To Download the Complete Folder Listing for the Collection for Review and Printing. (PDF

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

To Download the Complete Folder Listing for the Collection for Review and Printing. (PDF Container List Series I. Newsletters. 1919-1997. Box 1 Folder 1 The A.C.E 1919-1921 Vol. I, No. 1, 1919 [Vol. I, Nos. 2-6, 1920, issues missing] Vol. II, Nos. 7-12, 1921 (No. 12 includes minutes of 9th annual conference.) Box 1 Folder 2 The A.C.E 1921-1922 Vol. III, Nos. 1-6, 1921 Nos. 7-10, 1922 Box 1 Folder 3 The A.C.E 1922 Vol. IV, Nos. 1-3, 1922 Box 1 Folder 4 The A.C.E 1923-1924 Vol. V, Nos. 1 [Misnumbered as No. 13]-6, 1923 Nos. 7-10 [No no. 9 exists], 1924 Box 1 Folder 5 The A.C.E 1924-1925 Vol. 6, Nos. 1-7 [No. 2 missing], 1924 Nos. 8-12, 1925 Box 1 Folder 6 The A.C.E 1925-1926 Vol. 7, Nos. 1-6, 1925 Nos. 7-9, 1926 Box 1 Folder 7 The A.C.E 1926-1927 Vol. 8, Nos. 1-6, 1926 Nos. 7-12, 1927 Box 1 Folder 8 The A.C.E 1927-1928 12 Vol. 9, Nos. 1-5, 1927 No. 6, 1928 Box 1 Folder 9 The A.C.E 1928 Vol. 10, Nos. 2-6, 1928 Box 1 Folder 10 The A.C.E 1929 Vol. 11, Nos. 1-6, 1929 Box 1 Folder 11 The A.C.E 1929-1930 Vol. 12, Nos. 1-4, 1929 Nos. 5-12, 1930 Box 1 Folder 12 The A.C.E 1930-1931 Vol. 13, Nos. 1-5, 1930 Nos. 6-12, 1931 Box 1 Folder 13 The A.C.E 1931-1932 Vol. 14, No. 1, 1931 Nos. 2-4, 1932 Box 1 Folder 14 The ACE 1932-1933 Vol. 15, No. I, 1932 Nos. II-VII, 1933 Box 1 Folder 15 The ACE 1933-1934 Vol. 16, No. II, 1933 Nos. III-VIII, 1934 Box 1 Folder 16 The ACE 1934-1935 Vol. 17, Nos. I-II, 1934 Nos. III-VII, 1935 Box 2 Folder 17 The ACE 1935-1936 13 Vol. 18, Nos. 1-2, 1935 Nos. 3-7, 1936 Box 2 Folder 18 The ACE 1936-1937 Vol. 19, Nos. 1-4, 1936 (No. 4 is the Christmas Holiday edition) Nos. 5-12, 1937 Box 2 Folder 19 The ACE 1937-1938 Vol. 20, Nos. 1-2, 1937 Nos. 3-8, 1938 Box 2 Folder 20 The ACE 1938-1939 Vol. 21, No. 1, 1938 Nos. 2-5, 1939 Box 2 Folder 21 The ACE 1939-1940 Vol. 22, Nos. 1-3, 1939 Nos. 4-7, 1940 Box 2 Folder 22 The ACE 1940-1941 Vol. 23, Nos. 1-2, 1940 Nos. 3-4, 1941 Vol. 24, Nos. 5-9, 1941 Box 2 Folder 23 The ACE 1941-1942 Vol. 25, Nos. 1-4, 1941 Nos. 5-14, 1942 Box 3 Folder 24 The ACE 1943 Vol. 26, Nos. 1-6, 1943 (No. 1 is first printed issue) (No. 2 is first to use photographs) Box 3 Folder 25 The ACE 1943-1944 14 Vol. 27, No. 1, 1943 Nos. 2-7, 1944 (No. 6 is pre-conference issue) Box 3 Folder 26 The ACE 1944-1945 Vol. 28, Nos. 1-4 [No. 4 is incorrectly dated 1945], 1944 No. 5, 1945 Box 3 Folder 27 The ACE 1945-1947 Vol. 29, No. 1, 1945 Nos. 2-10, 1946 Nos. 11-12 [No. 11 misnumbered 10], 1947 Box 3 Folder 28 The ACE 1947-1948 [Vol. 30, Nos. 1- 2, 1947, issues missing] Vol. 30, Nos. 3-7, 1947 No. 8, 1948 Box 3 Folder 29 The ACE 1948-1949 Vol. 31, Nos. 1-4, 1948 Nos. 5-10, 1949 Box 3 Folder 30 The ACE 1949-1950 Vol. 32, Nos. 1-4, 1949 Nos. 5-10, 1950 Box 3 Folder 31 The ACE 1950-1951 Vol. 33, Nos. 1-3, 1950 Nos. 4-10, 1951 Box 3 Folder 32 The ACE 1951-1952 Vol. 34, Nos. 2-4, 1951 Nos. 5-11, 1952 Box 3 Folder 33 The ACE 1952-1953 15 Vol. 35, Nos. 1-4, 1952 No. 5, 1953 ACE Vol. 35, Nos. 6-8, 1953 Box 3 Folder 34 ACE 1953-1954 Vol. 36, Nos. 1-2, 1953 Nos. 3-8, 1954 Box 3 Folder 35 ACE 1954-1955 Vol. 37, Nos. 1-4, 1954 Nos. 5-10, 1954 Box 3 Folder 36 ACE 1955-1956 Vol. 38, Nos. 1-4, 1955 Nos. 5-11, 1956 Box 3 Folder 37 ACE 1956-1957 Vol. 39, Nos. 1-2, 1956 Nos. 3-8, 1957 Box 3 Folder 38 ACE 1957-1959 Vol. 40, No. 1, 1957 Nos. 2-5, 1958 No. 9, 1958 Vol. 41, No. 1, 1958 Nos. 2-5, 1959 Box 3 Folder 39 ACE 1959-1962 Vol. 41, No. 6, 1959 Vol. 42, No. 2-4, 1960 Vol. 43, Nos. 1-2, 1960 Nos. 3-5, 1961 Vol. 44, Nos. 1-3, 1961 Nos. 4-6, 1962 16 Box 3 Folder 40 ACE 1962-1963 Vol. 45, Nos. 1-3, 1962 Nos. 4-6, 1963 Box 3 Folder 41 ACE 1963-1964 Vol. 46, Nos. 1-3, 1963 Nos. 4-6, 1964 Box 4 Folder 42 ACE 1964-1965 Vol. 47, Nos. 1-3, 1964 Nos. 4-6, 1965 Box 4 Folder 43 ACE 1965-1966 Vol. 48, Nos. 1-3, 1965 Nos. 4-6, 1966 Box 4 Folder 44 ACE 1966-1967 Vol. 49, Nos. 1-3, 1966 Nos. 4-6, 1967 Vol. 50, No. 1, 1967 Box 4 Folder 45 ACE 1967-1968 Vol. 50, Nos. 2-3, 1967 Nos. 4-6, 1968 aaace September-December 1968 Box 4 Folder 46 aaace 1969 January-December 1969 Box 4 Folder 47 aaace 1970 January-December 1970 17 Box 4 Folder 48 aaace 1971 January-December 1971 Box 4 Folder 49 aaace 1972 January-July, 1972 aaace Newsletter August-December, 1972 Box 4 Folder 50 aaace Newsletter 1973 January-December 1973 Box 4 Folder 51 aaace Newsletter 1974 January-December 1974 Box 4 Folder 52 aaace Newsletter 1975-1976 January 1975-January 1976 Box 5 Folder 53 aaace Newsletter 1976-1977 February 1976-January 1977 Box 5 Folder 54 aaace Newsletter 1977 February-December 1977 Box 5 Folder 55 aaace Newsletter 1978 January-March, May-June 1978 ACE September-October 1978 Box 5 Folder 56 ACE 1979 18 January-February, March, May, June, August, September, November 1979 Box 5 Folder 57 ACE 1980 January, February, May, September, December 1980 Box 5 Folder 58 ACE 1981 February, March, May, July, September, November 1981 Box 5 Folder 59 ACE 1982 January, March, May, August, September, December 1982 Box 5 Folder 60 ACE 1983 February, April, June, August, October, December 1983 Box 5 Folder 61 ACE 1984 January, March, April, August, October, December 1984 Box 5 Folder 62 ACE 1985 April, July, September, November 1985 Box 5 Folder 63 ACE 1986 January, April, June, August, October 1986 Box 5 Folder 64 The ACE Communicator 1987 January-February, April-May, June, August-September, November 1987 Box 6 Folder 65 The ACE Communicator 1988 January, February-March, May, June, August-September, October-November 1988 Box 6 Folder 66 The ACE Communicator 1989 19 January-December 1989 Box 6 Folder 67 Signals 1990 Vol. 1, Nos. 1-6, 1990 Box 6 Folder 68 Signals 1991 Vol. 2, Nos. 1-6, 1991 Box 6 Folder 69 Signals 1992 Vol. 3, Nos. 1-6, 1992 Box 6 Folder 70 Signals 1993 Vol. 4, Nos. 1-5, 1993 Box 6 Folder 71 Signals 1994 Vol. 5, Nos. 1-6, 1994 Box 6 Folder 72 Signals 1995 Vol. 6, Nos. 1-6, 1995 Box 6 Folder 73 Signals 1996 Vol. 7, Nos. 1-6, 1996 Box 6 Folder 73A Signals 1997 Vol. 8, Nos. 1-6, 1997 Box 7 Folder 74 ACE (Mimeographed copies) 1959-1961 December 1959-January 1960 February 27, 1961 March 7, 1961 March 28, 1961 May 1, 1961 May 23, 1961 June 20, 1961 20 July 17, 1961 August 14, 1961 September 8, 1961 October 3, 1961 November 13, 1961 December 12, 1961 Box 7 Folder 75 ACE (Mimeographed copies) 1962 January 24, 1962 February 27, 1962 April 6, 1962 May 1, 1962 May 15, 1962 May 28, 1962 July 20, 1962 September 1, 1962 October 1, 1962 November 1, 1962 December 1, 1962 Box 7 Folder 76 ACE (Mimeographed copies) 1963 January-December [except September] 1963 Box 7 Folder 77 ACE (Mimeographed copies) 1964 April, June, July, August, November 1964 Box 7 Folder 78 ACE (Mimeographed copies) 1965 January-December 1965 Box 7 Folder 79 ACE (Mimeographed copies) 1966 January-December [except August] 1966 Box 7 Folder 80 ACE (Mimeographed copies) 1967 January-December 1967 Box 7 Folder 81 ACE (Mimeographed copies) 1968 21 January-June 1968 Box 51 Folder 436 The A.C.E (copies) 1920 Vol I , Nos. 3-8, 1920 Box 51 Folder 437 The A.C.E (copies) 1920 Vol II, Nos. 1-6, 1920 Box 51 Folder 438 Signals 1998-2001 Vol. 9, Nos. 1-6, 1998 [No. 2, June 1998, misnumbered, should be No. 3] Vol. 10, Nos. 1-6, 1999 Vol. 11, Nos. 1-6, 2000 Vol 12, Nos. 1-6, 2001 Series II. Journals. 1968-2000. Box 8 aaace 1968-1976 Vol. 51, No. 1, 1968 Vol. 52, Nos. 1-4, 1969 Vol. 53, Nos. 1-4, 1970 Vol. 54, Nos. 1-4, 1971 Vol. 55, Nos. 1-4, 1972 Vol. 56, Nos. 1-4, 1973 Vol. 57, Nos. 1-3, 1974 Vol. 58, No. 4, 1974 [Incorrectly dated as 1975] Vol. 59, Nos. 1-4, 1976 Box 9 aaace 1976-1982 Vol.
Recommended publications
  • Cument Is from the Collections at the Dole Archives, University of Kansas
    This document is from the collections at the Dole Archives, University of Kansas http://dolearchives.ku.edu ----- EGACY bruary 26, 1986 Senator Robert J. Dole 141 Senate Hart Office Building 2nd Street & Constitution Avenue N.E. Washington, D.C. 20510 Dear Bob: ; · .', ' This is to confirm with you our plans to proceed with the national kick=o.ff_ o_f the HU1!!J?.hrey Commemorative Exhibit campaign on Thursda~> ~~r'?~ -- 2 _ ¢_;- T~flf6. --It w11r-n-e-·a - cocktail and buffet event from 6 - 8 p.m., and will be held int~ conference room of the Hall of States building, 444 North Capitol street, was_E.1~9-ton- ~ -o-:-c:·-- ·· ··----- - -------- ------- The invitation will go out over your signature and that of Walter Mondale, to approximately 400 major donor prospects plus spouses and guests, mainly from the East Coast. It will be preceded by a Mailgram, due to time constraints. By way of follow-up, we will contact by phone and letter those who cannot attend. Jane Freeman will serve as hostess, assisted by Bill Riggs for logistical arrangements. They have arranged for office space at the Hall of States (State of Minnesota rooms) and have a '·'.; .... telephone (202/624-5871) for use during the interim. Bill will be in touch with your off ice very soon to get your approval and signature on the letter. At an appropriate point during the affair Jane will welcome guests, note the purpose of the event, and introduce the Dean of the Humphrey Institute, Harlan Cleveland. He will call attention to the Exhibit project, and then introduce you and Walter Mondale as the project's distinguished national co-chairs.
    [Show full text]
  • TUESDAY, M Y 1, 1962 the President Met with the Following of The
    TUESDAY, MAYMYI,1, 1962 9:459:45 -- 9:50 am The PrePresidentsident met with the following of the Worcester Junior Chamber of CommeCommerce,rce, MasMassachusettssachusetts in the Rose Garden: Don Cookson JJamesarne s Oulighan Larry Samberg JeffreyJeffrey Richard JohnJohn Klunk KennethKenneth ScScottott GeorgeGeorge Donatello EdwardEdward JaffeJaffe RichardRichard MulhernMulhern DanielDaniel MiduszenskiMiduszenski StazrosStazros GaniaGaniass LouiLouiss EdmondEdmond TheyThey werewere accorrpaccompaniedanied by CongresCongressmansman HaroldHarold D.D. DonohueDonohue - TUESDAY,TUESbAY J MAY 1, 1962 8:45 atn LEGISLATIVELEGI~LATIVE LEADERS BREAKFAST The{['he Vice President Speaker John W. McCormackMcCortnack Senator Mike Mansfield SenatorSenato r HubertHube rt HumphreyHUInphrey Senator George SmatherStnathers s CongressmanCongresstnan Carl Albert CongressmanCongresstnan Hale BoggBoggs s Hon. Lawrence O'Brien Hon. Kenneth O'Donnell0 'Donnell Hon. Pierre Salinger Hon. Theodore Sorensen 9:35 amatn The President arrived in the office. (See insert opposite page) 10:32 - 10:55 amatn The President mettnet with a delegation fromfrotn tktre Friends'Friends I "Witness for World Order": Henry J. Cadbury, Haverford, Pa. Founder of the AmericanAtnerican Friends Service CommitteeCOtntnittee ( David Hartsough, Glen Mills, Pennsylvania Senior at Howard University Mrs. Dorothy Hutchinson, Jenkintown, Pa. Opening speaker, the Friends WitnessWitnes~ for World Order Mr. Samuel Levering, Arararat, Virginia Chairman of the Board on Peace and.and .... Social Concerns Edward F. Snyder, College Park, Md. Executive Secretary of the Friends Committe on National Legislation George Willoughby, Blackwood Terrace, N. J. Member of the crew of the Golden Rule (ship) and the San Francisco to Moscow Peace Walk (Hon. McGeorgeMkGeorge Bundy) (General Chester V. Clifton 10:57 - 11:02 am (Congre(Congresswomansswoman Edith Green, Oregon) OFF TRECO 11:15 - 11:58 am H.
    [Show full text]
  • Nber Working Paper Series Henry Agard Wallace, The
    NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES HENRY AGARD WALLACE, THE IOWA CORN YIELD TESTS, AND THE ADOPTION OF HYBRID CORN Richard C. Sutch Working Paper 14141 http://www.nber.org/papers/w14141 NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH 1050 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, MA 02138 June 2008 Thanks to Connie Chow and Hiroko Inoue for research assistance, to Susan B. Carter for critical advice, to Mason Gaffney for prodding questions that stimulated much further research, and to Norman Ellstrand for assistance with the plant biology. Financial support was provided by a National Science Foundation Grant: “Biocomplexity in the Environment, Dynamics of Coupled Natural and Human Systems.” Administrative support was provided by the Biotechnology Impacts Center and the Center for Economic and Social Policy at the University of California, Riverside. The views expressed herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research. NBER working papers are circulated for discussion and comment purposes. They have not been peer- reviewed or been subject to the review by the NBER Board of Directors that accompanies official NBER publications. © 2008 by Richard C. Sutch. All rights reserved. Short sections of text, not to exceed two paragraphs, may be quoted without explicit permission provided that full credit, including © notice, is given to the source. Henry Agard Wallace, the Iowa Corn Yield Tests, and the Adoption of Hybrid Corn Richard C. Sutch NBER Working Paper No. 14141 June 2008 JEL No. N12 ABSTRACT This research report makes the following claims: 1] There was not an unambiguous economic advantage of hybrid corn over the open-pollinated varieties in 1936.
    [Show full text]
  • The Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party Schism of 1948
    DR. MiTAU is professor of political .science and cochairman of his department in Macalester College at St. Paul. He is actively interested in state politics, and he is thus especially well qualified to write about Minnesota's recent political history. The Democratic-Farmer-Labor PARTY SCHISM of 1948 G. THEODORE MITAU BEHIND the lively events of the Demo­ Thus the fervor for social justice and cratic-Farmer-Labor party schism of 1948 a economic opportunity has long had organ­ long and complex background of political izational expression in Minnesota, even protest can be traced. As one writer has put though success in national elections has it, Minnesota "through most of its history been rare and erratic. Along with other has shown symptoms of political schizo­ Midwestern states, Minnesota witnessed the phrenia. On the one hand, it was the staid well-known patterns of protest, genuinely dowager, as reliably Republican as its down- active, rich in condemnation of the rail­ East Yankee sisters; on the other, it had skit­ roads, monopolies, and Wall Street, and tish moments during which it produced a proud of the righteous blasts from such brood of third parties or helped raise the "tribunes of the people" as Ignatius Don­ radical offspring of its neighbors."^ Espe­ nelly, A. C. Townley, Magnus Johnson, and cially in periods of economic depression, Floyd B. Olson. The quest for success at the voices of agrarian and urban protest, often polls, which would translate platform and discordant and intense, have risen from the program into actual pubhc policy, caused mining pits of the Mesabi Range, from the leaders of the Populist movement to experi­ slaughterhouses and railroad shops of the ment with various types of political tactics.
    [Show full text]
  • President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports Council Members And
    List of Members 5/17/06 2:55 PM Page 64 The President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports 50 Years Promoting Health and Fitness PRESIDENT’S COUNCIL ON PHYSICAL FITNESS AND SPORTS COUNCILMEMBERS AND EXECUTIVES (July 1956 - May 2006) Administration: Dwight D. Eisenhower W. Willard Wirtz, Secretary of Labor July 16, 1956: President’s Council on Youth Fitness Luther Hodges, Secretary of Commerce Established John Conner, Secretary of Commerce Richard M. Nixon, Vice President, Chairman (1956-57) Robert Kennedy, Attorney General Fred Seaton, Secretary of the Interior, Chairman Robert Weaver, House and Home Finance (1957-58) Administration Ezra Benson, Secretary of Agriculture Charles (Bud) Wilkinson, Consultant to the President on James Mitchell, Secretary of Labor Physical Fitness Herbert Brownell, Jr., Attorney General Richard (“Dick”) Snider, Council Administrator Neil McElroy, Secretary of Defense Marion Folsom, Secretary of Health, Education & Welfare Administration: Lyndon B. Johnson Arthur Fleming, Secretary of Health, Education & Council renamed President’s Council on Physical Fitness Welfare and Sports Lewis Strauss, Secretary of Commerce Anthony Celebrezze, Secretary of Health, Education & Frederick Mueller, Secretary of Commerce Welfare, Chairman (1963-67) Albert Cole, House and Home Finance Administration Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, Chairman (1968) Shane McCarthy, Executive Director and Consultant to the President Orville Freeman, Secretary of Agriculture Administration: John F. Kennedy W. Willard Wirtz, Secretary of Labor
    [Show full text]
  • Fourth Oral History Interview
    Stewart L. Udall Oral History Interview – JFK #4, 4/7/1970 Administrative Information Creator: Stewart L. Udall Interviewer: W.W. Moss Date of Interview: April 7, 1970 Length: 24 pp. Biographical Note Udall was the Secretary of the Interior for the President Kennedy and President Johnson Administrations (1961-1969). This interview focuses on Department of Interior appointments, the Bay of Pigs Invasion, and evaluations of Kennedy Administration Cabinet members, among other issues. Access Restrictions No restrictions. Usage Restrictions According to the deed of gift signed March 17, 1981, copyright of these materials have been assigned to the United States Government. Users of these materials are advised to determine the copyright status of any document from which they wish to publish. Copyright The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Under certain conditions specified in the law, libraries and archives are authorized to furnish a photocopy or other reproduction. One of these specified conditions is that the photocopy or reproduction is not to be “used for any purpose other than private study, scholarship, or research.” If a user makes a request for, or later uses, a photocopy or reproduction for purposes in excesses of “fair use,” that user may be liable for copyright infringement. This institution reserves the right to refuse to accept a copying order if, in its judgment, fulfillment of the order would involve violation of copyright law. The copyright law extends its protection to unpublished works from the moment of creation in a tangible form.
    [Show full text]
  • Minnesota's Greatest Generation Oral
    Jane C. Freeman Narrator Douglas Bekke Interviewer October—November 2007 Minneapolis, Minnesota DB: Minnesota Historical Society Greatest Generation Project interview with Jane C. Freeman in Minneapolis, Minnesota on October 31, 2007. Mrs. Freeman, could you please say and spell your full name? JF: Jane Charlotte Shields Freeman. II DB: And Shields is your maiden name. GenerationPart JF: Right. DB: Where were you born? Society JF: Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Actually in Statesville just outside Winston-Salem. Project: DB: Was that like a small town or a suburb?Greatest JF: It was a small rural town. Historical DB: I imagine it’s a suburb now. History JF: Yes. My parents moved back to Winston-Salem very shortly after I was born. DB: Your birth date? Is that okay to ask? Minnesota'sOral JF: Yes, of course. May 25, 1921. Minnesota DB: Can you tell us a little bit about your parents and your ethnic background? JF: My mother and father had come to North Carolina from Pennsylvania. My mother was born and raised in Pennsylvania. Her father was Scotch-Irish. Her mother was Swiss-German and English. A mixture. My father was born in York, Ohio but raised in Pennsylvania most of his life. He was English and Scotch and Irish but I don’t know from which grandparent or which parent, how that division came. But basically we were mostly Scotch, Irish, English and some German. 25 DB: And had your family been in the New World, in the United States for a long time or had they immigrated in the 19th century? JF: Yes.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Download
    134 Reviews Yet this does not mean that dependency theorists argue that conflict grows from a power imbalance. Barbieri concludes that instead of power imbalances result- ing in greater conflict between states, states with symmetric ties were in fact more likely to experience conflict. In the end, while Barbieri has made a signif- icant contribution to the field, she is willing to admit that while her findings are useful, questions still remain, and more research is needed to understand the exact nature of the interaction between trade and conflict. It is a noble admission from a scholar who has provided a spirited insight into this complex and impor- tant field. Z%e Liberal Illusion is not without its shortcomings, however. Although it is very dense, the book is, in fact, rather short, running to only 137 pages of text. There are sections in the book which provide some excellent analysis on how the Great Powers related to each other in terms of conflict and trade over the last century: The reader would appreciate more of this insight. Moreover, although it is brief, the book devotes considerable detail to explaining the nuances of Barbieri's methodology. While important, readers would likely have traded the extensive equations for more examples that actually address real world relation- ships and conflict. As a result, the books reads like a dissertation (it was), which, while brilliant, could have been expanded and refined somewhat. It also might be appreciated more by political theorists than historians, who will find the rig- orous methodology and extensive data somewhat removed from historical events.
    [Show full text]
  • Orville Freeman Oral History Interview IV, 11/17/88, by Michael L
    LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON LIBRARY ORAL HISTORY COLLECTION LBJ Library 2313 Red River Street Austin, Texas 78705 http://www.lbjlib.utexas.edu/johnson/archives.hom/biopage.asp ORVILLE FREEMAN ORAL HISTORY, INTERVIEW IV PREFERRED CITATION For Internet Copy: Transcript, Orville Freeman Oral History Interview IV, 11/17/88, by Michael L. Gillette, Internet Copy, LBJ Library. For Electronic Copy on Compact Disc from the LBJ Library: Transcript, Orville Freeman Oral History Interview IV, 11/17/88, by Michael L. Gillette, Electronic Copy, LBJ Library. INTERVIEW IV DATE: November 17, 1988 INTERVIEWEE: ORVILLE FREEMAN INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. Freeman's office, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1, Side 1 G: You were saying, with regard to the food stamp program, it was something you really had to coax him [LBJ] along on, that he was reluctant to do it. F: Yes, he was reluctant, and that was not the result of a lack of concern, but a genuine feeling, or at least a big question in his mind: "Was this the best use of resources?" and, "Once you feed people, why, it's gone, and how much better off are they?" I would say, "Now, Mr. President, you don't want to go down in history as one who did not support feeding hungry people. I don't want to see that on the history of your administration. I want to see you out in front leading on this issue of reaching people in need of food. I feel very strongly that if we are going to be forced by circumstances to cut back production in agriculture in order to bring some balance in the marketplace, why, it's almost a moral necessity, in my feeling, that we do everything we possibly can to feed people in this country.
    [Show full text]
  • Adecade That Changed History Poverty
    holding a hearing in Mississippi on reauthorizing the War on ADecade that Changed History Poverty. Clark and several colleagues, including Sens. Robert F. Kennedy (D-NY) and Jacob Javits (R-NY), were startled by the testimony of young civil rights attorney Marian Wright, It was a textbook example of how awareness leads to who, instead of emphasizing the poverty program, talked action — and how a group of dedicated activists and leaders about the near-starvation she was seeing in the state. can change history and dramatically improve people’s lives. Having heard this, Clark and Kennedy decided to change From 1967 through 1977, these leaders set in motion a their itinerary to see things firsthand. Accompanied by series of events that combined to shock Americans’ Kennedy’s aide, Peter Edelman, and Wright (who were later consciences about the existence of hunger in the midst of married), they went the next day to visit families living in plenty, to then revolutionize federal food and nutrition policy, shacks with no food in the pantry and severely malnourished and finally, to dramatically reduce hunger in our nation. children with distended bellies. Hunger was not a new problem in the 1960s. Those at the Kennedy was deeply moved and remarked to Peter Edelman bottom of America’s economic ladder have always had and others that he had seen such conditions only in Third trouble feeding their families, and this problem had become World countries. He returned to Washington determined to particularly acute during the Great Depression. follow up. However, after the post-World War II decades of robust This experience had a profound impact not only on Kennedy, growth in America’s economy, Americans’ consciousness of but on millions of Americans, since what he saw was seen hunger faded.
    [Show full text]
  • Making Tracks, November 2011
    Nov. 2011 ONE-THIRD DONE! — Construction of the light rail transit line is 32 percent complete. By the end of November, crews plan to finish repaving and reopen four lanes of traffic on the western three miles of University Avenue in St. Paul, reopen Fourth Street in its final configuration in downtown St. Paul, re- open Robert Street in the Capitol area and install rail on Washington Avenue on the East Bank. Crews above build the guideway on University Avenue just east of Highway 280. Read more about it at: http://tinyurl.com/85pptzz Downtown Downtown Minneapolis St. Paul Four University Avenue stations taking shape Snelling Avenue Station Fairview Avenue Station Raymond Avenue Station Westgate Station 2 Downtown Downtown Minneapolis St. Paul University Avenue—all new sidewalks, pavers, streets, lights! “I keep coming back to this: Let’s keep our eye on the prize. The Midway dis- trict of St. Paul is going to be a substantially superior place to live, work and have fun after light rail is fin- ished than before it was started.” Marvin Plakut, president and CEO, Episcopal Homes. 3 Downtown Downtown Minneapolis St. Paul Union Depot Station Embedding rail (top) at Union Depot Station. Photo courtesy of Steve Glis- chinski, TRAINS magazine. Semicircular walkway (bottom) fin- ished up to Un- ion Depot, al- lowing Christos restaurant to reopen soon. 4 Downtown Downtown Minneapolis St. Paul Central Station at 4th & Cedar streets The rebuilt skyway over Fifth Street between Cedar and Minnesota streets reopened Nov. 1, kicking off a busy month when a lot of elements will be completed for the 2011 heavy construction season.
    [Show full text]
  • GH Helen Mccann White -HW
    Judge Gerald W. Heaney Narrator Helen McCann White Interviewer November 30, 1967 Duluth, Minnesota Gerald W. Heaney -GH Helen McCann White -HW HW: could you tell a little bit about how you happened to get into politics, Judge Heaney? GH: Well, I suspect that my interest in politics started when I was & boy in Goodhue County during the Al Smith campaign in 1928. There was an old family friend by the name of Frank O'Gorman who was the county chairman of Goodhue County which at that time was a very strongly Republican county, and through him I developed an interest in politics and spent a good deal of time going with him to meetings and nailing up signs and doing the customary political chores. I continued an interest in politics from that time until the present - rather a passive interest during my high school and college days - but I was working as well as going to school. After graduation from the University of Minnesota law school in 1941, I worked for a year with the Securities Commission of the State of Minnesota as an attorney investigator, and of course, I was under civil service during that period of time and didn't have a strong political interest. During law school, however, I became acquainted with Orville Freeman. We were in the same fraternity and were very close personal friends at that time, a friendship that has continued until now. In 1942, I went into the army and served in the Second Ranger Battalion overseas until 1945. And I would suspect that the real impetus of my going into politics came during the period of time that I was in the army in this respect, that I would suppose that it was a good deal like so many others that served in the army in World War II in Minnesota and who came back and got active in politics.
    [Show full text]