: 0611 3: 0962 Yarborough, Ralph W. Zimmerman, Charles S. 2: 0457; 5: 0313 17: 0249 Yehuda, Shaleak Ben Zuckerman, George D. 9: 0258, 0405 6: 0705 Yorty, Sam Zukerman, Jacob T. 6: 0464 9: 0405

59 SUBJECT INDEX

The following index is a guide to the major topics in this microform publication. The first number after an entry refers to the reel, while the four-digit number following the colon refers to the frame number at which a particular file folder containing information on the subject begins. Hence, 7: 0556 directs the researcher to the folder that begins at Frame 0556 of Reel 7. By referring to the Reel Index, which constitutes the initial section of this guide, the researcher will find the folder title, inclusive dates, and a list of Major Topics and Principal Correspondents, arranged in the order in which they appear on the film.

Active Black Brothers coffee 14: 0890 National Inmate Fund 7: 0556 liberation struggles in 11: 0335 Ad Hoc Committee for Campus Rights Namibia Support Group 10: 0342 Ohio State University 18: 0001 Nigeria 6: 0323; 11: 0236, 0941; Ad Hoc Committee for Intellectual 19: 0001 Freedom Operation Crossroads Africa 8: 0741 17: 0249 Pan African Congress 22: 0773 Administration of justice Pan-African Solidarity Committee see Criminal justice system 10: 0538 Adoption Republic of Guinea 11: 0236 interracial 17: 0659 Rhodesia 2: 0949; 14: 0626 Affirmative action South Africa 7: 0291, 0468; 11: 0236– in education 9: 0258; 11: 0606–0897; 0335; 19: 0782; 20: 0577–0766; 17: 0659 22: 1010 in employment 6: 0732; 7: 0556; U.S. relations with 2: 0949; 4: 0548; 9: 0258, 0935; 11: 0606–0897; 5: 0180; 10: 0947; 11: 0112 14: 0341; 17: 0659; 18: 0230–0356 Volta River Dam 14: 0890 Jewish Rights Council’s opposition to see also African-American Institute 13: 0457 see also American Committee on Africa Metropolitan New York Project Equality see also American Negro Leadership 9: 0620–0731 Conference on Africa New Orleans Plan 15: 0182; 18: 0230 African Progressive Coalition Philadelphia Plan 22: 0062 7: 0556 Africa African-American Dialogues African National Congress 7: 0468 10: 0947 African People’s Democratic Union of African-American Institute South Africa 11: 0335 11: 0001–0195 Association for the Educational and African-American Nation Cultural Advancement for Africans 7: 0556 22: 1010 African National Congress Biafra 6: 0323; 11: 0236, 0941 7: 0468

61 African People’s Democratic Union of Alaska South Africa Anchorage NAACP branch 18: 0494 11: 0335 All African People’s Revolutionary Party Afro-American Cultural Foundation 7: 0468 7: 0398 ALPHA School (drug rehabilitation) Afro-American Distributors, Ltd. 20: 0340 7: 0170 Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Afroamerican Institute Workmen of North America, AFL-CIO 15: 0280 7: 0398 Aged and aging Amarillo, Texas White House Conference on Aging schools 19: 0150 6: 0135; 18: 0356 America-Israel Cultural Foundation Agnew, Spiro T. 7: 0170 2: 0105 American Bar Association Agricultural commodities 11: 0450 African coffee 14: 0890 American Black Culture and Opportunity Agricultural labor Exposition 4: 0548 7: 0170 Agricultural Stabilization and American Committee on Africa Conservation Service, U.S. Agriculture 11: 0236–0335 Department American Committee to Keep Biafra 2: 0117 Alive Agricultural subsidies 11: 0941 14: 0001 American Federation of Labor–Congress Agriculture of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) see Agricultural commodities AFSCME 1: 0435; 6: 0933 see Agricultural labor Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher see Agricultural subsidies Workmen of North America 7: 0398 see Agriculture Department, U.S. American Federation of Television and Agriculture Department, U.S. Radio Artists 4: 0324; 7: 0398 2: 0117; 4: 0604, 0725; 18: 0230 New York State Building Trades Council see also Food assistance programs 1: 0680 see also Food stamps participation in A. Philip Randolph Airlines Institute Conference 7: 0556 South African Airways 11: 0236 American Federation of State, County, Akron, Ohio and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) fair housing ordinance 11: 0510 Community and Social Agency NAACP branch 17: 0449 Employees, Local 1707 1: 0435; Alabama 6: 0933 Birmingham—visit by Roy Wilkins American Federation of Television and 1: 0655 Radio Artists, AFL-CIO Bullock County schools 3: 0917 4: 0324; 7: 0398 extradition of Donald Lewis Cox for rape American Jewish Committee case 20: 0899; 21: 0001, 0338; 11: 0510–0772; 17: 0449 22: 0514 American Jewish Congress Jefferson County Committee for 11: 0897 Economic Opportunity 17: 0001 American Jewish Museum of Art and National Democratic Party of Alabama Culture 6: 0408 7: 0170 Tuskegee syphilis study 3: 0962

62 American Missionary Association Assault and battery 13: 0457 charges against Philadelphia police American Negro Leadership Conference officers 18: 0580 on Africa Association for the Educational and 7: 0170; 19: 0001 Cultural Advancement for Africans Americans for Democratic Action 22: 1010 7: 0291–0398 Association for the Study of Negro Life Amos v. Board of School Directors, City and History of Milwaukee 15: 0280 16: 0647 Association for Voluntary Sterilization Anchorage, Alaska 11: 0964 NAACP branch 18: 0494 Association of Arab-American University Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith Graduates 7: 0291, 0556 7: 0170 Antipoverty programs Atlanta, Georgia 12: 0745 city employees’ strike 17: 0725 see also Poverty NAACP branch 21: 0135; 22: 0638 see also Public welfare programs school desegregation 22: 0773 see also War on Poverty Attica Correctional Facility Anti-Semitism uprising 6: 0732; 19: 0207 1: 0941 Augusta, Georgia Apartheid riot (1970) 22: 0022 San Diego, California, demonstration Automobile industry 20: 0766 Long v. Ford Motor Company 11: 0772 in South Africa 7: 0291 National Black Automobile Dealers United Nations Special Committee on Association 9: 0935 Apartheid 11: 0335 National Citizens’ Committee to Aid the Arab-Americans Families of G.M. Strikers 9: 0935 Association of Arab-American University see also Automobile insurance Graduates 7: 0170 Automobile insurance Arab-Israeli conflict 20: 0124 10: 0864; 11: 0236 Awards, medals, and prizes Art of Black Music Society American Jewish Committee, American 20: 0247 Liberties Medallion 17: 0449 Arts and culture City College of New York, John H. Afro-American Cultural Foundation Finley Medal 17: 0571 7: 0398 Jules Cohen Memorial Award 17: 0449 American Black Culture and Opportunity Freedom House, 1967 Freedom Award Exposition 7: 0170 17: 0449 American Jewish Museum of Art and League for Industrial Democracy, 1970 Culture 7: 0170 Annual Award 17: 0449 Art of Black Music Society 20: 0247 Omega Psi Phi fraternity, Mu Omicron Assassinations Chapter, Man of the Year 17: 0571 Clark, Mark 8: 0065; 22: 0445 Spingarn Medal 17: 0001 Hampton, Fred 8: 0065; 22: 0445 Banks and banking King, Martin Luther, Jr. 6: 0899; 9: 0520; Empire Mortgage and Investment 14: 0626 Company, Inc. 16: 0495 Mondlane, Eduardo 11: 0236 Freedom National Bank 1: 0648 Wright, Clifton 14: 0341 International Bank for Reconstruction and Development 9: 0192

63 Banks and banking cont. Black Power loans to government of South Africa 4: 0051; 10: 0734; 14: 0557, 0890; 11: 0335 21: 0530; 22: 1010 National Bankers Association 2: 0631 see also Black Liberation Alliance see also Credit unions see also Black Panther Party see also Loans see also Congress of African People Baraka, Amiri see also Congress of Racial Equality 13: 0508 see also Gary declaration Beadenkopf, Anne see also National Black Political 1: 0005 Assembly Bell, Griffin B. see also National Black Political 2: 0232 Convention Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks see also Revolutionary Action 16: 0001 Movement Bermuda see also Soul City, North Carolina Progressive Labour Party 15: 0655 Black studies programs Bethune, Mary McLeod 18: 0001 21: 0530 Black Women’s Institute Mary McLeod Bethune Memorial National Council of Negro Women Committee 7: 0831 7: 0831 B’nai B’rith Women Biafra 7: 0769 famine in 11: 0941 Bombs and bombing Nigeria-Biafra War 6: 0323; 11: 0236, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, NAACP branch 0941 office 2: 0100 Big Brothers Inc. Boycotts 7: 0696 Dallas, Texas, Safeway stores 18: 0230 Birmingham, Alabama Gulf Oil Corporation 11: 0335 Wilkins, Roy—visit 1: 0655 Perry, Georgia, retail stores 18: 0001 Birth control South African Open Games 11: 0335 Association for Voluntary Sterilization Twiggs County, Georgia, retail stores 11: 0964 18: 0937 Planned Parenthood Association of San Wilmington, North Carolina, schools Diego County 14: 0551 14: 0341 see also Family planning see also Demonstrations and protests Black Construction Workers’ Manifesto see also Strikes 15: 0381 Boy Scouts of America Black Liberation Alliance 7: 0769–0904 7: 0696 Bridgehampton Child Care and Black nationalism Recreational Center, Inc. [New York] see Black Power 7: 0769 see Brothers United for National Broadcasting Development see Radio and television broadcasting see Separatism Brooklyn, New York Black Panther Party Canarsie schools 20: 0124; 22: 0638– assassination of Fred Hampton and 0773 Mark Clark 8: 0065; 22: 0445 Brotherhood In Action law enforcement and 12: 0001 7: 0696 Black People for Progress Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters 7: 0696 7: 0831

64 Brothers United for National National Newspaper Publishers Development Association 10: 0098; 19: 0001 7: 0769 Office of Minority Business Enterprise Budget, NAACP 2: 0631 1971 16: 0794 Peninsula, Virginia, Chamber of Budget, U.S. Commerce 6: 0851 defense spending 14: 0001 Polaroid Corporation 11: 0236 impoundment legislation 13: 0244–0334 Project Transfer 11: 0897 Nixon administration proposals 20: 0472 Quality-In Manufacturing Company revenue sharing proposal 18: 0937 10: 0708 suggestions 14: 0001–0156, 0410 Responsible Corporate Action 18: 0580 see also Coalition for Human Needs and retail stores 18: 0001, 0230, 0937 Budget Priorities Bob Rothman Contract Services, Inc. Building trades unions 10: 0708 1: 0680; 3: 0533; 10: 0864; 14: 0626; Safeway stores 18: 0230 15: 0182; 18: 0230 Small Business Administration 4: 0725; see also Construction industry 5: 0027 Bullock County, Alabama small businesses 2: 0631 schools 3: 0917 South African Airways 11: 0236 Business and industry U.S. businesses in South Africa African coffee 14: 0890 11: 0335; 22: 1010 Afro-American Distributors, Ltd. 7: 0170 see also Automobile industry Chamber of Commerce, U.S. 2: 0590 see also Banks and banking consumer protection 13: 0437, 0808; see also Construction industry 14: 0001 see also Economic development corporate contributions to NAACP see also Employment 22: 0773 see also Insurance and insurance cosmetics 20: 0124 industry Empire Mortgage and Investment see also Labor unions and organizations Company, Inc. 16: 0495 see also Mass media Farah Manufacturing Company 17: 0110 see also Motion picture industry Fayette County Cooperative Stamping see also Radio and television and Manufacturing Co., Inc. 8: 0875 broadcasting Free Enterprise Association 8: 0741 Busing Gulf Oil Corporation 11: 0335 see School busing International Business Communications Cabral, Amilcar 9: 0192 11: 0335 Interracial Council for Business Cairo, Illinois Opportunity 18: 0689 African Americans in 21: 0135 Floyd B. McKissick Enterprises, Inc. California 9: 0620 Board of Education 6: 0423 minority business enterprises 4: 0001 Code of Fair Practices 6: 0464 Minority Business Opportunities Department of Health Care Services Program 16: 0403 6: 0464 NAACP National Housing Development employment discrimination 18: 0580 Corporation 18: 0230 government employees 3: 0533 National Black Automobile Dealers health care services 18: 0494 Association 9: 0935 Human Relations Agency 17: 0725 National Council for Equal Business Los Angeles 1: 0658; 6: 0423; 18: 0001, Opportunity 13: 0457 0356; 22: 0062

65 California cont. Head Start program 3: 0857; 20: 0001 Medi-Cal funding cuts 6: 0464; 18: 0494 Riverdale Children’s Association NAACP branches 6: 0423; 18: 0001, 10: 0734 0356; 22: 0062 White House Conference on Children Planned Parenthood Association of San 17: 0367 Diego County 14: 0551 see also Adoption prisons 7: 0291 see also Child day care Rural Legal Assistance 18: 0494 see also Youth San Diego demonstration against Christian Echoes National Ministry, Inc. apartheid 20: 0766 v. United States San Fernando Valley State College 7: 0556; 11: 0772 22: 0062 Cincinnati, Ohio San Francisco 1: 0662; 22: 0062 Jewish Community Center of Cincinnati school choice legislation 6: 0423 9: 0405 “Call to Conscience” conference Citizens Against Legalized Murder 18: 0356, 0689 8: 0001 Cambodia Citizens Committee for Equal Justice for war in 2: 0884 Public Employees Camden, New Jersey 8: 0174 NAACP branch 18: 0356 Citizens Committee for Government Canarsie, Brooklyn, New York Reorganization schools 20: 0124; 22: 0638–0773 2: 0884; 8: 0174 Capital punishment Citizens Committee for Justice for Farah Citizens Against Legalized Murder Workers 8: 0001 17: 0110 Carswell, G. Harrold Citizens for Justice with Order 5: 0261–0365; 12: 0369; 13: 0725; 8: 0065 14: 0626; 16: 0647, 0887; 17: 0725 City College of New York Census, U.S. John H. Finley Medal 17: 0571 1970 2: 0631, 0825; 16: 0001; 17: 0367 Civil Rights Documentation Project Center for Applied Research in the 21: 0530 Apostolate Civil rights legislation 8: 0001 California Code of Fair Practices Challenge International 6: 0464 8: 0001 federal 2: 0314; 4: 0144, 0548; Chamber of Commerce, U.S. 11: 0897; 12: 0555; 13: 0001, 0244– Urban Action Exchange program 0437 2: 0590 New York State 6: 0705 Chambers of Commerce Omnibus Civil Rights Act of 1969 Peninsula, Virginia 6: 0851 12: 0282 see also Chamber of Commerce, U.S. state, general 11: 0897 Child day care Civil rights policies 12: 0836; 13: 0596; 14: 0626 of Nixon, Richard M. 3: 0698; 4: 0604, see also Bridgehampton Child Care and 0725; 13: 0244–0334; 14: 0626; Recreational Center, Inc. 16: 0403; 20: 0247–0340; 22: 0062 see also Day Care and Child of Truman, Harry S. 17: 0367 Development Council of America Civil Service Commission, U.S. Children 2: 0609; 4: 0725 Council on Interracial Books for Children 16: 0262–0403

66 Civil service system Commission for Racial Justice see Civil Service Commission, U.S. United Church of Christ 8: 0065; see National Civil Service League 20: 0124 Civitan International Commission on Civil Rights, U.S. 08: 0282 2: 0737, 0884; 12: 0487 Clark, Mark Commission on Negro History and 8: 0065; 22: 0445 Culture Clarke, John Henrik 2: 0314 7: 0556 Committee on Black-Jewish Relations Cleveland, Ohio 12: 0097 PATH Association 10: 0589 Community Action Programs Clothing workers Jefferson County Committee for strike at Farah Manufacturing Company Economic Opportunity 17: 0001 17: 0110 Community and Social Agency Coalition for Human Needs and Budget Employees, Local 1707, AFSCME Priorities 1: 0435; 6: 0933 8: 0282 Community Coalitions for a Clean Coalition for Job Equality in the Environment Act of 1971 Construction Industry 4: 0548 17: 0249; 19: 0884 Community control Coffee of schools 5: 0477; 17: 0659 14: 0890 Comprehensive Home Health and Jules Cohen Memorial Award Preventive Medicine Act of 1972 17: 0449 4: 0548 Collective bargaining Concerned Professional Association of 8: 0174 Boys’ Club Workers see also Labor unions and organizations 8: 0282 Colleges and universities Conference of Presidents of Major all-black college dormitories 16: 0262 American Jewish Organizations City College of New York 17: 0571 7: 0681 Fellowship of Concerned University Congress, U.S. Students (FOCUS) 8: 0741 2: 0825–0949; 4: 0548; 12: 0555 Jackson State College 22: 0062 see also Congressional Black Caucus Bob Jones University 16: 0495 see also Congressional districts Ohio State University 15: 0001; see also Congressional elections 18: 0001 see also House of Representatives, race relations at 17: 0659; 22: 0062 U.S. Rutgers University student housing see also Senate, U.S. 9: 0520 Congressional Black Caucus San Fernando Valley State College 2: 0801 22: 0062 Congressional districts Southern University 22: 0514 9: 0325 Wilberforce University 7: 0769 Congressional elections Columbus, Ohio Evers, Charles—1968 campaign demonstration regarding schools 6: 0602 22: 0230 1970 2: 0825; 10: 0864; 18: 0689 Commerce Department, U.S. Congress of African People 2: 0631 8: 0174 Congress of Racial Equality 8: 0174–0282; 12: 0123, 0369

67 Connecticut Crime and criminals NAACP State Conference 21: 0135 African Americans and 17: 0110, 0659 New Britain Police Department 1: 0672 arrest of Philadelphia police officers New Haven mayoral race (1969) 18: 0580 1: 0668 drug trafficking 1: 0001 Construction industry in New York City 1: 0001 Black Construction Workers’ Manifesto see also Criminal justice system 15: 0381 Criminal justice system building trades unions 1: 0680; 3: 0533; 2: 0516; 4: 0223; 14: 0001, 0410; 10: 0864; 14: 0626; 15: 0182; 16: 0887; 18: 0154; 20: 0124 18: 0230 see also Citizens for Justice with Order Coalition for Job Equality in the see also Crime and criminals Construction Industry 17: 0249; see also Criminal procedure 19: 0884 see also Justice Department, U.S. contractors 16: 0495; 22: 0022, 0062 see also Law enforcement discrimination in 19: 0884 see also National Catholic Conference employment 2: 0001; 3: 0375; 13: 0596; for Interracial Justice 15: 0182; 19: 0207 see also Prisons National Urban Coalition program for Criminal procedure 13: 0808 conviction of sailor in Kitty Hawk racial New Orleans Plan 15: 0182; 18: 0230 disturbance case 22: 0773 Philadelphia Plan 22: 0062 District of Columbia Court Reform and United Community Construction Criminal Procedure Act of 1970 Workers 15: 0381 2: 0457; 12: 0487; 13: 0808 Consumer protection extradition for rape case 20: 0899; 13: 0437, 0808; 14: 0001 21: 0001, 0338; 22: 0514 Cooperatives see also Criminal justice system Fayette County Cooperative Stamping Current, Gloster B. and Manufacturing Co., Inc. 8: 0875 1: 0521 Coro Foundation Cyesis Programs Consortium 1: 0662; 6: 0423 12: 0138 Corporation for Public Broadcasting Dallas, Texas 13: 0334 Safeway stores boycott 18: 0230 Cosmetics industry Dams 20: 0124 Volta River Dam (Ghana) 14: 0890 Council of Churches of the City of New Day Care and Child Development York Council of America 20: 0124 8: 0467 Council on Interracial Books for Children Defense Department, U.S. 16: 0262–0403 3: 0001–0128 Counseling services Defense spending for pregnant adolescent girls 12: 0138 14: 0001 Courts Delaware District of Columbia Court Reform and Wilmington NAACP branch 18: 0356 Criminal Procedure Act of 1970 Deliverance Gospel Mission 2: 0457; 12: 0487; 13: 0808 8: 0467 see also Supreme Court, U.S. Delta Sigma Theta sorority Credit unions 8: 0467 1: 0617 Democratic National Committee 3: 0167; 4: 0548

68 Democratic Party Diseases and disorders code of political behavior regarding sickle cell anemia 3: 0917 discrimination 13: 0088 syphilis 3: 0962 Democratic National Committee see also Health care facilities and 3: 0167; 4: 0548 services Democratic National Convention District of Columbia Court Reform and 3: 0167; 16: 0887 Criminal Procedure Act of 1970 Democratic Party of the State of 2: 0457; 12: 0487; 13: 0808 Mississippi 3: 0167; 6: 0602; Drug rehabilitation programs 12: 0555 ALPHA School 20: 0340 Michigan 8: 0467 see also Drug use and abuse National Democratic Party of Alabama Drug trafficking 6: 0408 1: 0001 Democratic Party of the State of Drug use and abuse Mississippi 1: 0001 3: 0167; 6: 0602; 12: 0555 see also Drug rehabilitation programs Demonstrations and protests DuBois, Shirley Graham Columbus, Ohio, regarding schools 14: 0626 22: 0230 Economic assistance memorial march for Viola Liuzzo to foreign nations 14: 0001 14: 0626 Economic conditions Poor People’s Campaign 14: 0626 Fayette County, Tennessee 3: 0962 regarding South African apartheid Meany, George—speech 7: 0556 20: 0766 Economic development Southern University students 22: 0514 Black People for Progress 7: 0696 see also Boycotts Challenge International 8: 0001 see also Riots and disorders International Bank for Reconstruction see also Strikes and Development 9: 0192 Detroit, Michigan International Development Association school desegregation case 14: 0626 9: 0192 Disarmament International Development Conference 3: 0698 9: 0258 Disaster relief New York City 1: 0804 6: 0375; 11: 0941; 16: 0794 urban areas 14: 0341–0410 Discrimination Urban Innovations 8: 0001 by Benevolent and Protective Order of Economic Opportunity Act Elks 16: 0001 extension 10: 0160 in construction industry 19: 0884 Economic policy Democratic Party code regarding Johnson administration 4: 0144 13: 0088 Economic sanctions employment 1: 0680; 2: 0609; 3: 0441– on Rhodesia 11: 0335 0533; 11: 0772; 14: 0626; 17: 0110, Economic Stabilization Act 0571; 18: 0001, 0230, 0580, 0836; 13: 0001 19: 0884; 21: 0001; 22: 0514 Education housing 3: 0252; 13: 0244; 17: 0110, affirmative action in 9: 0258; 11: 0606– 0571; 22: 0358 0897; 17: 0659 by labor unions 3: 0258 California Board of Education 6: 0423 in public accommodations 4: 0223 Council on Interracial Books for Children 16: 0262–0403

69 Education cont. Emergency Employment Act of 1971 Education Amendments of 1971 2: 0483; 4: 0665; 12: 0646–0745 4: 0548; 13: 0001 Emergency Relief Fund, NAACP Education Department, U.S. 4: 0548 15: 0001–0120; 16: 0001–0154 Elementary and Secondary Education Emergency School Aid Act of 1971 Act extension 3: 0865; 12: 0282– 12: 0555–0646 0369; 13: 0334 Emergency School Aid and Quality Emergency School Aid and Quality Integrated Education Act of 1971 Integrated Education Act of 1971 12: 0646 12: 0646 Empire Mortgage and Investment Equal Educational Opportunities Act of Company, Inc. 1972 2: 0516; 13: 0001, 0181 16: 0495 Esperanto League for North America Employment 8: 0585 affirmative action in 6: 0732; 7: 0556; federal aid to 3: 0917 9: 0258, 0935; 11: 0606–0897; Galaxy Conference on Adult Education 14: 0341; 15: 0182; 17: 0659; 8: 0933 18: 0230–0356; 22: 0062 Head Start program 3: 0857; 20: 0001 Atlanta city employees’ strike 17: 0725 National Urban Coalition 13: 0596; in broadcasting 4: 0324; 20: 0899 14: 0001 Coalition for Job Equality in the New York State 20: 0124 Construction Industry 17: 0249; for pregnant adolescent girls 12: 0138 19: 0884 Quality Integrated Education Act of 1971 construction industry 2: 0001; 3: 0375; 12: 0646 13: 0596; 15: 0182; 19: 0207 in South Africa 20: 0766 discrimination in 1: 0680; 2: 0609; western states 18: 0689; 20: 0577 3: 0441–0533; 11: 0772; 14: 0626; see also Colleges and universities 17: 0110, 0571; 18: 0001, 0230, see also School busing 0580, 0836; 19: 0884; 21: 0001; see also School desegregation 22: 0514 see also Schools EEOC 2: 0483–0516, 0884; 3: 0252– see also Students 0636; 4: 0725; 12: 0487, 0646– see also Vocational education and 0836; 13: 0001 training Emergency Employment Act of 1971 Education Amendments of 1971 2: 0483; 4: 0665; 12: 0646–0745 4: 0548; 13: 0001 Employment and Training Opportunities Education Department, U.S. Act of 1970 2: 0483; 12: 0487 4: 0548 Equal Employment Opportunity Act of Elections 1972 11: 0606 congressional (1970) 2: 0825; 10: 0864; equal opportunity in 3: 0258; 4: 0324; 18: 0689 13: 0001; 22: 0445 presidential federal programs 4: 0548 1968 4: 0001, 0604 Frontiero v. Richardson 11: 0772 1972 16: 0262–0495 Metropolitan New York Project Equality state (1970) 18: 0689 9: 0620–0731 Electoral College Morsell, John A.—comments 16: 0887 reform 11: 0450 motion picture industry 3: 0533 Elementary and Secondary Education National Urban Coalition and 13: 0596; Act 14: 0001 extension 3: 0865; 12: 0282–0369; Opportunities Industrialization Centers 13: 0334 2: 0884; 10: 0476; 19: 0207

70 placement services 16: 0262 Esperanto League for North America postal workers 4: 0908 8: 0585 seniority 10: 0864 Ethnic and minority groups statistics 3: 0375 14: 0856 summer 13: 0596 see also Arab-Americans U.S. Senate hearings on equal see also Hispanic Americans opportunity 3: 0258 see also Jews western states 18: 0689; 20: 0577 Europe youth 13: 0596; 15: 0001 NAACP tour of housing in 14: 0626 see also Business and industry U.S. military bases in West Germany see also Government employees 14: 0626; 22: 0937 see also Labor unions and organizations Evers, Charles see also Strikes 6: 0602 see also Unemployment Export-Import Bank see also Vocational education and loan to Portugal 2: 0949 training Extradition see also Wages and salaries 20: 0899; 21: 0001, 0338; 22: 0514 Employment and Training Opportunities Families and households Act of 1970 interracial adoption 17: 0659 2: 0483; 12: 0487 Operation Family 10: 0476 Employment Specialist Corporation see also Children 8: 0687 see also Family Assistance Act of 1970 Encampment for Citizenship see also Family planning 8: 0687 see also Teenage pregnancy Energy resources and consumption Family Assistance Act of 1970 3: 0698 4: 0604; 11: 0510; 13: 0725; 18: 0154– Environmental protection 0230 4: 0548; 14: 0001; 20: 0124 Family planning Episcopal Society for Cultural and Racial 3: 1006; 11: 0964; 16: 0001 Unity Famine 8: 0585 in Biafra 11: 0941 Equal Educational Opportunities Act of Farah Manufacturing Company 1972 17: 0110 2: 0516; 13: 0001, 0181 Farmers Home Administration Equal Employment Opportunity Act of 7: 0904; 14: 0626 1972 Fayette County, Tennessee 11: 0606 economic conditions 3: 0962 Equal Employment Opportunity Fayette County Cooperative Stamping Commission (EEOC) and Manufacturing Co., Inc. 8: 0875 2: 0483–0516, 0884; 3: 0252–0636; Federal aid to education 4: 0725; 12: 0487, 0646–0836; 3: 0917 13: 0001 Federal Communications Commission Equal Pay Act 3: 0643 extension 13: 0244 Federal Republic of Germany Equal Rights Amendment see Germany, West 12: 0369; 17: 0659 Fellowship of Concerned University Equitable Life Assurance Society of the Students (FOCUS) United States 8: 0741 8: 0585

71 Filibuster rule Delta Sigma Theta sorority 8: 0467 U.S. Senate 4: 0548; 12: 0282, 0555– Omega Psi Phi fraternity 17: 0571 0646 Freedom Budget for All Americans Firearms 4: 0548; 12: 0646 4: 0223 Freedom House Fire insurance 1967 Freedom Award 17: 0449 6: 0642–0696 Freedom National Bank Flint, Michigan 1: 0648 Roy Wilkins Community School Freedom of Information Act 17: 0571 2: 0314 Food Free Enterprise Association African coffee 14: 0890 8: 0741 Food for All 8: 0741–0875; 15: 0655 Fresh Air Fund White House Conference on Food, 8: 0741 Nutrition, and Health 6: 0135 Friends Seminary see also Food assistance programs 8: 0875 Food assistance programs Frontiero v. Richardson 2: 0117; 4: 0604, 0797 11: 0772 see also Food stamps Fund-raising, NAACP Food for All 16: 0154; 20: 0340, 0577, 0899 8: 0741–0875; 15: 0655 see also Special Contribution Fund, Food stamps NAACP 3: 0685; 7: 0468; 8: 0875; 12: 0487; Galaxy Conference on Adult Education 13: 0437, 0725–0808; 15: 0461; 8: 0933 16: 0001 Gary declaration Food stores 13: 0508 boycott of Safeway stores 18: 0230 Georgia Ford Foundation Atlanta 17: 0725; 21: 0135; 22: 0638– grant to NAACP Special Contribution 0773 Fund 16: 0794 Augusta riot (1970) 22: 0022 Ford Motor Company Twiggs County retail stores boycott 11: 0772 18: 0937 Foreign relations, U.S. Germany, West with Africa 2: 0949; 4: 0548; 5: 0180; 1972 Olympic Games 11: 0606 10: 0947; 11: 0195–0335 U.S. military facilities in 14: 0626; closing of U.S. consulate in Rhodesia 22: 0937 14: 0626 Ghana economic assistance 14: 0001 Volta River Dam 14: 0890 Forest Hills, New York Glen Cove, Long Island, New York housing project 19: 0494–0657, 0884; Stanley Park housing project 16: 0001; 20: 0899 22: 0445 The Forum, Inc. Government, federal 8: 0741 Agriculture Department 2: 0117; Foundations and nonprofit organizations 4: 0604, 0725; 18: 0230 Coro Foundation 1: 0662; 6: 0423 budget 13: 0244–0334; 14: 0001–0156, Ford Foundation 16: 0794 0410; 18: 0937; 20: 0472 Taconic Foundation 16: 0647 Civil Service Commission 2: 0609; Fraternal and sororal organizations 4: 0725 Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks Commerce Department 2: 0631; 5: 0027 16: 0001

72 Commission on Civil Rights 2: 0737, Housing and Development 0884; 12: 0487 Administration 1: 0804; 2: 0001 Defense Department 3: 0001–0128 Housing Authority 11: 0772 defense spending 14: 0001 Interdepartmental Committee on Education Department 4: 0548 Integration 1: 0728 EEOC 2: 0483–0516, 0884; 3: 0252– Planning Commission 1: 0728 0636; 4: 0725; 12: 0487, 0646– Transit Authority 14: 0626 0836; 13: 0001 New York State Farmers Home Administration 7: 0904; Commission on Human Rights 14: 0626 1: 0680 Federal Communications Commission Insurance Department 6: 0642 3: 0643 Rockford [Illinois] Commission on Health, Education, and Welfare Human Relations 1: 0676 Department 3: 0865–1006; 4: 0725; San Francisco Board of Supervisors 6: 0206 1: 0662 Housing and Urban Development Government employees Department 4: 0725; 7: 0904 Atlanta city employees’ strike 17: 0725 Interior Department 4: 0080 California 3: 0533 Internal Revenue Service 4: 0132 Citizens Committee for Equal Justice for Justice Department 2: 0737; 4: 0223– Public Employees 8: 0174 0396; 19: 0373 equal opportunity 3: 0698 Labor Department 4: 0480, 0725; federal 2: 0609 6: 0206 New York City 1: 0680 National Advisory Commission on Civil see also Civil Service Commission, U.S. Disorders 4: 0527 see also National Civil Service League Office of Economic Opportunity 4: 0797; Government spending 12: 0555–0836; 13: 0334; 14: 0341 appropriations legislation 6: 0206 Peace Corps 14: 0534 see also Budget, U.S. revenue sharing 12: 0646; 18: 0937 Greater North Augusta Council on Selective Service System 5: 0020 Human Relations (South Carolina) Small Business Administration 4: 0725; 8: 0933 5: 0027 Guinea, Republic of State Department 5: 0112–0254 11: 0236 Transportation Department 6: 0110 Gulf Oil Corporation U.S. Information Agency 4: 0051 11: 0335 see also Citizens Committee for Haitian refugees Government Reorganization 4: 0324 Government, state and local Hamer, Fannie Lou California 15: 0786 Board of Education 6: 0423 Hampton, Fred Department of Health Care Services 8: 0065; 22: 0445 6: 0464 Harlem, New York Human Relations Agency 17: 0725 health care services in 19: 0782 legislative districts 9: 0325 Haynsworth, Clement F., Jr. Maine Human Rights Commission 5: 0499–0986; 12: 0282 proposal 6: 0550 Head Start New York City 3: 0857; 20: 0001 Commission on Human Rights Health 1: 0680, 0804–0941; 2: 0001; White House Conference on Food, 10: 0864 Nutrition, and Health 6: 0135

73 Health cont. Interreligious Coalition for Housing see also Diseases and disorders 7: 0904 see also Health care facilities and Kawaida Towers (Newark, New Jersey) services 22: 0445 see also Health, Education, and Welfare Low- and moderate-income 16: 0001; Department, U.S. 22: 0358 Health care facilities and services Morsell, John A.—comments 16: 0887 4: 0797; 6: 0464; 12: 0138; 13: 0001, NAACP National Housing Development 0808; 14: 0001; 18: 0494; 19: 0001, Corporation 18: 0230 0782; 20: 0124 NAACP request for conference on see also Comprehensive Home Health 6: 0135 and Preventive Medicine Act of 1972 National Rural Housing Coalition Health, Education, and Welfare 7: 0904; 17: 0917 Department, U.S. National Urban Coalition and 13: 0808; 3: 0865–1006; 4: 0725; 6: 0206 14: 0001, 0410 Health insurance New York City 1: 0728–0804 8: 0065–0174 nonprofit programs 18: 0230, 0494 Highways Otero v. New York City Housing interstate 6: 0110 Authority 11: 0772 Missouri Highway Patrol 6: 0623 PATH Association 10: 0589 Hispanic Americans public 13: 0334 18: 0836 Rutgers University 9: 0520 see also Mexican Americans Stanley Park housing project, Glen Home Mortgage Disclosure Act of 1975 Cove, Long Island, New York 13: 0437 16: 0001; 22: 0445 Homicide Taconic Foundation meeting on of Israeli athletes at 1972 Olympic 16: 0647 Games 11: 0606 zoning ordinances 18: 0356 of Jackson State College students see also Farmers Home Administration 22: 0062 see also Housing and Urban in Mississippi 4: 0223 Development Department, U.S. of Philadelphia police officer 18: 0580 Housing and Urban Development see also Assassinations Department, U.S. House of Representatives, U.S. 4: 0725; 7: 0904 14: 0626 Houston, Texas Housing social conditions 15: 0655 Akron, Ohio, fair housing ordinance Human relations councils and 11: 0510 commissions discrimination in 3: 0252; 13: 0244; California Human Relations Agency 17: 0110, 0571; 22: 0358 17: 0725 equal opportunity in 2: 0884 Greater North Augusta Council on Europe 14: 0626 Human Relations 8: 0933 Farmers Home Administration 14: 0626 Maine Human Rights Commission federal policies and programs 12: 0555, proposal 6: 0550 0745 New York City Commission on Human Forest Hills, New York 19: 0494–0657, Rights 1: 0680, 0804–0941; 2: 0001; 0884; 20: 0899 10: 0864 Home Mortgage Disclosure Act of 1975 New York State Commission on Human 13: 0437 Rights 1: 0680

74 Rockford [Illinois] Commission on Integration Human Relations 1: 0676 Leadership Conference on Civil Rights see also Commission on Civil Rights, statement on 12: 0646 U.S. New York City Interdepartmental Human rights Committee on Integration 1: 0728 Human Rights Party 15: 0461 see also School desegregation International Conference on Human Interior Department, U.S. Rights in Tehran 22: 0978 4: 0080 International League for the Rights of Internal Revenue Service Man 9: 0258 4: 0132 National Association of Human Rights see also Taxation Workers 10: 0270 International Association of Heat and United Nations work on 14: 0557 Frost Insulators and Asbestos Workers Wilkins, Roy—comments 4: 0051 18: 0230 see also Human relations councils and International Bank for Reconstruction commissions and Development Human Rights Party 9: 0192 15: 0461 International Business Communications Humphrey, Hubert H. 9: 0192 4: 0001 International Conference on Human Hunger Rights (1968) 4: 0548 5: 0148 see also Famine International Cooperation Year (1965) see also Food 5: 0112 Identity politics International Development Association 14: 0856 9: 0192 Illinois International Development Conference Cairo 21: 0135 9: 0258 Rockford Commission on Human International League for the Rights of Relations 1: 0676 Man Impoundment of funds 9: 0258 legislation 13: 0244–0334 Interracial Colloquy Income maintenance 9: 0258 legislation 13: 0725 Interracial Council for Business programs 14: 0001 Opportunity Independent black political party 18: 0689 21: 0530 Interreligious Coalition for Housing Indiana Interreligious Commission on 7: 0904 Human Equality Interstate highways 9: 0258 6: 0110 Institute for American Democracy Iran 9: 0052–0192 see Tehran, Iran Insurance and insurance industry Stanley M. Isaacs Neighborhood Center automobile 20: 0124 (New York City) companies 6: 0732 9: 0052–0192 fire 6: 0642–0696 Israel health 8: 0065–0174 Arab-Israeli conflict 10: 0864; 11: 0236 life 8: 0585 murder of Israeli athletes at 1972 New York State Insurance Department Olympic Games 11: 0606 6: 0642

75 Israel cont. Lyndon Baines Johnson Library see also America-Israel Cultural symposium on civil rights 20: 0577; Foundation 22: 0011 see also Zionism Joint Center for Political Studies Jackson State College 9: 0325 murder of students 22: 0062 Bob Jones University Jefferson County Committee for 16: 0495 Economic Opportunity [Alabama] Judicial appointments 17: 0001 4: 0665 Jesus Christ Superstar (film) Junta of Militant Organizations (JOMO) 11: 0772 9: 0325 Jewish Community Center of Cincinnati Justice Department, U.S. (Ohio) general 4: 0223–0396 9: 0405 Law Enforcement Assistance Jewish Labor Committee Administration 2: 0737; 19: 0373 9: 0405 Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Jewish organizations Protection Act of 1973 American Jewish Committee 11: 0510– 2: 0516 0772; 17: 0449 Kawaida Towers American Jewish Congress 11: 0897 22: 0445 American Jewish Museum of Art and John Fitzgerald Kennedy Library Culture 7: 0170 9: 0325 Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith King, Martin Luther, Jr. 7: 0291, 0556 assassination of 6: 0899; 9: 0520; B’nai B’rith Women 7: 0769 14: 0626 Conference of Presidents of Major birthday celebration 6: 0899 American Jewish Organizations Wilkins, Roy—comments 6: 0899; 7: 0681 21: 0530 Jewish Community Center of Cincinnati Martin Luther King Living Memorial (Ohio) 9: 0405 Foundation Jewish Labor Committee 9: 0405 6: 0899 Jewish Rights Council 13: 0457 Kitty Hawk National Jewish Community Relations see USS Kitty Hawk Advisory Council 10: 0160 Labor Department, U.S. see also Jews 4: 0480, 0725; 6: 0206 Jewish Rights Council Labor unions and organizations opposition to affirmative action 13: 0457 AFL-CIO 7: 0556 Jews African Americans and 4: 0548; relations with African Americans 22: 0062–0230 14: 0856 Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher in Soviet Union 11: 0606 Workmen of North America, AFL- see also Committee on Black-Jewish CIO 7: 0398 Relations American Federation of Television and see also Israel Radio Artists, AFL-CIO 4: 0324; see also Jewish organizations 7: 0398 see also Zionism Black Construction Workers 15: 0381 Johnson, Lyndon B. Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters 4: 0144 7: 0831 building trades unions 3: 0533; 10: 0864; 14: 0626; 15: 0182

76 Community and Social Agency Legal cases Employees, Local 1707, AFSCME Amos v. Board of School Directors, City 1: 0435; 6: 0933 of Milwaukee 16: 0647 discrimination by 3: 0258 Christian Echoes National Ministry, Inc. International Association of Heat and v. United States 7: 0556; 11: 0772 Frost Insulators and Asbestos conviction of San Fernando Valley State Workers 18: 0230 College students 22: 0062 Jewish Labor Committee 9: 0405 Detroit, Michigan, school desegregation League for Industrial Democracy, 1970 14: 0626 Annual Award 17: 0449 extradition for rape case 20: 0899; National Afro-American Labor Council 21: 0001, 0338; 22: 0514 10: 0270 Frontiero v. Richardson 11: 0772 National Alliance of Postal Employees Long v. Ford Motor Company 11: 0772 4: 0851 NAACP v. Brown 6: 0933 New York State AFL-CIO Building NAACP v. Bullock County, Alabama, Trades Council 1: 0680 Board of Education 3: 0917 Transport Workers Union 14: 0626 Otero v. New York City Housing United Auto Workers 17: 0571 Authority 11: 0772 United Community Construction Legal defense activities Workers 15: 0381 see Lawyers and legal services Language Legislation, federal 8: 0585; 17: 0659; 18: 0937 appropriations 6: 0206 Law enforcement civil rights 2: 0314; 4: 0144, 0548; Black Panther Party and 12: 0001 11: 0897; 12: 0555; 13: 0001, 0244– Missouri Highway Patrol 6: 0623 0437 National Urban Coalition on 14: 0001 Comprehensive Home Health and see also Criminal justice system Preventive Medicine Act of 1972 see also Justice Department, U.S. 4: 0548 see also Police District of Columbia Court Reform and Law Enforcement Assistance Criminal Procedure Act of 1970 Administration 2: 0457; 12: 0487; 13: 0808 Justice Department 2: 0737; 19: 0373 Economic Opportunity Act 10: 0160 Lawyers and legal services Economic Stabilization Act 13: 0001 California Rural Legal Assistance Education Amendments of 1971 18: 0494 4: 0548; 13: 0001 Connecticut NAACP 21: 0135 EEOC 2: 0483–0516; 12: 0487, 0646– fees and expenses 16: 0647 0836; 13: 0001 for the poor 13: 0334 Elementary and Secondary Education see also American Bar Association Act extension 3: 0865; 12: 0282– see also Legal cases 0369; 13: 0334 Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Emergency Employment Act of 1971 Under Law 2: 0483; 4: 0665; 12: 0646–0745 9: 0520 Emergency School Aid Act of 1971 Leadership Conference on Civil Rights 12: 0555–0646 4: 0548; 12: 0282–0836; 13: 0001–0437 Emergency School Aid and Quality League for Industrial Democracy Integrated Education Act of 1971 1970 Annual Award 17: 0449 12: 0646 League of Women Voters Employment and Training Opportunities 9: 0520 Act of 1970 2: 0483; 12: 0487

77 Legislation, federal cont. New York State civil rights 6: 0705 Equal Educational Opportunities Act of New York State fire insurance 6: 0696 1972 2: 0516; 13: 0001, 0181 suburban zoning ordinances 18: 0356 Equal Employment Opportunity Act of Libraries 1972 11: 0606 Lyndon Baines Johnson Library Equal Pay Act 13: 0244 20: 0577; 22: 0011 Equal Rights Amendment 12: 0369; John Fitzgerald Kennedy Library 17: 0659 9: 0325 Family Assistance Act of 1970 4: 0604; Life insurance 11: 0510; 13: 0725; 18: 0154–0230 Equitable Life Assurance Society of the Freedom of Information Act 2: 0314 United States 8: 0585 Home Mortgage Disclosure Act of 1975 Liuzzo, Viola 13: 0437 14: 0626 impoundment of funds 13: 0244–0334 Loans income maintenance 13: 0725 from Export-Import Bank to Portugal Juvenile Justice and Delinquency 2: 0949 Protection Act of 1973 2: 0516 to government of South Africa 11: 0335 minimum wage 4: 0548; 12: 0745–0836; Home Mortgage Disclosure Act of 1975 13: 0001–0334; 14: 0410 13: 0437 Office of Economic Opportunity Long Island, New York 12: 0646–0836 Glen Cove, Stanley Park housing Omnibus Civil Rights Act of 1969 project 16: 0001; 22: 0445 12: 0282 Long v. Ford Motor Company public welfare programs 12: 0745; 11: 0772 13: 0808 Los Angeles, California Quality Integrated Education Act of 1971 NAACP branch 6: 0423; 18: 0001, 0356; 12: 0646 22: 0062 social security 12: 0745 police chief, search for 1: 0658 Social Security Amendments of 1967 Maine 2: 0825 Human Rights Commission proposal Social Security Amendments of 1972 6: 0550 2: 0516 Manufacturing Student Transportation Moratorium Act Farah Manufacturing Company 17: 0110 of 1972 2: 0516; 13: 0001 Quality-In Manufacturing Company Tax Reform Act of 1969 2: 0388–0457 10: 0708 Transportation Systems Improvement Mass media Act of 1972 4: 0548 3: 0643 Universal Voter Registration Act of 1971 see also Newspapers 2: 0483 see also Radio and television voter registration 13: 0244, 0437 broadcasting Voting Rights Act extension 4: 0396, Tom Mboya Memorial Fund 0604; 12: 0282–0369; 13: 0725– 9: 0731 0808; 15: 0001; 16: 0647 Floyd B. McKissick Enterprises, Inc. Legislation, state and local 9: 0620 Akron, Ohio, fair housing ordinance Meany, George 11: 0510 7: 0556 California Code of Fair Practices Medgar Evers Fund, Inc. 6: 0464 9: 0620–0731 California school choice 6: 0423 Medi-Cal civil rights 11: 0897 6: 0464; 18: 0494

78 Medical personnel Mississippi 15: 0655 congressional delegation 12: 0555 Memberships, NAACP congressional election, 1968 6: 0602 20: 0577; 22: 0022, 0638–0773 Democratic Party of Mississippi 3: 0167; Metropolitan New York Project Equality 6: 0602; 12: 0555 9: 0620–0731 Jackson State College 22: 0062 Mexican Americans murder of African Americans in 4: 0223 18: 0580 Missouri Michigan Highway Patrol 6: 0623 Democratic Party 8: 0467 Mondlane, Eduardo Detroit school desegregation case assassination of 11: 0236 14: 0626 Moon, Henry Lee Roy Wilkins Community School (Flint) 14: 0847 17: 0571 Morsell, John A. Middle class 14: 0856–0890; 15: 0001–0786; 17: 0659 16: 0001–0887 Military conflicts Mortgages see Arab-Israeli conflict Home Mortgage Disclosure Act of 1975 see Vietnam War 13: 0437 Military facilities Motion picture industry in West Germany 14: 0626; 22: 0937 employment 3: 0533 Military personnel Jesus Christ Superstar 11: 0772 3: 0016; 4: 0324; 10: 0098; 11: 0772; Munich, West Germany 17: 0571; 22: 0773 1972 Olympic Games 11: 0606 Milwaukee, Wisconsin Music Amos v. Board of School Directors, City Art of Black Music Society 20: 0247 of Milwaukee 16: 0647 NAACP v. Brown bombing of NAACP branch office 6: 0933 2: 0100 NAACP v. Bullock County, Alabama, Minimum wage legislation Board of Education 4: 0548; 12: 0745–0836; 13: 0001– 3: 0917 0334; 14: 0410 Namibia Support Group Minority business enterprises 10: 0342 federal programs 4: 0001 National Advisory Commission on Civil Minority Business Opportunities Disorders Program 16: 0403 4: 0527 Office of Minority Business Enterprise National Afro-American Labor Council 2: 0631 10: 0270 Project Transfer 11: 0897 National Alliance for Safer Cities Small Business Administration programs 11: 0510, 0772; 15: 0001 5: 0027 National Alliance of Postal Employees Minority Business Opportunities 4: 0851 Program National Assembly for Social Policy and 16: 0403 Development Miss Black America Beauty Pageant 9: 0935; 10: 0001 9: 0731 National Association for Sickle Cell Missions and missionaries Disease, Inc. American Missionary Association 10: 0270 13: 0457

79 National Association of Human Rights National conventions, NAACP Workers 1970 14: 0626; 16: 0647 10: 0270 1971 15: 0786; 19: 0001 National Association of Railroad 1972 7: 0468 Passengers 1973 21: 0001 10: 0001 National Council for Equal Business National Association of Social Workers Opportunity 9: 0935 13: 0457 National Bankers Association National Council of Negro Women 2: 0631 7: 0831; 18: 0356, 0689 National Black Automobile Dealers National Council of the Churches of Association Christ 9: 0935 9: 0891 National Black Political Agenda National Council of Women of the United see Gary declaration States National Black Political Assembly 10: 0160 13: 0508 National Democratic Party of Alabama National Black Political Convention 6: 0408 13: 0508; 19: 0657 National health insurance National Catholic Conference for 8: 0065–0174 Interracial Justice National Housing Development 10: 0409; 16: 0495 Corporation, NAACP National Center for Voluntary Action 18: 0230 10: 0001, 0160, 0342 National Jewish Community Relations National Citizens Committee for Advisory Council Broadcasting 10: 0160 9: 0873, 0935 National Newspaper Publishers National Citizens’ Committee to Aid the Association Families of G.M. Strikers 10: 0098; 19: 0001 9: 0935 National Organization for Women National Civil Liberties Clearing House 10: 0001, 0270, 0409 9: 0873 National Peace Action Coalition National Civil Service League 10: 0001 10: 0098 National Rural Housing Coalition National Commission on the Causes and 7: 0904; 17: 0917 Prevention of Violence National Urban Coalition 11: 0510 13: 0579–0808; 14: 0001–0410; National Committee for Commitment to 16: 0647 Brotherhood in 1971 National Welfare Rights Organization 10: 0001 10: 0098 National Committee for Responsible National Youth Work Committee, NAACP Patriotism 22: 0022, 0230 9: 0891 Naval vessels National Committee of Black Churchmen USS Kitty Hawk 4: 0725; 22: 0773 9: 0891–0935 “Negro” and “black” terms National Conference of Christians and use of 16: 0001, 0403 Jews Negro History Week 2: 0884 17: 0001, 0725; 18: 0689 National constitution, NAACP 7: 0001–0141

80 Newark, New Jersey New York State Kawaida Towers housing project AFL-CIO Building Trades Council 22: 0445 1: 0680 NAACP branch 16: 0647; 18: 0356 Attica Correctional Facility uprising New Britain, Connecticut 6: 0732; 19: 0207 Police Department 1: 0672 Bridgehampton Child Care and New Haven, Connecticut Recreational Center, Inc. 7: 0769 mayoral candidacy of Henry Parker civil rights legislation 6: 0705 1: 0668 Commission on Human Rights 1: 0680 New Jersey fire insurance legislation 6: 0696 Camden NAACP branch 18: 0356 Insurance Department 6: 0642 Newark 16: 0647; 18: 0356; 22: 0445 NAACP State Conference 18: 0356 New Orleans Plan Stanley Park housing project, Glen 15: 0182; 18: 0230 Cove, Long Island, New York Newspapers 16: 0001; 22: 0445 National Newspaper Publishers see also New York City Association 10: 0098; 19: 0001 Nigeria New York City health care services 19: 0001 Canarsie, Brooklyn, schools 20: 0124; Nigeria-Biafra War 6: 0323; 11: 0236, 22: 0638–0773 0941 Commission on Human Rights 1: 0680, Nixon, Richard M. 0804–0941; 2: 0001; 10: 0864 budget proposals 20: 0472 Council of Churches of the City of New civil rights policies 3: 0698; 4: 0604– York 20: 0124 0725; 13: 0244–0334; 14: 0626; crime in 1: 0001 16: 0403; 20: 0247–0340; 22: 0062 economic development plan 1: 0804 impoundment of funds 13: 0244 Forest Hills housing project 19: 0494– revenue sharing proposal 18: 0937 0657, 0884; 20: 0899 North Augusta, South Carolina government employees 1: 0680 Greater North Augusta Council on health care services in Harlem 19: 0782 Human Relations 8: 0933 Housing and Development North Carolina Administration 1: 0804; 2: 0001 Soul City 9: 0620; 19: 0373; 21: 0338 Housing Authority 11: 0772 Wilmington school boycott and murder Interdeparmental Committee on of Clifton Wright 14: 0341 Integration 1: 0728 Norton, Eleanor Holmes Stanley M. Isaacs Neighborhood Center 2: 0001 9: 0052–0192 Nutrition Metropolitan New York Project Equality food stamps 3: 0685; 7: 0468; 8: 0875; 9: 0620–0731 12: 0487; 13: 0437, 0725–0808; Planning Commission 1: 0728 15: 0461; 16: 0001 Project Transfer 11: 0897 Senate Select Committee on Nutrition race relations in 20: 0124 and Human Needs 12: 0282 Riverdale Children’s Association White House Conference on Food, 10: 0734 Nutrition, and Health 6: 0135 school personnel 10: 0864 see also Food schools 1: 0804–0941; 2: 0001; Office of Economic Opportunity 11: 0897; 17: 0659; 20: 0124; 4: 0797; 12: 0555–0836; 13: 0334; 22: 0638–0773 14: 0341 Transit Authority 14: 0626 Office of Minority Business Enterprise 2: 0631

81 Ohio Peace Corps Akron 11: 0510; 17: 0449 14: 0534 Cleveland housing 10: 0589 Peace movement Columbus demonstration regarding National Peace Action Coalition schools 22: 0230 10: 0001 Jewish Community Center of Cincinnati Peninsula, Virginia 9: 0405 Chamber of Commerce 6: 0851 Ohio State University Pennsylvania Ad Hoc Committee for Campus Rights NAACP branches 15: 0280; 18: 0356 18: 0001 Philadelphia 15: 0280; 18: 0356, 0580 students 15: 0001 Philadelphia Plan 22: 0062 Olympic Games Pittsburgh 18: 0356 Munich (1972) 11: 0606 Perry, Georgia Omega Psi Phi fraternity retail store boycott 18: 0001 Mu Omicron Chapter, Man of the Year Petroleum and petroleum industry 17: 0571 Gulf Oil Corporation 11: 0335 Omnibus Civil Rights Act of 1969 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 12: 0282 arrest of police officers 18: 0580 Operation Crossroads Africa NAACP branches 18: 0356 8: 0741 West Philadelphia NAACP branch Operation Family 15: 0280 10: 0476 see also Philadelphia Plan Operation PUSH (People United to Save Philadelphia Plan Humanity) 22: 0062 10: 0589 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Opportunities Industrialization Centers NAACP branch 18: 0356 2: 0884; 10: 0476; 19: 0207 Planned Parenthood Association of San Original Hebrew Israelite Nation of Diego County Jerusalem 14: 0551 9: 0405 Planned Parenthood Federation of Otero v. New York City Housing America Authority 3: 1006 11: 0772 see also Planned Parenthood Pakistan Relief Committee Association of San Diego County 6: 0375 Polaroid Corporation Palestine operations in South Africa 11: 0236 11: 0772 Police Pan African Congress 1: 0658, 0672; 13: 0596; 18: 0580 22: 0773 see also Police brutality Pan-African Solidarity Committee Police brutality 10: 0538 4: 0797; 6: 0816; 11: 0335; 17: 0659; Parker, Henry 18: 0001 1: 0668 Political appointments Passports and visas Bell, Griffin B. 2: 0232 denial of visa to Shirley Graham DuBois by California Governor Ronald Reagan 14: 0626 17: 0725 PATH Association (Plan of Action for by Johnson, Lyndon B. 4: 0144 Tomorrow’s Housing, Cleveland, Ohio) 10: 0589

82 by Nixon, Richard M. 4: 0665–0725; National Alliance of Postal Employees 5: 0261–0365, 0499–0986; 6: 0001– 4: 0851 0051; 12: 0282–0369, 0836; Poverty 13: 0725; 14: 0626; 16: 0647, 0887; legal services for the poor 13: 0334 17: 0725 National Urban Coalition report on Supreme Court 13: 0808 Carswell, G. Harrold 5: 0261–0365; Poor People’s Campaign 14: 0626 12: 0369; 13: 0725; 14: 0626; see also Antipoverty programs 16: 0647, 0887; 17: 0725 see also Public welfare programs Haynsworth, Clement F., Jr. see also War on Poverty 5: 0499–0986; 12: 0282 Powell, Adam Clayton, Jr. Powell, Lewis 12: 0836 14: 0626 Rehnquist, William 6: 0001–0051; Powell, Lewis 12: 0836 12: 0836 Political campaigns Pregnancy see Elections 12: 0138 Political participation Presidential campaigns 6: 0851; 20: 0577 1968 4: 0001, 0604 see also Elections Presidential elections see also Political appointments 1972 16: 0262–0495 see also Political parties Presidential libraries see also Voter registration Lyndon Baines Johnson Library see also Voting rights 20: 0577; 22: 0011 Political parties John Fitzgerald Kennedy Library All African People’s Revolutionary Party 9: 0325 7: 0468 Prisoners Democratic Party 3: 0167; 4: 0548; Active Black Brothers, National Inmate 6: 0408, 0602; 8: 0467; 12: 0555; Fund 7: 0556 13: 0088; 16: 0887 NAACP programs for 19: 0884 Democratic Party of the State of see also Prisons Mississippi 3: 0167; 6: 0602; Prisons 12: 0555 Attica Correctional Facility uprising Human Rights Party 15: 0461 6: 0732; 19: 0207 independent black political party California 7: 0291 21: 0530 NAACP programs 19: 0884 National Democratic Party of Alabama see also Prisoners 6: 0408 Progressive Labour Party (Bermuda) Progressive Labour Party (Bermuda) 15: 0655 15: 0655 Project One Nation Republican Party 5: 0001; 16: 0887 13: 0181 Poor People’s Campaign Project Transfer 14: 0626 11: 0897 Population growth Public accommodations 14: 0001 desegregation of 5: 0477 Portugal discrimination in 4: 0223 Export-Import Bank loan to 2: 0949 Public opinion Postal workers reaction to articles by Roy Wilkins equal employment opportunities for 17: 0367 4: 0908 Public transportation 2: 0001; 14: 0341; 20: 0124

83 Public welfare programs Christian Echoes National Ministry, Inc. Family Assistance Act of 1970 4: 0604; v. United States 7: 0556; 11: 0772 11: 0510; 13: 0725; 18: 0154–0230 Council of Churches of the City of New food stamps 3: 0685; 7: 0468; 8: 0875; York 20: 0124 12: 0487; 13: 0437, 0725–0808; Deliverance Gospel Mission 8: 0467 15: 0461; 16: 0001 Episcopal Society for Cultural and Humphrey, Hubert H.—comments Racial Unity 8: 0585 4: 0001 Indiana Interreligious Commission on income maintenance 13: 0725; 14: 0001 Human Equality 9: 0258 Leadership Conference on Civil Rights National Catholic Conference for statement on 4: 0548 Interracial Justice 10: 0409; legislation 12: 0745; 13: 0808 16: 0495 see also National Welfare Rights National Committee of Black Organization Churchmen 9: 0891–0935 see also Social security National Conference of Christians and Publishing industry Jews 2: 0884 National Newspaper Publishers National Council of the Churches of Association 10: 0098; 19: 0001 Christ 9: 0891 Quality-In Manufacturing Company Southern Christian Leadership 10: 0708 Conference 10: 0848 Quality Integrated Education Act of 1971 United Church of Christ 8: 0065; 12: 0646 20: 0124 Radio and television broadcasting see also Jewish organizations American Federation of Television and Reparations Radio Artists, AFL-CIO 4: 0324; 14: 0723; 15: 0120 7: 0398 Repression Corporation for Public Broadcasting 17: 0659 13: 0334 Republican Party employment in 4: 0324; 20: 0899 Republican National Convention licenses 13: 0244 5: 0001; 16: 0887 National Citizens Committee for Republic of Guinea Broadcasting 9: 0873, 0935 see Guinea, Republic of Railroads Research and development National Association of Railroad 14: 0001 Passengers 10: 0001 Responsible Corporate Action A. Philip Randolph Institute “Corporate Apartheid—California, 7: 0398, 0556–0681; 10: 0864 U.S.A. Style (The Exclusion of Rape case Blacks, Mexican-Americans, and 20: 0899; 21: 0001, 0338; 22: 0514 Females from Corporate Power)” Reagan, Ronald 18: 0580 17: 0725 Restitution for Involuntary Servitude Recreational facilities and services 10: 0734 10: 0160 Retail stores Refugees boycotts 18: 0001, 0230, 0937 Haitian 4: 0324 Revenue sharing Rehnquist, William 12: 0646; 18: 0937 6: 0001–0051; 12: 0836 Revolutionary Action Movement Religious organizations 10: 0734 Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate 8: 0001

84 Rhodesia see also Student Transportation closing of U.S. consulate in 14: 0626 Moratorium Act of 1972 United Nations sanctions on 11: 0335 School desegregation U.S. relations with 2: 0949 2: 0737; 4: 0396, 0604; 11: 0510; Riots and disorders 12: 0282–0487; 13: 0001, 0181, after assassination of Martin Luther King 0334–0437; 14: 0626, 0847; Jr. 9: 0520 15: 0001; 16: 0001–0154, 0647– Attica Correctional Facility uprising 0887; 17: 0110, 0367, 0571–0659; 6: 0732; 19: 0207 18: 0001, 0836; 20: 0124, 0766; Augusta, Georgia (1970) 22: 0022 21: 0135, 0338, 0530; 22: 0062, urban areas 4: 0797; 14: 0557 0638–0773 on USS Kitty Hawk 4: 0725; 22: 0773 see also Emergency School Aid and see also Demonstrations and protests Quality Integrated Education Act of Riverdale Children’s Association 1971 10: 0734 see also Quality Integrated Education Rockford, Illinois Act of 1971 Commission on Human Relations see also School busing 1: 0676 Schools Eleanor Roosevelt Memorial Foundation Amarillo, Texas 19: 0150 10: 0734 Bullock County, Alabama 03: 0917 Bob Rothman Contract Services, Inc. California school choice 06: 0423 10: 0708 Canarsie, Brooklyn 22: 0638–0773 Roxborough, Mildred Bond Columbus, Ohio 22: 0230 16: 0932–0963; 17: 0001–0249 community control of 5: 0477 Rutgers University Emergency School Aid Act of 1971 student housing 9: 0520 12: 0555–0646 Saint Mark’s Educational Foundation of Emergency School Aid and Quality South Africa Integrated Education Act of 1971 20: 0766 12: 0646 Sanctions Friends Seminary 8: 0875 see Economic sanctions New York City 1: 0804–0941; 2: 0001; San Diego, California 10: 0864; 11: 0897; 17: 0659 demonstration against South African Roy Wilkins Community School apartheid 20: 0766 17: 0571 San Diego County, California Wilmington, North Carolina, boycott Planned Parenthood Association of San 14: 0341 Diego County 14: 0551 see also Colleges and universities San Fernando Valley State College see also Education 22: 0062 see also School busing San Francisco, California see also School desegregation Board of Supervisors 1: 0662 Selective Service System NAACP branch 22: 0062 3: 0128; 5: 0020 School busing Senate, U.S. 2: 0516, 0737; 4: 0396, 0665; 11: 0606, elections (1970) 10: 0864 0897; 12: 0369; 13: 0001–0181, equal employment opportunity hearings 0334–0437; 16: 0001–0154, 0403, 3: 0258 0887; 17: 0659–0725; 19: 0494; filibuster rule 4: 0548; 12: 0282, 0555– 20: 0001, 0899; 21: 0530 0646 see also School desegregation Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs 12: 0282

85 Separatism Unity Movement of South Africa 7: 0556; 16: 0262; 17: 0725; 20: 0124; 11: 0335 22: 1010 U.S. corporations in 11: 0335; 22: 1010 Shagaloff, June South African Airways 17: 0353 11: 0236 Sickle cell anemia South Carolina 3: 0917 Greater North Augusta Council on see also National Association for Sickle Human Relations 8: 0933 Cell Disease, Inc. Southern Africa Small Business Administration U.S. relations with 11: 0236–0335 4: 0725; 5: 0027 Southern Christian Leadership Small businesses Conference 2: 0631 10: 0848 see also Small Business Administration Southern Regional Council Smith, Lonnie E. 17: 0725 14: 0626 Southern University Social conditions student protests 22: 0514 Houston, Texas 15: 0655 Special Contribution Fund, NAACP Social security 15: 0280–0381, 0786; 16: 0794; 12: 0745; 14: 0001 17: 0917; 22: 0230 see also Social Security Amendments Spingarn Medal Social Security Amendments 17: 0001 of 1967 2: 0825 Sports and athletics of 1972 2: 0516 murder of Israeli athletes at 1972 Social work Olympic Games 11: 0606 Concerned Professional Association of South African Open Games 11: 0335; Boys’ Club Workers 8: 0282 20: 0577 National Association of Social Workers Stanley Park housing project, Glen Cove, 9: 0935 Long Island, New York Soul City, North Carolina 16: 0001; 22: 0445 9: 0620; 19: 0373; 21: 0338 State Department, U.S. South Africa 5: 0112–0254; 14: 0626 African National Congress 7: 0468 Sterilization African People’s Democratic Union of 3: 1006; 11: 0964 South Africa 11: 0335 Strikes apartheid in 7: 0291; 11: 0335; 20: 0766 Atlanta city employees 17: 0725 bank loans to 11: 0335 clothing workers at Farah Manufacturing demonstration in San Diego, California, Company 17: 0110 against apartheid 20: 0766 National Citizens’ Committee to Aid the NAACP policy on 19: 0782 Families of G.M. Strikers 9: 0935 Open Games 11: 0335; 20: 0577 see also Boycotts Polaroid Corporation operations in see also Demonstrations and protests 11: 0236 Students police brutality 11: 0335 African Progressive Coalition 7: 0556 Saint Mark’s Educational Foundation of aid programs 3: 0865 South Africa 20: 0766 Fellowship of Concerned University South African Airways 11: 0236 Students (FOCUS) 8: 0741 students 11: 0335 murder of 22: 0062 terrorism trial in 11: 0236–0335 Ohio State University 15: 0001 South Africa 11: 0335

86 Southern University 22: 0514 Texas Student Transportation Moratorium Act Amarillo schools 19: 0150 of 1972 2: 0516; 13: 0001 Dallas Safeway stores boycott 18: 0230 see also Education Houston social conditions 15: 0655 see also Schools Transportation Student Transportation Moratorium Act airlines 11: 0236 of 1972 National Association of Railroad 2: 0516; 13: 0001 Passengers 10: 0001 Suburban areas National Urban Coalition budget 17: 0367; 18: 0356 suggestions 14: 0001 see also Urban areas New York City Transit Authority Supreme Court, U.S. 14: 0626 nominations public 2: 0001; 14: 0341; 20: 0124 Carswell, G. Harrold 5: 0261–0365; Transportation Systems Improvement 12: 0369; 13: 0725; 14: 0626; Act of 1972 4: 0548 16: 0647, 0887; 17: 0725 Transport Workers Union 14: 0626 Haynsworth, Clement F., Jr. see also Highways 5: 0499–0986; 12: 0282 see also School busing Powell, Lewis 12: 0836 see also Transportation Department, Rehnquist, William 6: 0001–0051; U.S. 12: 0836 Transportation Department, U.S. Syphilis 6: 0110 Tuskegee study 3: 0962 Transportation Systems Improvement Taconic Foundation Act of 1972 housing meeting 16: 0647 4: 0548 Tax Action Campaign Transport Workers Union 20: 0247 14: 0626 Taxation Travel Christian Echoes National Ministry, Inc. denial of visa to Shirley Graham DuBois v. United States 7: 0556; 11: 0772 14: 0626 exemptions 2: 0483; 4: 0132; 7: 0556; expenses 22: 0022 11: 0772 NAACP staff 1: 0521 Internal Revenue Service 4: 0132 NAACP tour of housing in Europe Tax Action Campaign 20: 0247 14: 0626 Tax Reform Act of 1969 2: 0388–0457 observation of U.S. military facilities in Tax Reform Act of 1969 Germany 14: 0626; 22: 0937 2: 0388–0457 Truman, Harry S. Teenage pregnancy civil rights policies 17: 0367 12: 0138 Tuskegee syphilis study Tehran, Iran 3: 0962 International Conference on Human Twiggs County, Georgia Rights 22: 0978 retail stores boycott 18: 0937 Television Unemployment see Radio and television broadcasting statistics 3: 0375 Tennessee see also Employment Fayette County economic conditions United Auto Workers 3: 0962; 8: 0875 17: 0571 Terrorism United Church of Christ 7: 0170; 11: 0236–0335, 0606 Commission for Racial Justice 8: 0065; 20: 0124

87 United Community Construction Vocational education and training Workers Employment and Training Opportunities 15: 0381 Act of 1970 2: 0483; 12: 0487 United Nations federal programs 3: 0865; 4: 0604 sanctions on Rhodesia 11: 0335 National Urban Coalition budget Special Committee on Apartheid suggestions 14: 0001 11: 0335 Opportunities Industrialization Centers see also United Nations Association of 2: 0884; 10: 0476; 19: 0207 the United States of America Volta River Dam (Ghana) United Nations Association of the United 14: 0890 States of America Volunteers 14: 0557 see National Center for Voluntary Action Unity Movement of South Africa Voter Education Project, Inc. 11: 0335 19: 0494 Universal Voter Registration Act of 1971 Voter registration 2: 0483 13: 0244, 0437, 0596; 15: 0001; Urban Action Exchange 16: 0001; 18: 0154, 0494, 0689; 2: 0590 19: 0001; 22: 0230–0358 Urban areas see also Political participation economic development 14: 0341–0410 see also Universal Voter Registration National Alliance for Safer Cities Act of 1971 11: 0510, 0772; 15: 0001 see also Voting rights Otero v. New York City Housing Voting rights Authority 11: 0772 for eighteen year olds 12: 0369–0487, revenue sharing and 18: 0937 0646; 14: 0626; 17: 0571; 19: 0207 riots 4: 0797; 14: 0557 see also Voter Education Project, Inc. state government programs 17: 0917 see also Voter registration Urban Action Exchange 2: 0590 see also Voting Rights Act Urban Innovations 8: 0001 Voting Rights Act Wilkins, Roy—speech 6: 0513 extension 4: 0396, 0604; 12: 0282– see also National Urban Coalition 0369; 13: 0725–0808; 15: 0001; see also Suburban areas 16: 0647 Urban Coalition Wages and salaries see National Urban Coalition controls 13: 0001 Urban Innovations Equal Pay Act 13: 0244 8: 0001 minimum wage legislation 4: 0548; U.S. Information Agency 12: 0745–0836; 13: 0001–0334; 4: 0051 14: 0410 USS Kitty Hawk of New York City school personnel 4: 0725; 22: 0773 10: 0864 USSR War on Poverty Jews in 11: 0606 California Rural Legal Assistance Vietnam War 18: 0494 2: 0884–0949; 17: 0917 Head Start program 3: 0857; 20: 0001 see also Peace movement see also Community Action Programs Virginia see also Economic Opportunity Act African American elected officials see also Office of Economic Opportunity 6: 0851 Peninsula Chamber of Commerce 6: 0851

88 Washington, D.C. National Council of Negro Women District of Columbia Court Reform and 7: 0831; 18: 0356, 0689 Criminal Procedure Act of 1970 National Council of Women of the 2: 0457; 12: 0487; 13: 0808 United States 10: 0160 home rule 12: 0745; 13: 0334 National Organization for Women Welfare programs 10: 0001, 0270, 0409 see Public welfare programs YWCA 16: 0647 West Coast Regional Office, NAACP Women’s rights 18: 0001 see Equal Rights Amendment White House Conference on Aging World Bank 6: 0135; 18: 0356 International Bank for Reconstruction White House Conference on Children and Development 9: 0192 17: 0367 Wright, Clifton White House Conference on Food, murder of 14: 0341 Nutrition, and Health Young, Whitney M., Jr. 6: 0135 12: 0646; 14: 0626 Wilberforce University Young Women’s Christian Association 7: 0769 (YWCA) Wilkins, Roy 16: 0647 1: 0617, 0655; 2: 0105; 6: 0513, 0899; Youth 17: 0367–0917; 18: 0001–0937; Big Brothers Inc. 7: 0696 19: 0001–0884; 20: 0001–0899; Boy Scouts of America 7: 0769–0831 21: 0001–0857; 22: 0001–1010 employment 13: 0596; 15: 0001 Roy Wilkins Community School Juvenile Justice and Delinquency 17: 0571 Protection Act of 1973 2: 0516 Wilmington, Delaware NAACP National Youth Work NAACP branch 18: 0356 Committee 22: 0022, 0230 Wilmington, North Carolina NAACP youth councils 18: 0836; school boycott and murder of Clifton 22: 0022 Wright 14: 0341 voting rights for eighteen year olds Wisconsin 12: 0369–0487, 0646; 14: 0626; Amos v. Board of School Directors, City 17: 0571; 19: 0207 of Milwaukee 16: 0647 YWCA 16: 0647 Milwaukee NAACP branch 2: 0100 see also Children Women see also Concerned Professional employment discrimination 18: 0580 Association of Boys’ Club Workers see also Women’s organizations see also Students see also Women’s rights Zionism Women’s organizations 13: 0437 B’nai B’rith Women 7: 0769 see also Israel Delta Sigma Theta sorority 8: 0467 Zoning ordinances League of Women Voters 9: 0520 suburban areas 18: 0356

89 BLACK STUDIES RESEARCH SOURCES Microfilms from Major Archival and Manuscript Collections PAPERS OF THE NAACP

Part 1. Part 16. Meetings of the Board of Directors, Records of Board of Directors, Correspondence Annual Conferences, Major Speeches, and and Committee Materials, 1919–1970 Special Reports, 1909–1970 Part 17. Part 2. National Staff Files, 1940–1965 Personal Correspondence of Selected NAACP Officials, 1919–1939 Part 18. Special Subjects, 1940–1955 Part 3. The Campaign for Educational Equality, 1913–1965 Part 19. Youth File Part 4. The Voting Rights Campaign, 1916–1965 Part 20. White Resistance and Reprisals, 1956–1965 Part 5. The Campaign against Residential Segregation, Part 21. 1914–1965 NAACP Relations with the Modern Civil Rights Movement Part 6. The Scottsboro Case, 1931–1950 Part 22. Legal Department Administrative Files, 1956–1965 Part 7. The Anti-Lynching Campaign, 1912–1955 Part 23. Legal Department Case Files, 1956–1965 Part 8. Discrimination in the Criminal Justice System, Part 24. 1910–1955 Special Subjects, 1956–1965

Part 9. Part 25. Discrimination in the U.S. Armed Forces, 1918–1955 Branch Department Files [1941–1965]

Part 10. Part 26. Peonage, Labor, and the New Deal, 1913–1939 Selected Branch Files, 1940–1955

Part 11. Part 27. Special Subject Files, 1912–1939 Selected Branch Files, 1956–1965

Part 12. Part 28. Selected Branch Files, 1913–1939 Special Subject Files, 1966–1970

Part 13. Part 29. The NAACP and Labor, 1940–1965 Branch Department [1966–1972]

Part 14. Part 30. Race Relations in the International Arena, 1940–1955 General Office Files, 1966–1972

Part 15. Segregation and Discrimination: Complaints and Responses, 1940–1955

UPA Collections from LexisNexis™ www.lexisnexis.com/academic