PAULEY, FRANCES FREEBORN, 1905-2003. Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992

Emory University Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library , GA 30322 404-727-6887 [email protected]

Descriptive Summary

Creator: Pauley, Frances Freeborn, 1905-2003. Title: Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Call Number: Manuscript Collection No. 659 Extent: 53.625 linear feet (100 boxes), 3 oversized papers boxes (OP), and 1 oversized bound volume (OBV) Abstract: Papers of Georgia human rights and civil rights activist Frances Freeborn Pauley including correspondence, diaries, organizational records, subject files, clippings, and memorabilia. Language: Materials entirely in English.

Administrative Information

Restrictions on Access Special restrictions apply: Series 11, entire series is closed to researchers.

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Source Gift, 1984 with subsequent additions.

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Emory Libraries provides copies of its finding aids for use only in research and private study. Copies supplied may not be copied for others or otherwise distributed without prior consent of the holding repository. Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Collection Description

Biographical Note Frances Freeborn Pauley (1905-2003), human rights and civil rights activist, was born September 11, 1905 in Wadsworth, Ohio, to William Freeborn, a merchant, and Josephine Andrews Freeborn. She had one brother, William Elbridge Freeborn. In 1908, William Freeborn was offered the job of running the business for his brother-in-law, H.G. Hastings, owner of Hastings Nursery, and so the family moved from Ohio to Decatur, Georgia. Frances Pauley attended Decatur High School, and graduated from in 1927 with a degree in mathematics. During her years at Agnes Scott, Pauley took many drama courses, and taught drama in the DeKalb County schools for several years after graduation. She was also active in theatrical activities around Atlanta. It was while she was directing a play at St. Philip's Episcopal Church that she met her future husband, William Crooks Pauley. They were married on May 25, 1930, and had two daughters, Joan Pauley Lamb, and Marylin Pauley Beittel. William Crooks Pauley, a landscape architect, was born July 6, 1893 in Lafayette, Indiana, to Joseph E. Pauley and Lillian A. Crooks Pauley. He graduated in 1916 from Purdue University with a B.S. in Agriculture, and in 1918 from the University of Massachusetts with a M.L.A. (Landscape). He was the architect who designed Hurt Park and other developments. William Crooks Pauley died in 1985. During the depression, while raising a young family and doing volunteer work for a church- sponsored free dental clinic, Pauley's social consciousness began to develop. During that time, she organized community support and helped raise $25,000 to begin a program of providing hot lunches at every school in DeKalb County. She also helped set up a free medical clinic in Decatur. In the 1940s, she became active in the DeKalb County League of Women Voters, and as its second President, she struck the bylaws clause limiting membership to whites only. From 1952-1955, she served as President of the state chapter of the League of Women Voters, which successfully worked to defeat the County Unit System. In the late 1950s, she helped establish bi-racial discussion groups with the Fund For Adult Education. It was here that she forged relationships with many of those with whom she would work on human rights and civil rights issues in years to come. Following the 1954 desegregation decision of the U.S. Supreme Court, Frances Pauley worked with HOPE (Help Our Public Schools) to help keep public schools open and to advance the cause of integration. She also organized testimony for the Sibley Commission hearings in 1960. After urging from Martin Luther King, Jr., Frances Pauley became head of the Georgia Council on Human Relations in 1960. She served in this position until 1967, organizing local councils in many Georgia towns and cities to provide a forum for Blacks and whites. The Council was often in the midst of controversy, as when attempting to register Black voters in remote Georgia counties. From 1968 to 1973, Frances Pauley worked for the Office of Civil Rights of the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare. She began working in the welfare compliance section, but was soon moved to the education division where she coordinated school desegregation compliance in Mississippi.

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After her retirement in 1973, Frances Pauley continued to be active in social causes, founding the Georgia Poverty Rights Organization in 1974 to lobby for the rights of poor people primarily in the areas of welfare and energy assistance. She has continued to be involved in human rights and civil rights organizations in more recent years, including AID Atlanta, and People for Urban Justice (PUJ), an organization for the homeless sponsored by the Open Door Community. Among her many awards, Frances Pauley has received the Christian Council of Metropolitan Atlanta's community service award, the Outstanding Alumni Award from Agnes Scott College's Alumnae Association (1984), and an honorary doctor of laws degree from Emory University (1989).

Scope and Content Note The Frances Freeborn Pauley papers consist of a wide variety of material types including correspondence, diaries, organizational records, subject files, clippings, and memorabilia. The collection dates from 1919-1992, with the bulk of the papers dating from ca. 1957-1992. This collection is strong in its representation of civil rights and social welfare issues prevalent from the mid 1950s to the present time. Organization-related records make up most of this collection; there are relatively few materials relating to the personal life of Frances Freeborn Pauley. Most information of this type is found in the Personal Papers series. All of the series document Pauley's involvement with civil rights and social welfare issues. Series 11 of this collection houses those files which have been restricted. The restriction decisions were based on the recent personal information found in these items, and include such items as resumes, performance evaluations, questionnaires, and case files.

Arrangement Note Arranged in twelve series: (1) Personal papers, (2) League of Women Voters records, (3) Fund for Adult Education records, (4) HOPE (Help Our Public Education) records, (5) Georgia Council on Human Relations records, (6) Georgia State Advisory Committee on Civil Rights records, (7) United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare: Office of Civil Rights files, (8) Georgia Poverty Rights Organization records, (9) Other affiliations files, (10) AIDS files, (11) Restricted files, and (12) Unprocessed additions.

Finding Aid Note Index to selected correspondents is available.

3 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Description of Series

Series 1: Personal papers, 1919-1991 Series 2: League of Women Voters records, 1950-1960 Series 3: Fund for Adult Education records, 1957-1961 Series 4: HOPE (Help Our Public Education) records, 1959-1961 Series 5: Georgia Council on Human Relations records, 1956-1975 Series 6: Georgia State Advisory Committee on Civil Rights records, 1958-1972 Series 7: United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare: Office of Civil Rights files, 1945-1977 Subseries 7.1: General files, 1950-1984 Subseries 7.2: Collected material, 1945-1977 Series 8: Georgia Poverty Rights Organization records, circa 1930s-1992 Subseries 8.1: Administrative records, 1971-1989 Subseries 8.2: General subject files, 1959-1992 Subseries 8.3: Welfare files, circa. 1930s-1989 Subseries 8.4: Energy assistance files, 1979-1992 Subseries 8.5: Georgia politics files, 1972-1989 Subseries 8.6: Allied organizations files, 1967-1990 Series 9: Other affiliations files, 1940-1989 Series 10: AIDS files, 1983-1990 Series 11: Restricted files, 1966-1988 Series 12: Unprocessed additions

4 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Series 1 Personal papers, 1919-1991 Boxes 1-4, OP1-OP4, and AV1

Scope and Content Note Series 1 contains materials of both a personal and general nature relating to Frances Pauley. The Personal Papers series includes biographical data, awards, correspondence to and from Pauley (1951-1989, no date), a diary (no date), legal documents, appointment books, calendars, telephone messages, address books, a program, and an audio recording. Also included in this series are photographs of Pauley, clippings relating to her life and work, and programs, brochures, sketches and memorabilia collected by Pauley. Although most materials documenting Pauley's public career will be found in the organizational series (League of Women Voters, Georgia Council on Human Relations, etc.), there is also some material in this series. Of particular note are letters written by Pauley to her children during her years with the Civil Rights Office of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. These letters comment on the desegregation protests in Albany, Georgia (1961), desegregation confrontations in Georgia and other Southern states, and her reaction to the death of Martin Luther King, Jr. Also of note is a form letter signed by Martin Luther King, Jr. in folder 5.

Arrangement Note Arranged by record type.

Box Folder Content 1 1 Biographical data, 1953, 1971, 1983, and no date 1 2 Awards, 1966-1991, and no date OP1 1 Awards: Maharishi Award, June 19, 1977; Community Service Award, July 31, 1981 1 3 General correspondence, 1951-1979 1 4 General correspondence, 1980-1981 1 5 General correspondence, 1982-1989, and no date 1 6 Letters to children, 1961-1969, and no date 1 7 Diary, no date 1 8 Legal documents: Receipts, 1948-1983 1 9 Legal documents: Receipts, Traffic tickets, 1959, 1961

Subject files 1 10 Martin Luther King, Jr., "Man of the Year," Time, January 3, 1964 1 11 Martin Luther King, Jr., Memorial service program, Columbus, Ga., April 7, 1968 1 12 Martin Luther King, Jr., clippings, April 1968, and no date OP1 2 Martin Luther King, Jr., clippings, 1967 April 1968, Church News, January 15, 1983, issue devoted to Martin Luther King, Jr. 1 13 Jimmy Carter, Atlanta, January 1977

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OP1 3 Jimmy Carter, clippings, 1976-1977

Personal administrative papers 2 1 Appointment books, 1960-1962 2 2 Appointment books, 1964-1966 2 3 Calendars, 1957-1960 2 4 Calendars, 1964, 1968, 1969 2 5 Calendars, 1972, 1974 2 6 Calendars, 1975, 1976 2 7 Calendars, 1977-1980 2 8 Calendars, 1981, 1982, 1989 3 1 Telephone messages, 1967, and no date 3 2 Telephone messages, 1980, and no date 3 3 Address/telephone books, 1965-1967 3 4 Address/telephone books, 1968-1979; includes FP letter to children, with references to Martin Luther King, Jr 3 5 Address/telephone books, 1979 3 6 Address/telephone books, 1970s

Activities 4 1 Programs: Atlanta Civic Ballet, 1946-1956 4 2 Women's International League for Peace and Freedom 4 3 "Sisters in Struggle...": Conference, March 7, 1991, flier AV1 - "Sisters in Struggle...": Conference, March 7, 1991, [original: audio cassette] 4 4 Photographs, 1922, 1960, 1961, 1978, and no date 4 4a Photographs in newspaper clippings 4 5 Flier, "Group to protest segregated golf tournament," [1990?] 4 6 Clippings, 1928, 1943, 1955, 1959, 1961-1962, 1964, 1966, 1968-1969 OP1 4 The Thomasville News, (Thomasville, GA), September 5-7, 1968 (first Black Presidential and Vice Presidential nominees) 4 7 Clippings, 1971-1974, 1977-1979 4 8 Clippings, 1980-1982, 1984 4 9 Clippings, 1987-1993, n.d. 4 10 Articles: "Stories of Struggle and Triumph," Open Door Community's Hospitality, interview with Frances Pauley, 1993. [interviewed by Kathy Nasstrom] [Audiocassettes are located in Box 98]

Collected material 4 11 Children's Yearbook, 1919 4 12 Programs, 1955-1983, and no date

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4 13 Civil War Times Illustrated, July 1973, (see title page for Bell Wiley inscription and p. 9) 4 14 Brochures, flyers, etc., 1977-1985, no date 4 15 Typescript letter, John Floyd to War Dept., November 17, 1838 4 16 Sketch: Robert F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Jr., and John F. Kennedy by A.B. Jackson, no date, (print) 4 17 Memorabilia: Georgia General Assembly Pass, March 1, 1979

7 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Series 2 League of Women Voters records, 1950-1960 Box 5, OP 5

Scope and Content Note Frances Pauley served as President of the Georgia chapter of the League of Women Voters from 1952-1955. Through its program of providing non-partisan, factual information about registration, voting, candidates and issues, the Georgia League (affiliated with the League of Women Voters of the U.S.) sought to promote political responsibility through the informed and active participation of citizens in government. During Pauley's tenure, the League worked actively against the County Unit System (1952), against the private school amendment to the constitution (1954), the Subversives Activities Bill/ Literature Commission Act (censorship), 1953, and for the "Tolerance" pledge, 1952, urging candidates to restrain from making appeals to the racial or religious prejudices of the electorate. In an interview with Frances Pauley (1991), she remarked that Herman Talmadge had paid her the compliment of saying he would have succeeded in establishing the County Unit System "if it hadn't for that damned Frances Pauley!" Similarly, Julian LaRose Harris said of her in a letter dated January 8, 1953, "I have seldom seen an iron hand so effectually masked by a glove so seemingly soft and pliant." (Julian LaRose Harris papers, Box 5:1) Pauley also fought discrimination within the League itself, striking the bylaw clause restricting membership to whites only, and opening up the League to African-American women. The series includes correspondence of an organizational nature (1951-1960, no date), financial records, subject files relating to various League campaigns (County Unit System, Open Schools), press releases and printed matter, notes, clippings, collected materials and memorabilia.

Box Folder Content 5 1 Correspondence, 1951-1960, and no date 5 2 Financial records, 1952, and no date 5 3 Conventions, 1953, 1955, and no date 5 4 County unit controversy: Background, 1950, 1952, and no date 5 5 County unit controversy: Printed matter, 1952 5 6 Citizens Against the County Unit Amendment: Printed matter, 1952, and no date OP1 5 Poster, "Four Steps to dictatorship..." no date 5 7 Open schools campaign: Printed matter, 1954 5 8 Open schools campaign: Flyers, 1954 5 9 Red scare: Related materials, 1952, 1957 5 10 Notes, no date 5 11 Press releases, 1952, 1954, and no date 5 12 Printed matter, 1951, 1954-1955, 1960, and no date 5 13 Georgia Voter, 1950, 1952, 1954, 1958-1960

Clippings

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5 14 General, 1948-1957, and no date 5 15 Communism, 1952-1957, and no date 5 16 County unit system, 1950, 1952, 1955, 1961, 1963 5 17 League of Women Voters, 1951-1952, 1955-1956, and no date 5 18 Public schools, 1954, 1956, and no date 5 19 "Tolerance" pledge, 1952, 1954 5 20 Welfare reform, 1952

Collected material 5 21 Desegregation, 1955, 1957, and no date 5 22 "Freedom to Read," T.V. program, 1952, 1957, and no date 5 23 Memorabilia: U.S. Senate Chamber pass, April 24, 1951

9 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Series 3 Fund for Adult Education records, 1957-1961 Box 6

Scope and Content Note Series 3 documents Frances Pauley's involvement in setting up adult study groups in Georgia under the auspices of the Fund for Adult Education, a national organization based in White Plains, New York. The organization sponsored guided discussion groups in Atlanta, Macon, Rome, Gainesville, and other locations throughout Georgia on a variety of topics including World Politics, American Democracy, American Foreign Policy, and Modern Painting. She also assisted in setting up an integrated discussion group on World Politics at Tuskegee Institution (Alabama). This series includes correspondence (1957-1961, no date) documenting the organizational details of setting up the discussion groups, including letters between Mrs. Pauley and representatives of educational and civic institutions which provided facilities for the discussion groups, her efforts to find volunteers to serve as discussion leaders, financial management, and the ordering of texts. Other materials include progress reports, financial reports, registration reports, contact lists, notes, brochures, printed material and clippings.

Box Folder Content 6 1 Correspondence, 1957 6 2 Correspondence, 1958 January - June 6 3 Correspondence, 1958 July - December 6 4 Correspondence, 1959 January - June 6 5 Correspondence, 1959 July - December 6 6 Correspondence, 1960 6 7 Correspondence, 1961, and no date 6 8 Progress report, no date 6 9 Financial report, 1959-1961, and no date 6 10 Atlanta registration reports, 1958-1961, and no date 6 11 United States registration reports, 1959-1960 6 12 Registration figures, 1957-1961 6 13 Registration receipts, 1958 6 14 Contact lists, no date 6 15 Discussion leaders report card, no date 6 16 Notes, no date 6 17 Brochures, 1957-1961, and no date 6 18 Printed matter, 1959, and no date 6 19 Clippings, 1957, 1959-1960, and no date

10 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Series 4 HOPE (Help Our Public Education) records, 1959-1961 Boxes 7-8

Scope and Content Note Series 4 documents Frances Pauley's work with HOPE (Help Our Public Education) Inc., a non-profit organization of volunteers set up to preserve free public education in Georgia. The overriding goal of HOPE was to keep public schools open in the face of state laws and public opinion that decried the notion of "race-mixing." To avoid divisiveness, HOPE refrained from debating the pros or cons of desegregation, focusing its attention instead on the vital, but less controversial, topics of education and economics. HOPE was affiliated with the Southern Regional Council (SRC) and with many religious, civic and fraternal organizations. HOPE was chartered in 1958 after a desegregation suit was filed in Atlanta. At that time there were state laws on the books to close any public school in Georgia that was desegregated, and it appeared likely that all public schools in the state might eventually close because of the conflict between state and federal laws. To inform the public of this threat, HOPE publicized the situation through the creation of local chapters, conferences, meetings, and newsletters. The 1960 legislature created a School Study Commission to be chaired by banker John Sibley (see related collection: The John Sibley papers). Following the publication of the Sibley Commission report in May 1960, HOPE sponsored an Open School Conference to crystallize statewide reaction to the report. In 1961, HOPE saw the legislature and governor as possible obstacles to compliance with federal law. In place at the state level were "massive resistance" laws of the type that had been disastrous in Virginia, Louisiana and Arkansas. To influence the governor and legislature to repeal the "massive resistance" laws, HOPE laid the groundwork for "Operation Last Chance." A special session of the legislature was called. In addressing the session, Governor Vandiver admitted that the state's school closing laws had "become an albatross" and recommended repealing "massive resistance" laws. The legislature concurred, thus achieving HOPE's major goal. Using her vast network of friends and acquaintances across Georgia, Frances Pauley was highly effective as chair of the state organizing committee for HOPE. Pauley traveled widely to initiate and guide HOPE satellite groups created in Albany, Athens, Augusta, Columbus, Gainesville, Macon, Rome, Savannah, and many smaller communities. By July 1959, eight months after its founding, HOPE had the largest membership of any organization in the state. The group received much local and national publicity, including the WSB (Atlanta) radio broadcast, "Open Mike," conducted by Aubrey Morris, the week of 5 January 1960; an article in Time, 16 March 1959, and an Edward R. Murrow telecast entitled, "Who Speaks for the South?." The collection includes correspondence, organizing strategies, policy statements, minutes, reports, conference proceedings, transcripts of hearings, agendas, newsletters, mass mailings, lists of participants, memorabilia, printed matter, and clippings. Prominent people affiliated with HOPE and represented in this series include: John Bertrand (pres., Berry Schools), Ruth Boozer, Helen Bullard, Leslie Dunbar, William B. Hartsfield, Muriel Lokey, Hamilton Lokey, Ralph McGill, Mackay, Congressman Erwin Mitchell, Eliza

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Paschall, Rabbi Jacob M. Rothschild, Alice W. Stancil, Judson C. Ward, Charles Longstreet Weltner. For more information on HOPE and the school closing dilemma, see Donald Ross Green's If The Schools Are Closed (XE368.G738.I3).

Box Folder Content 7 1 Organizing strategies, 1959, and no date 7 2 Policy statements and objectives, 1959 7 3 Bylaws, no date 7 4 Minutes, 1959-1961, and no date 7 5 Correspondence, 1959 January-June 7 6 Correspondence, 1959 July-December 7 7 Correspondence, 1960 7 8 Correspondence, 1961, and no date 7 9 Meeting activity report, 20 August 1959 7 10 Progress report, no date 7 11 Officers: lists, 1960, and no date 7 12 Open schools campaign: Planning strategies, no date 7 13 Open schools campaign: Proposed legislation, 1959, and no date 7 14 Open schools campaign: Official statements, 1959-1961 7 15 Open schools campaign: Operation Last Chance, no date 7 16 Open schools campaign: New Orleans (Save Our Schools): House bills, 1960 7 17 Open schools campaign: Notes, no date 7 18 Georgia Open School Conference, 14 May 1960: Planning notes, no date 7 19 Georgia Open School Conference, 14 May 1960: Correspondence, 1960 April - May 7 20 Georgia Open School Conference, 14 May 1960: Press release, 9 May 1960 7 21 Georgia Open School Conference, 14 May 1960: Workshop reports, no date 7 22 Georgia Open School Conference, 14 May 1960: Financial report, no date 7 23 Georgia Open School Conference, 14 May 1960: Final report, no date 7 24 Georgia Open School Conference, 14 May 1960: Programs, no date 7 25 Georgia Open School Conference, 14 May 1960: Brochures, no date 7 26 Georgia Open School Conference, 14 May 1960: Dinkler Plaza Hotel, floor plan 7 27 Georgia School Study Commission: Hearings, 1960 8 1 Newsletters: The HOPE-ful Outlook, 1959-1960; HOPE Bulletin, no date; HOPE Newsletter, no date 8 2 Mailings, 1959-1960, and no date 8 3 Mailing list, 1959, and no date 8 4 Price list for HOPE Materials, no date 8 5 Articles, 1956-1959, and no date 8 6 Clippings: 1957, 1959

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8 7 Clippings: 1960, and no date 8 8 Conferences: Non-HOPE, 1959-1960, and no date 8 9 Printed material, 1959-1961, and no date 8 10 Collected material: Addresses, 1957-1958, 1960 8 11 Memorabilia: Badges

13 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Series 5 Georgia Council on Human Relations records, 1956-1975 Boxes 9-14, OP 6

Scope and Content Note Series 5 documents Frances Pauley's involvement with the Georgia Council on Human Relations. She served as director of the Council from 1960-1967. The Georgia Committee on Interracial Cooperation was founded in 1919 with the aim of working towards better understanding between the races. Renamed the Georgia Council on Human Relations in 1956, the biracial organization's stated goal was to "establish human dignity for all citizens as a part of the Georgia 'way of life.' basic in our effort is the development of understanding and the recognition that the pursuit of happiness requires equal opportunities in all areas of life." The Council was a private, non-profit organization with headquarters in Atlanta, and local councils in Savannah, Columbus, Macon, Augusta, Rome, Brunswick and Albany. The Council provided an opportunity for discussion and consultation between blacks and whites, informed Georgians on potential conflicts in race relations, and served as a mediator in times of tension and crisis. The Council held forums, conferences, institutes, workshops and adult education classes with interracial groups to stimulate interracial cooperation in communities throughout Georgia. After chapters were established, the Council broadened its scope to include community needs and problems in general (i.e. health, senior citizens and juvenile delinquency) which in turn generated interagency cooperation with various other groups. In addition to assisting and organizing local groups, the Council published a quarterly and monthly newsletter, offered workshops on such current problems as employment opportunities, school desegregation and voting rights. The state headquarters served as a center of research and information on human relations problems and supplied information, materials and speakers to school, church and community groups. The staff acted as conciliators in special crisis situations throughout the state of Georgia. Series 5 contains administrative records, educational materials, papers relating to the Council's community outreach activities, promotional materials, and collected materials. Materials relating to the Council's administrative activities include historical sketches, mission statements, bylaws, minutes, correspondence, quarterly and annual reports, annual meeting reports, financial records, contact lists, and other items. One notable body of correspondence consists of letters from residents of Albany, Georgia, in response to the Council's efforts to mediate the 1962 desegregation conflict in Albany, Georgia (also known as the Albany Movement). While a small portion of the mail is favorable, much of it is what might be termed 'hate mail,' aimed at the 'outside agitators' many in Albany believed the Council to be. The educational activities of the Council are documented by programs, reports, printed material and other items concerning various conferences on human relations issues: the Race Relations Institute held at Fisk University (1957), the White House conference, "To Fulfill These Rights," (1966), and a conference on the Georgia Child's Access to Materials Pertaining to American Negroes (1967). The Council's community action activities are reflected in materials relating to the welfare system and other human relations concerns. These include the results of a survey of welfare

14 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 recipients conducted by the Council, printed material relating to the Georgia welfare rights center, welfare regulations, a report on welfare rights, and other materials. Promotional materials include press releases, a newsletter, position statements, brochures and flyers reflecting the activities of the Council. There is also a small group of collected printed materials relating to allied organizations, including chapter councils in Rome and Augusta, and the Greater Atlanta Council on Human Relations.

Box Folder Content 9 1 Historical background, 1955, and no date 9 2 Committee on Interracial Cooperation, 1956 9 3 Mission statements, 1962, and no date 9 4 Bylaws, 1962, 1964, and no date 9 5 Minutes: Executive committee, 4 January 1961 9 6 Agenda: Executive committee, 24 July 1961 9 7 Correspondence, 1957-1961 9 8 Correspondence, 1962-1965 9 9 Correspondence, 1966 January-June 9 10 Correspondence, 1966 July-December 9 11 Correspondence, 1967 January-June 9 12 Correspondence, 1967 July-December 9 13 Correspondence, 1968-1969, and no date 9 14 Correspondence, Albany (GA) Response mail, 1962, tallies, addresses 9 15 Correspondence, Albany (GA) Response mail, 1962 9 16 Correspondence, Albany (GA) Response mail, 1962 10 1 Correspondence, Albany (GA) Response mail, 1962 10 2 Correspondence, Albany (GA) Response mail, 1962 10 3 Quarterly reports, 1964-1967 10 4 Annual reports, 1959, 1964-1965 10 5 Annual reports, 1966-1968 10 6 Civil Rights Act: Compliance reports, 1964-1965, and no date 10 7 Reports: Various, 1965, 1967, and no date 10 8 Financial records, 1961-1967 10 9 Travel expenses, May 1966 10 10 Grant applications, 1965-1967, and no date 10 11 Officers: Lists 10 12 Membership report, 1966-1967 10 13 Job descriptions, 1962 and no date 10 14 Job seekers: Notes, no date 11 1 Contact lists: City and County, no date 11 2 Contact lists: Community, no date

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11 3 Contact lists: Organizational, 1959-1971, and no date 11 4 Contact lists: Georgians for Jackson, no date 11 5 Contact lists: Other, no date 12 1 Annual meetings, 1965-1966, 1968 12 2 Conferences, 1960-1972 12 3 Welfare program: Welfare survey: Correspondence with expense vouchers, 1966-1967 12 4 Welfare program: Welfare rights report, November 1967 12 5 Welfare program: Welfare meeting participants, 1967: List 12 6 Welfare program: Georgia welfare rights center: Proposal, 1967 12 7 Welfare program: Georgia welfare rights center: Correspondence, 1967-1968, and no date 12 8 Welfare regulations: Welfare Manual, 1 July 1969 12 9 Welfare regulations: SSI Handbook, November 1973 12 10 Welfare regulations: Assistance Payments Transmittal no. 77, (AFDC and flat grant), 29 August 1975 12 11 Welfare regulations: Memorandum re cuts in AFDC, November 1975 12 12 Welfare regulations: Chart of Federal Regulations, August 1976; eligibility requirements, no date 12 13 Welfare: Printed material, 1938, 1965-1968, and no date 13 1 Race Relations Institute, Fisk Univ., July 1957:Programs 13 2 Race Relations Institute, Fisk Univ., July 1957:Keynote address 13 3 Race Relations Institute, Fisk Univ., July 1957:Reports 13 4 Race Relations Institute, Fisk Univ., July 1957:Printed material 13 5 Race Relations Institute, Fisk Univ., July 1957:Reading list 13 6 Race Relations Institute, Fisk Univ., July 1957:Notes 13 7 Race Relations Institute, Fisk Univ., June 1962: Notes 13 8 White House Conference, "To Fulfill These Rights," 1-2 June 1966 13 9 Desegregation conferences: Participants, 1966-1967 13 10 Conference: "Ga. Child's Access to Materials Pertaining to American Negroes," 10-11 November 1967 13 11 Printed material 13 12 Planning strategies: Notes, no date 13 13 Quotations: Notes, no date 13 14 Racial unrest: Notes, no date

Promotional material 14 1 Press releases, 1965-1966, and no date 14 2 Newsletter, 1956-1964 14 3 "Program Highlights," 1961-1967

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14 4 Position statements, 1966-1967 14 5 Leaflet, "Who Gets Welfare?," no date 14 6 Brochures 14 7 Brochures: Albany (GA) 14 8 Pamphlets 14 9 Flyers and other printed matter, 1963, 1967, and no date 14 10 Clippings, 1951-1967, and no date

Collected material OP1 6 "An Appeal for Human Rights," Atlanta University Center, November or December 1959 14 11 African Americans in government: Printed matter, 1965, 1967-1968, and no date 14 12 Directory: "Intergroup Relations Organizations," 4 December 1964 14 13 Printed material, 1963-1970 14 14 Allied organizations: Greater Atlanta Council on Human Relations: Minutes, 1957 14 15 Allied organizations: Greater Atlanta Council on Human Relations: Newsletter, 1961-1967 14 16 Allied organizations: Greater Atlanta Council on Human Relations: Miscellany, 1958-1963, and no date 14 17 Other chapter councils: Augusta, Rome, 1960-1961, 1963, 1988-1989, no date 14 18 Job announcement, April 1965 14 19 Calling cards: Various 14 20 Memorabilia

17 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Series 6 Georgia State Advisory Committee on Civil Rights records, 1958-1972 Boxes 15-16

Scope and Content Note Frances Pauley became secretary of the Georgia State Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights in 1964. She was appointed by Sylvan Meyer, the first president of the committee, who resigned in 1965 and was replaced by Vivian Henderson. Other well-known members of the committee included Sam Massell, Jr. and L.D. Milton. The committee was created in 1957 as a reporting body to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. It was charged with the task of informing the federal commission about the progress, or lack thereof, civil rights in the state. To this end, the committee held hearings in numerous Georgia towns and cities to discuss the question. In these hearings, the following areas were considered: housing, employment, education, welfare, agriculture and public accommodations. Testimony heard was then compiled into reports and sent to the parent commission. The series includes federal guidelines, agendas and programs, minutes of meetings both open and closed, official correspondence, reports both to and from the federal commission and the six- state Southern field office, and transcripts of hearings. Several files of clippings, membership lists, and a bibliography are also included. Statements and/or correspondence with the following people are included in this series: Sam Massell, Jr., Charles Sherrod, Aaron Henry, Lyndon Baines Johnson, Xernona Clayton, Andrew Young and Father Theodore M. Hesburgh.

Box Folder Content 15 1 Federal guidelines, 1958-1967, and no date 15 2 Agendas and programs, 1964-1971 15 3 Minutes, 1964-1970, and no date 15 4 Correspondence, 1958-1966 15 5 Correspondence, 1967-1972, and no date 15 6 Reports: Desegregation, 1961-1969, and no date 15 7 Reports: Housing, 1967-1968 15 8 Statistics, 1971, and no date 16 1 Membership lists, 1964-1971, and no date 16 2 Travel expenses, 1964-1965, 1967-1968 16 3 Hearings: Transcript of proceedings in the matter of Georgia State Advisory Committee (Committee on Civil Rights), Augusta, GA, 11 December 1964 16 4 Hearings: Transcript of proceedings in the matter of Georgia State Advisory Committee (Closed session), Macon, Georgia, 28 May 1966, "Equal Opportunity in Farm Programs," 16 5 Statements, 1959-1971 16 6 Notes 16 7 Conferences, 1964-1966

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16 8 Notes, no date 16 9 Press releases, 1962-1971, and no date 16 10 Brochures, U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, no date 16 11 Blank forms 16 12 Printed material, 1963-1972 and no date 16 13 Clippings, 1957-1960 16 14 Clippings, 1961-1965 16 15 Clippings, 1966-1969 16 16 Clippings, no date 16 17 Bibliographies, 1964-1967

19 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Series 7 United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare: Office of Civil Rights files, 1945-1977 Boxes 17-31, OP Boxes 1-2, OP 7

Scope and Content Note The U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) was renamed the Department of Health and Human Services on 17 October 1979, as part of legislation establishing a separate Department of Education. HEW was created 11 April 1953, as a successor to the Federal Security Agency, which had been set up in 1939 to "administer federal responsibilities in the field of health, education, and social security." The department experienced dramatic expansion during the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, eventually administering more than 200 programs, including: the Public Health Service, the Social Security Administration, Social and Rehabilitation Service, the Office of Human Development, and the Education Division. In 1964, the Office of Civil Rights was created to enforce the provisions of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Title VI of the Act stated: "No person in the United States shall, on the ground of race, color, or national origin, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving federal financial assistance." The Office of Civil Rights was charged with investigating evidence of non-compliance with desegregation in education, employment and other areas. Series 7 documents Frances Pauley's work for the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare's (HEW) Office of Civil Rights. As a civil rights specialist, Pauley investigated and mediated very complex civil rights cases. This included planning and conducting complaint investigations and reviews to ascertain compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Investigations and reviews involved meetings with the complainant and the organization, interviewing witnesses, and reviewing records maintained by the institution or organization being investigated. She then served as a negotiator, working to resolve conflicts between parties and preparing reports describing findings and offering recommendations for solutions. The series includes administrative correspondence, 1967-1981 and no date; statistical and compliance status reports on school desegregation in the Southern region, 1951-1973; public school transfer student sheets for schools in Atlanta and Thomasville, Georgia, 1971-1973; subject files relating to her work with the DeKalb Biracial Committee, 1977-1987, desegregation issues such as busing, court rulings, housing, and public vs. private schools; and clippings, 1950-1984 and no date.

Arrangement Note Arranged in two subseries: (7.1) General files and (7.2) Collected material.

20 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Subseries 7.1 General files, 1950-1984 Boxes 17-26; OP 7

Scope and Content Note Subseries 7.1 consists of general files relating to Frances Pauley's work for the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare's (HEW) Office of Civil Rights including correspondence, compliance status reports from various Southern States, public school transfer student sheets, subject files, and clippings.

Box Folder Content 17 1 Correspondence, 1967-1968 17 2 Correspondence, 1969-1970 17 3 Correspondence, 1971 17 4 Correspondence, 1972-1973 17 5 Correspondence, 1974-1975 17 6 Correspondence, 1976-1981, and no date

Atlanta Model Cities Program 17 7 Staff conference, minutes, 2 October 1968 17 8 Correspondence, 1968-1971 17 9 Reports, 1969-1974 17 10 Meetings, April 1970: Notes 17 11 Map 17 12 Clippings, 1969, and no date

Compliance status reports (Title VI, Civil Rights Act of 1964), HEW region IV schools 18 1 Alabama, no date 18 2 Georgia, 1968-1972, and no date 18 3 Georgia teacher statistics, 1965-1972, and no date 18 4 Atlanta metro area enrollment figures, 1951-1973 18 5 Mississippi, 1966-1970, and no date 18 6 Tennessee, 1971-1973, and no date 18 7 Statistical reports: HEW region IV: School desegregation, 1968-1970, and no date 18 8 Survey: HEW enforcement of Title VI of Civil Rights Act, Dougherty, Terrell, and Baker Counties, Georgia, no date 18 9 HEW survey of Georgia elementary and secondary schools, fall 1968 18 10 Private schools: 441 approval reports and comments, 1971-1972

Public school transfer student sheets, 1971-1973 19 1 Atlanta: Birney school

21 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

19 2 Atlanta: Birney school 19 3 Atlanta: Brandon school 19 4 Atlanta: Brandon school 19 5 Atlanta: Jackson school 19 6 Atlanta: Jackson school 20 1 Atlanta: McClatchey school 20 2 Atlanta: McClatchey school 20 3 Atlanta: Northside school 20 4 Atlanta: Smith school 20 5 Atlanta: Smith school 20 6 Atlanta: Sutton school 20 7 Atlanta: Sutton school 20 8 Atlanta: Sutton school 21 1 Thomasville (GA): E. Rivers school 21 2 Thomasville (GA): E. Rivers school 21 3 Thomasville (GA): Rivers school 21 4 Thomasville (GA): Rivers school

Subject files 22 1 Burke County, 1964-1982, and no date 22 2 Busing and Emmaus House, 1972 22 3 Busing statistics: Atlanta, DeKalb, Fulton, and Gwinnett counties, no date 22 4 Busing: Printed material, 1972 22 5 Court cases re school desegregation: Brown v. Board of Education, 1953-1955 22 6 Court cases re school desegregation: Anson Graves v. Walton County Board of Education, 1968 22 7 Court cases re school desegregation: United States v. State of Georgia, 1969-1970 22 8 Court cases re school desegregation: Vivian Calhoun v. Ed S. Cook, 1971-1974 22 9 Court cases re school desegregation: Emma Armour v. Jack P. Nix, 1972-1973 22 10 Court cases re school desegregation: Houston Bassett v. Atlanta Independent School Distict, 1972 22 11 Court cases re school desegregation: Kenneth Adams v. Elliott Richardson, 1972-1973 22 12 Court cases re school desegregation: Various cases, 1968-1969 22 13 Court cases re school desegregation: Printed material, 1967-1975 23 1 DeKalb Biracial Committee: Agenda, 1977 23 2 DeKalb Biracial Committee: Meeting minutes, 1977-1985, and no date 23 3 DeKalb Biracial Committee: Correspondence, 1978 23 4 DeKalb Biracial Committee: School enrollment information, 1977, no date

22 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

23 5 DeKalb Biracial Committee: Majority to minority transfer information, 1977 23 6 DeKalb Biracial Committee: Busing transportation costs, 1977-1978 23 7 DeKalb Biracial Committee: Bus schedules, 1977-1978 23 8 DeKalb Biracial Committee: Majority to minority transfer, promotional materials, 1977, 1978, no date 23 9 DeKalb Biracial Committee: Notes and receipts, 1977, no date 23 10 DeKalb Biracial Committee: Clippings, 1980-1987 23 11 DeKalb County Schools: "Status of integration in DeKalb county schools," chronology, 1898-1977 23 12 DeKalb County Schools: "Handbook for DeKalb county elementary schools," 1971 23 13 DeKalb County Schools: Majority to minority transfer, promotional materials, 1979, and no date 24 1 Education: Printed material, 1975 24 2 Emergency School Assistance Program: "Emergency school assistance program," Federal Register, 21 August 1971 24 3 Emergency School Assistance Program: Application, Atlanta public schools, 27 August 1971 24 4 Emergency School Assistance Program: Application, Metro. Atlanta Leadership Congress, 11 December 1972 24 5 Housing: Printed material, 1968, 1971 24 6 Maps: Atlanta area schools, 1967-1973, and no date 24 7 Private schools: William H. Green v. John B. Connally v. Dan Coit, re tax exemption status, 30 June 1971 24 8 Private schools: Hearing: Testimony, ACLU re proposed revenue procedure, 5 December 1978 24 9 Private schools: Georgia data, 1970-1972 24 10 Private schools: Application 24 11 Private schools: Photographs, Crisp Academy, Cordele, Ga., June 1971 24 12 Private schools: Clippings, 1969, 1971 24 13 School desegregation: Position statements, 1972, 1974, and no date 24 14 School desegregation statistics: Printed material, 1966-1967, 1974 24 15 Personnel: Job description (FP) and job classification chart, Office of Civil Rights, no date 24 16 Personnel: Business cards (FP) 24 17 Personnel: Employee performance evaluation guide, 1969 24 18 Case file, Roy Lee Hunter: Koinonia incident, 1969 24 19 Case file, Roy Lee Hunter: Narrative, no date 24 20 Case file, Roy Lee Hunter: Graduation programs, 1968, 1969 24 21 Case file, Roy Lee Hunter: Clippings, 1968 24 22 Collected material, 1969, and no date

23 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

24 23 School desegregation: Notes 24 24 Press releases: HEW and school desegregation, 1971 24 25 Press releases: Other, 1960, 1972, and no date 24 26 Directory: Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Region IV, November 1971 24 27 Photograph, Title I trailer school, Yazoo County, Mississippi, no date 25 1 Clippings, 1950 25 2 Clippings, 1953 25 3 Clippings, 1954 25 4 Clippings, 1955 25 5 Clippings, 1956 25 6 Clippings, 1957 January-August 25 7 Clippings, 1957 September 1-10 25 8 Clippings, 1957 September 11-20 25 9 Clippings, 1957 October 25 10 Clippings, 1957 November-December 11 1958 25 12 Clippings, 1959 25 13 Clippings, 1960 25 14 Clippings, 1961 25 15 Clippings, 1963 25 16 Clippings, 1964 25 17 Clippings, 1967 25 18 Clippings, 1968 25 19 Clippings, 1969 26 1 Clippings, 1970 26 2 Clippings, 1971 26 3 Clippings, 1972 26 4 Clippings, 1973 26 5 Clippings, 1974 OP1 7 Poster, "Join the freedom ride to Boston, March against racism, December 14, 1974," fold-out from The Militant, November 1974 26 6 Clippings, 1975 26 7 Clippings, 1976 26 8 Clippings, 1977 26 9 Clippings, 1978 26 10 Clippings, 1979 26 11 Clippings, 1984 26 12 Clippings, no date

24 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Subseries 7.2 Collected material, 1945-1977 Boxes 27-31; OP Boxes 1-2

Scope and Content Note Subseries 7.2 consists of general materials collected by Frances Pauley relating to desegregation, housing and job discrimination, and voter registration. Included are printed materials, 1945-1977, including: articles, brochures, magazines, newsletters, pamphlets, and reports. A large group of materials relates specifically to school desegregation. The subseries also includes a run of Southern School News, 1954-1965; and collected materials relating to allied organizations, including the ACLU and the Southern Regional Council.

Box Folder Content 27 1 Articles, 1951-1956 27 2 Articles, 1957-1959 27 3 Articles, 1960, 1962-1964 27 4 Articles, 1967, 1969-1970, 1972, and no date 27 5 Brochures, 1957-1958, 1963, and no date 27 6 Magazines, 1960, 1963 27 7 Newsletter, Civil liberties, May 1964 27 8 Pamphlets, 1951-1959 27 9 Pamphlets, 1962-1971, and no date 27 10 Photo essay, The day they marched, (March on Washington for jobs and freedom) 1963

Reports 28 1 "Intimidation, reprisal and violence in the south's racial crisis," (1959?) 28 2 "Executive support of civil rights," 13 March 1962 28 3 "Having the power, we have the duty," Report of the Advisory Council on public welfare, June 1966 28 4 "The law and the low income consumer," Project on social welfare law, 1968 28 5 "Report of the national advisory council on civil disorders," 1 March 1968 28 6 "The federal civil rights enforcement effort - 1974," Report of the U.S. commission on civil rights, November 1975

Collected material: School desegregation 29 1 Articles, 1954-1960, 1963, 1972-1975, and no date 29 2 Bibliography, "Desegregation in Education," [1956?] 29 3 Pamphlets, 1955-1963, 1976 29 4 Reports: School desegration in metro Atlanta, 1954-1973," February 1973 29 5 Reports: "Analysis of Atlanta compromise school desegregation plan," 18 March 1973

25 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

29 6 Reports: "The Atlanta school case," chronology, 1954-1974 29 7 Reports: "The Atlanta plan: Report to the U.S. district court...," 1 October 1974 29 8 Reports: "Twenty years after Brown: Equality of economic opportunity," July 1975 29 9 Reports: "...Analysis of the 'school desegregation standards and assistance act of 1976'," no date 29 10 Reports: "Biennial conference in Philadelphia," (ACLU), desegregation reports, 10-13 June 1976 29 11 Reports: "School desegregation: Integration notebook," (ACLU), 1977, and no date 29 12 Various reports, 1969-1974: "Report of the community relations service student unrest survey," September 1969; "Coercion to compliance: Southern school districts and school desegregation guidelines," [1974?]; "American minorities in education: An action agenda for the future," 17 June 1976 29 13 Printed material, no date OP2 1 Newspaper: Southern School News, 1954-1960 OP3 1 Newspaper: Southern School News, 1961-1965

Collected materials: Allied organizations 30 1 ACLU: Annual Reports, 1953-1957 30 2 ACLU: Annual Reports, 1957-1962 30 3 ACLU: Annual Reports, 1962-1964 30 4 Southern Regional Council: Reports, 1957, 1959 30 5 Southern Regional Council: Reports, 1960 30 6 Southern Regional Council: Reports, 1961 30 7 Southern Regional Council: Reports, 1962

Collected material: Miscellany 31 1 Booklets: Roosevelt album, 1945 31 2 Laugh and let laugh way down in dixie: Three hundred funny negro stories, [1946?] 31 3 Miss Camille, 1969 31 4 "The Mongrel," poem, Ku Klux Klan, no date

26 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Series 8 Georgia Poverty Rights Organization records, circa 1930s-1992 Box 32-74, OP 8

Scope and Content Note Frances Pauley formed the Georgia Poverty Rights Organization (GPRO) in circa 1975 and served as its director until circa 1987. The organization was created as a non-profit, unincorporated statewide coalition of volunteers campaigning to protect the economic and social well being of the poor. GPRO lobbied legislative and executive agencies to get more funds for needy Georgians. A key component of the work was an informational one which involved educating the public and legislators regarding the issues that particularly affect poor people. As a champion for the poor, GPRO tackled such issues as raising Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) benefits, maintaining Medicaid funding, opening state budget meetings to the public, and expanding the emergency fuel assistance program. GPRO also joined forces with other service organizations across the state such as the American Civil Liberties Union, Christians Against Hunger in Georgia, and the Public Assistance Coalition in the campaign for welfare rights. In the early years, office headquarters were located in a house behind Emmaus House in southwest Atlanta, a neighborhood center operated under the auspices of the Atlanta Diocese of the Episcopal Church. Ms. Pauley would later work out of her home near Emory University. Though sponsored by the Atlanta Diocese, GPRO depended upon contributions for its operating budget. The GPRO series, spans the years 1930 through 1992 and consists of 40 document boxes.

Arrangement Note Organized into into six subseries: (8.1) Administrative records, (8.2) General subject files, (8.3) Welfare files, (8.4) Energy assistance files, (8.5) Political files, and (8.6) Allied organizations.

27 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Subseries 8.1 Administrative records, 1971-1989 Boxes 32-41

Scope and Content Note The administrative records subseries, dating from 1972 to 1989, includes records of the annual meetings, correspondence, financial records, press releases, mailings, and clippings. The minutes of the annual meetings document planning strategies, issues to be addressed, positions to be adopted, board elections, and other internal business matters such as staffing and fundraising. Of special note here is the correspondence which includes letters to and from various elected representatives and Department of Human Resources board members, and the mailings which were so critical to the campaign to educate and inform the membership concerning poverty issues. The mailings, which offer the clearest record of the GPRO operations, track key issues from year to year and the organization's campaign for welfare reform.

Box Folder Content 32 1 Historical background: Narratives and notes, 5 March 1971, and no date 32 2 Bylaws and statement of purpose, 13 December 1979 32 3 Meetings: Atlanta, 11 October 1975 32 4 Meetings: Macon, 8 November 1975 32 5 Meetings: Macon, 24 April 1976 32 6 Meetings: Cordele, 2 October 1976 32 7 Meetings: Milledgeville, 13 May 1978 32 8 Meetings: Emmaus House, 13 December 1979 32 9 Meetings: Unicoi Conference Center, 22-23 October 1980 32 10 Meetings: Macon, 15 November 1980 32 11 Meetings: Atlanta, 15 September 1983 32 12 Meetings: Columbus, 17 October 1985 32 13 Correspondence, 1972-1974 32 14 Correspondence, 1975 and no date 32 15 Correspondence, 23-25 June 1975, and no date: children's letters to the legislature re welfare cuts 32 16 Correspondence, 1976 January-June 32 17 Correspondence, 1976 July-December 33 1 Correspondence, 1977 January-June 33 2 Correspondence, 1977 July-December 33 3 Correspondence, 1978 January-June 33 4 Correspondence, 1978 July-December 33 5 Correspondence, 1979 January-June 33 6 Correspondence, 1979 July-December 33 7 Correspondence, 1980 January-June 33 8 Correspondence, 1980 July-December

28 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

34 1 Correspondence, 1981 January-June 34 2 Correspondence, 1981 July-December 34 3 Correspondence, 1982 34 4 Correspondence, 1983 34 5 Correspondence, 1984 34 6 Correspondence, 1985 34 7 Correspondence, 1986 34 8 Correspondence, 1987 34 9 Correspondence, 1988, and no date 35 1 Financial records: Financial reports, 1978-1987 35 2 Financial records: Checkbook stubs, 1976-1987 35 3 Financial records: Receipts, cancelled checks, 1975 35 4 Financial records: Receipts, cancelled checks, 1976 35 5 Financial records: Receipts, cancelled checks, 1977 35 6 Financial records: Receipts, cancelled checks, 1978 35 7 Financial records: Receipts, cancelled checks, 1979 35 8 Financial records: Receipts, cancelled checks, 1980 36 1 Financial records: Receipts, cancelled checks, 1981 36 2 Financial records: Receipts, cancelled checks, 1982 36 3 Financial records: Receipts, cancelled checks, 1983 36 4 Financial records: Receipts, cancelled checks, 1984 36 5 Financial records: Receipts, cancelled checks, 1985 36 6 Financial records: Receipts, cancelled checks, 1986 36 7 Financial records: Receipts, cancelled checks, 1987 37 1 Schedule for organizing efforts, [1975?] September 1 to January 1 37 2 Charter members, 1975 37 3 Governing board members, 1980, 1985, 1986, and no date 37 4 Press releases, 1976-1984 37 5 Staff newsletter, January 1979 37 6 Telephone messages, and notes, 1980, and no date 37 7 Stationery (blank) 37 8 Travel vouchers (blank) 37 9 Memorabilia: GPRO badges 37 10 Mailings, 1975 37 11 Mailings, 1976 37 12 Mailings, 1977 37 13 Mailings, 1978 37 14 Mailings, 1979 January-May 37 15 Mailings, 1979 June-December

29 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

39 1 Mailings, 1980 39 2 Mailings, 1981 39 3 Mailings, 1982 39 4 Mailings, 1983 39 5 Mailings, 1984 39 6 Mailings, 1985 39 7 Mailings, 1986 39 8 Mailings, 1987 39 8 Mailings, no date 39 10 Brochures 39 1 Membership drive: Mailings, 1981, no date 39 2 Membership drive: Mailings, 1981, no date 39 3 Membership drive: Mailings, 1981, no date 39 4 Membership drive: Mailings: Notes 39 5 Membership drive: Mailing lists 40 1 Clippings, 1974 40 2 Clippings, 1975 OP1 8 Clippings, 1975-1981 40 3 Clippings, 1976 40 4 Clippings, 1977 40 5 Clippings, 1978 40 6 Clippings, 1979 40 7 Clippings, 1980 40 8 Clippings, 1981 40 9 Clippings, 1982 40 10 Clippings, 1983 41 1 Clippings, 1984 41 2 Clippings, 1985 41 3 Clippings, 1986 41 4 Clippings, 1987 41 5 Clippings, 1988 January 41 6 Clippings, 1988 February 41 7 Clippings, 1988 April-December, and no date 41 8 Clippings, 1989, and no date

30 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Subseries 8.2 General subject files, 1959-1992 Boxes 42-46

Scope and Content Note The subject files subseries, consisting of five document boxes, was assembled as the collection was being processed. The files reflect Ms. Pauley's diverse interests as a poverty rights activist and include reports, statistics, newsletters, fliers, and brochures. The topics range from AIDS, the death penalty, maternal and infant health care to poverty issues in general. The material was collected primarily during her years with GPRO.

Box Folder Content 42 1 AIDS, no date 42 2 Atlanta: Consumer Price Index figures, 1969-1981 42 3 Atlanta: City charter, 16 March 1973 42 4 Atlanta: League of Women Voters, "Reviewing the Causes of Fiscal Crisis," 1979 42 5 Baldwin County: School Lunchroom Employee Group, 1977 42 6 Baldwin County: School Lunchroom Employee Group, Clippings, 1977 42 7 Campaign to End Hunger and Homelessness, flyer, 1988 42 8 Census figures (Ga.), 1970-1986 42 9 Children: Abused and neglected children, 1985, 1989, no date 42 10 Children: "Child Advocacy," conference, 1977 42 11 Children: Costs for average child, 1975-1980 42 12 Children: Day care, 1982, 1987, and no date 42 13 Children: Nutrition and the Children's Foundation 42 14 Children: Nutrition, National Child Nutrition Coalition, mailings, 1978 42 15 Civil rights march, Washington, D.C.: Clippings, 1983 42 16 Death penalty: Committee against the Death Penalty Bill, Amendment, 1985 (?) 42 17 Death penalty: Georgia Committee Against the Death Penalty: Agenda and statement, 1985 42 18 Death penalty: Senate voting record, 1981-1985 42 19 Death penalty: Death row, list, n.d. 42 20 Death penalty: Position statements, no date 42 21 Death penalty: Racial discrimination and statistics, June 1985 42 22 Death penalty: Printed materials, 1965, 1973, 1984 42 23 Death penalty: Clippings, 1977-1989 42 24 Defense spending: Figures, 1981 42 25 Defense spending: Notes 42 26 Defense spending: Printed materials, 1982, 1986 42 27 Defense spending: Clipping, 1 June 1982

31 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

42 28 DeKalb County: Basic human needs study, 1987? 42 29 Dixon, Lavonia: "Black Citizens of the Year," Laurens Co., clipping, no date 42 30 Food programs: Emergency food programs, 1983, and no date 42 31 Forms: Awards, blank 42 32 Fulton County: Annual financial report, 1973 43 1 Georgia: Printed materials (constitution, flag, maps), 1973, 1975, and no date 43 2 Georgia: Statistics, 1987, and no date 43 3 Georgia Deca-Lateral Commission, meeting, no date 43 4 Georgia Legal Services Program: Collected material, 1982-1983, and no date 43 5 Government contracts, article, June 1988 43 6 Hamilton, Grace: Fulton County Commission, clippings, 1975 43 7 Health care: Atlanta, health centers and clinics, 1976 43 8 Health care: Conferences, 1977 and no date 43 9 Health care: Division of public health, "District Quarterly Reports," 1985 43 10 Health care: Grady Hospital, 1977, and no date 43 11 Health care: Health systems agencies, 1977, 1978, and no date 43 12 Health care: Hospital care for the indigent, no date 43 13 Health care: Clippings, 1977-1989 43 14 Health care: Printed material, 1977-1983 43 15 Highlander Center: Human needs workshop, 1982 43 16 Human Relations Commission, creation of, 21 December 1987 43 17 Income figures: Clippings, 1959-1989 43 18 Jobs with justice: Conference, no date 43 19 John Birch Society: Clipping, 2 July 1981 43 20 Ku Klux Klan, 1980-1985, and no date 44 1 Labor: Printed material, 1979, 1984, 1985 44 2 Laetrile: Dept. of Human Resources, policy, 1977 44 3 Legal counsel for the indigent: Clipping, 13 April 1983 44 4 Lynching, clipping, 1992 44 5 Maternal and Infant Health, Council on: State task force (nutrition): Minutes, March, May 1975 44 6 Maternal and Infant Health, Council on: Budget request, FY 1978 44 7 Maternal and Infant Health, Council on: Reports, 1976, 1978 44 8 Maternal and Infant Health, Council on: Legislative news, 1975, 1977, 1980 44 9 Maternal and Infant Health, Council on: "Good Beginnings," newsletter, 1976-1986 44 10 Maternal and Infant Health, Council on: POWER, 1986 44 11 Maternal and Infant Health, Council on: Statistics, 1977-1986, and no date 44 12 Maternal and Infant Health, Council on: Clippings, 1976-1984, and no date 44 13 Mormons: Welfare services

32 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

44 14 National Clients Council: Services 44 15 Poverty, reports: Hunger, 1968, 1972 44 16 Poverty, reports: "Public assistance and poverty," March 1985 and "The poor: statement of the problem," no date 44 17 Poverty, report:: Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, 1987 and no date 44 18 Poverty, reports: "The poor: profiles of families in poverty," n.d. 44 19 Poverty: Georgia statistics, 1979, 1983, and no date 44 20 Poverty: Printed material, 1977-1989, and no date 45 1 Poverty: Clippings, 1977, 1980-1982 45 2 Poverty: Clippings, 1983 45 3 Poverty: Clippings, 1984-1986 45 4 Poverty: Clippings, 1987-1989, 1991 and no date 45 5 Prisons: "Improper use of force," Reidsville, January 1980 45 6 Prisons: Clippings, 1981, 1989, 1990 45 7 Project Georgia 23 (re voting) 45 8 Public relations: Guides, media lists, no date 45 9 Racism: Clippings, 1986 45 10 Racism: Clippings, 1987 45 11 Racism: Clippings, 1989, and no date 45 12 Roosevelt, Franklin: Clipping, 1983 46 1 Senior Citizens: Reports, 1979, 1989 46 2 Senior Citizens: Clippings, 1983, 1989 46 3 Social Security: Critical case procedure, no date 46 4 Social Security: Other countries, report, 6 February 1980 46 5 Social Security: Notes 46 6 Social Security: Printed materials 46 7 Social Security: Clippings, 1981, 1983, 1987 46 8 Supplemental Security Income: Printed materials 46 9 Supreme court, clipping, 6 February 1975 46 10 Wages: Minimum wage, clippings, 1987-1989 46 11 Women:African-American, Georgia Coalition of Black Women, printed materials, 1981, 1985, and no date 46 12 Women:Feminism: Printed materials, 1970, 1978 46 13 Women:"Women: Vanguard of the 90s," editorial, Social Policy, fall 1986

33 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Subseries 8.3 Welfare files, circa. 1930s-1989 Boxes 47-54

Scope and Content Note The materials in the welfare files document GPRO's efforts to increase welfare benefits, particularly in regard to the state's AFDC program. There is also much factual and statistical information here on Georgia's other public assistance programs, including Food Stamps, Medicaid, and SSI (Supplemental Security Income). Some of the activities documented here include: a food stamp protest in 1974, a welfare "hotline" instigated in 1975, a standard of need task force formed in 1979, an AFDC UP task force formed in 1983, the AFDC Catchup plan proposed in 1985, and a 32 page handbook on AFDC regulations. See boxes 47-52 for the materials described above. The welfare files also include information relating to the administration of Georgia's public assistance programs by the county Department of Family and Children Services (DFCS), under the supervision of the Georgia Department of Human Resources (DHR). Pauley regularly attended DHR board meetings to keep abreast of all developments relating to welfare policy and budget appropriations. She maintained a steady correspondence with the board members, urging them to request increased funding for welfare benefits from the Governor and the Legislature. See boxes 53 and 54 for information relating to these two agencies. In evaluating Frances Pauley's effectiveness on poverty issues, Rep. Jim Martin, an Atlanta Democrat, stated in 1989 that "I'm absolutely certain that AFDC levels would not be as high as they are without her". By 1989, Georgia had increased maximum payments of AFDC, the principal welfare program, from $115 to $270 a month for a family of four.

Box Folder Content 47 1 Pauley's account of her efforts to raise benefits, 1973-1985: Narrative, 1 January 1986 47 2 Food stamp protest at Fulton County Commission meeting, 4 December 1974: Petition, notes, clippings 47 3 Concerned Citizens Group: Minutes, 3 June 1975, 28 August 1975 47 4 Concerned Citizens Group: Petitions, no date 47 5 Concerned Citizens Group: Position statement 47 6 Concerned Citizens Group: Mailing, 15 July 1975 47 7 Telephone hot line: Invitation, September 1975 Legal Aid info, no date

Aid to Families with Dependent Children 47 8 Position statements, GPRO, 1977, 1981, no date 47 9 Position statements, other, 1977, no date 47 10 Hearing testimonies, GPRO and others, 20 June 1979 47 11 Questionnaire, May-June 1977 re case worker training 47 12 AFDC-UP: Task force minutes, September, December 1983 47 13 AFDC-UP: Bill, draft proposal, 20 September 1983

34 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

47 14 AFDC-UP: Position statement, GPRO, no date 47 15 AFDC-UP: Position statements, other, no date 47 16 Questionnaire for candidates, July 1984: 47 17 Questionnaire for candidates, July 1984:Candidate responses, A-L 47 18 Questionnaire for candidates, July 1984:Candidate responses, M-Z 47 19 Questionnaire for candidates, July 1984:Candidate responses, anonymous 47 20 Questionnaire for candidates, July 1984:Names and addresses of candidates 47 21 AFDC Catchup Plan, 1985, no date 47 22 "AFDC," handbook, no date 47 23 Printed material by GPRO re AFDC, 1977-1982, no date

Welfare reform 48 1 Position statements, GPRO, 1977, 1987, no date 48 2 Position statements, other, 1977, no date 48 3 Hearing testimony, GPRO, 25 August 1986, no date 48 4 Hearing testimony, other, 7 February 1980 48 5 Welfare reform work group, recommendation, 1987(?) 48 6 Standard of Need Task Force:Meeting agendas, May, June 1979 48 7 Standard of Need Task Force:Minutes, 11 May 1979, 17 June 1980 48 8 Standard of Need Task Force:Info packet from first meeting, 11 May 1979 48 9 Standard of Need Task Force:Correspondence, May-July 1979 48 10 Standard of Need Task Force:Report and drafts, 1979, no date 48 11 Standard of Need Task Force:Interim reports, 1979 48 12 Standard of Need Task Force:Final report, July 1979 (?) 48 13 Standard of Need Task Force:Report updates, 1980, 1984, no date 48 14 "Welfare Office Evaluation," questionnaire, 31 August 1986, no date 48 15 "Welfare Office Evaluation," report, 11 October 1986 48 16 "Georgia's Welfare Recipients: Victims or Villains?" informational brochure by GPRO, no date 48 17 "Summary of meeting...," welfare fraud in Bibb County, no date 48 18 Welfare case files:Christmas fund: Wallace, Annie M., December 1981-January 1982 48 19 Welfare case files:Westbrook, Dora, 1985, 1986, no date 48 20 Welfare case files:Pauley's notes re welfare cases 48 21 Pauley's notes re welfare work

Aid to Families with Dependent Children 49 1 Program history, 1930s-1979 49 2 General information, 1972-1982, no date 49 3 Fact sheets, 1977-1981

35 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

49 4 Budgets, 1950-1987 49 5 Court cases, 1967, 1974 49 6 Updated standards: Transmittal, 1971 49 7 Social security: Transmittal, 1977 49 8 Statistical analyses, 1975,-1985, no date 49 9 "What is Grant? What is Need?," report, 1975 49 10 "AFDC Info 1980" report, November 1980 49 11 "Background material and data on major programs...," report, 10 March 1981 49 12 "Analysis of new AFDC regulations," report, 1 October 1981 49 13 Applicant budget sheets, Dept. of Human Resources, 1982, and no date 49 14 "Aid for dependent corporations," report, 1983 49 15 "State options for AFDC improvements," report, 24 July 1984 49 16 AFDC-UP, general information, 1984, no date 49 17 "AFDC and public assistance proposals for FY 1985-1988...," no date 49 18 Comparison of state merit system employees salary increases w/ AFDC benefit increases, 1986 49 19 AFDC and employment, 1986, no date 49 20 "Analysis of 1987 benefit levels in the program...," report, 1987 49 21 Child support recovery unit of Dept. of Human Resources, no date 49 22 Printed material, 1966-1983, no date 50 1 Budget, Ga: Financial summaries of state funds for fiscal years 1981, 1982 50 2 Brunswick, Ga: Glynn-Brunswick Client Advisory Council, AFDC workshop, 20 June 1977 50 3 Flat Grant System: Dept. of Family and Children Services, 1 November 1975 50 4 Food Stamps: Statistics, Ga., 1967-1984, no date 50 5 Food Stamps: Reports, 1967, 1976, no date 50 6 Food Stamps: Court cases, May 1979 50 7 Food Stamps: Food stamps and AFDC program changes 50 8 Food Stamps: Project Bread, Boston, no date 50 9 Food Stamps: "FRAC," newsletter, 1978-1980 50 10 Food Stamps: Clippings, 1974-1988, no date 50 11 Food Stamps: Printed material, 1965-1980, no date 50 12 Law: Federal Register, excerpts, 1969, 1982, 1984 50 13 Memos to welfare specialists, Center on social welfare policy and law, 1976-1988 50 14 Congressional Record, excerpts, 1977, 1979, 1982 50 15 Medicaid: EPSDT program, 1976, fiscal year 1978 50 16 Medicaid: Net expenditure report, 13 December 1977 50 17 Medicaid: Statistics, 1978, 1980, 1984 50 18 Medicaid: Annual reports, Dept. of Medical Assistance, 1979, 1980, 1983

36 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

50 19 Medicaid: Program refinements, fiscal year 1982 50 20 Medicaid: Position statements, no date 50 21 Medicaid: Notes 50 22 Medicaid: Clippings, 1976-1982 50 23 Medicare: Statistics, 1977 50 24 Press releases, various issues, 1967-1987 51 1 Reform: Carter Administration, printed material, 1977, 1979 51 2 Reform: Reagan Administration, report, 20 January 1987 51 3 Reform: "Concepts of welfare reform," February 1987 51 4 Reform: Family security act of 1987 (Daniel E. Moynihan): February-August 1987 51 5 Reform: Ford welfare reform plan - HB 1720 (Harold E. Ford): Printed material, March-April 1987 51 6 Reform: "An update on welfare reform; special help needed in senate," 20 August 1987 51 7 Reform: Status on welfare reform, notes, 1987 51 8 Reform: Issue briefs, 1987, 1988 51 9 Reform: Printed material, 1966-1987, no date 51 10 Standard of need: "Analysis of Dept. of Human Resources AFDC standard of need," September 1978 51 11 Standard of need, 1978, 1981 51 12 Maryland: "Proposed consolidated standard," fiscal year 1985 51 13 Statistics: Statistical comparisons of states and public assistance benefits, 1950-1984, no date 51 14 Statistics: "Public assistance statistics," reports, 1974 51 15 Statistics: "Public assistance statistics," reports, 1975 51 16 Statistics: "Public assistance statistics," reports, 1976 51 17 Statistics: "Public assistance statistics," reports, 1977 51 18 Statistics: "Public assistance statistics," reports, 1979 52 1 Statistics: Public assistance payments, 1974-1979 52 2 Statistics: Public assistance payments, 1980-1984 52 3 Statistics: "Estimated costs and benefits of public family planning programs," report, 1976 52 4 Statistics: Public assistance: Caseloads, 1977, fiscal year 1986 52 5 Statistics: Public assistance, charts, 1978-1985 52 6 Statistics: Public assistance and race, 1981, 1982 52 7 Statistics: Collected material, 1977-1987, no date 52 8 Work programs:Job training partnership program (JTPA), September 1983 52 9 Work programs:Work incentive program (WIN), 1979, no date 52 10 Workfare: Printed materials, 1982-1984, no date

37 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

52 11 Workfare: Clippings, 1981-1987 52 12 Welfare: Printed material, 1976, 1984, no date

Dept. of Human Resources 53 1 Agendas, 1976-1982 53 2 Minutes, 1976, 1980-1987 53 3 Commissioner's presentation, 20 August 1980 53 4 Board committee meetings: Time schedule, no date 53 5 Subcommittee meetings: Agendas, 1976, 1977, 1984 53 6 Subcommittee meetings: Minutes, 4 December 1984 53 7 Personnel organizational chart, no date 53 8 Board members, 1977-1986, no date 53 9 Subcommittee membership, list, no date 53 10 Employee handbook, no date 53 11 Commissioner's reports, 1977, 1978 53 12 "Proposed comprehensive annual service plan," 1 October 1977-30 September 1978 53 13 "Proposed policy: personal funds...," foster care policy, 1979 (?) 53 14 Medicaid audit report: Statement, Jack Watson, 18 February 1976 53 15 "Combatting fraud and abuse in DHR programs," January 1981 53 16 Public hearing: "Statement of child service and family counseling center...," 19 May 1982 53 17 Budgets, fiscal years 1976, 1977 53 18 Budgets, fiscal year 1978 53 19 Budgets, fiscal year 1979 53 20 Budgets, fiscal year 1980 53 21 Budgets, fiscal year 1981 53 22 Budgets, fiscal year 1982 53 23 Budget comparisons, fiscal year 1981, 1982 53 24 Budgets, fiscal year 1984 53 25 Budgets, AFDC, fiscal year 1985 53 26 Budgets, fiscal year 1986 53 27 Budgets, fiscal year 1988 53 28 Budgets, fiscal year 1989 53 29 Press release re resignations, 26 January 1977 53 30 "The DHR Report," newsletter, 1981

Dept. of Family and Children Services 54 1 Fact sheet, June 1980

38 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

54 2 Reports:"A model for estimating hunger in the counties of Georgia," September 1967 54 3 Reports:"Addressing poverty in Georgia within the context of the new federalism," Spring 1982 54 4 Reports:"A profile of unemployment in Georgia," Spring 1982 54 5 Reports:"Public assistance, Georgia's response to poverty," June 1982 54 6 Reports:"Total county review-state generated data, FY 1984," January 1985 54 7 Reports:Employability advisory committee report, 6 November 1985 54 8 Reports:"Status of reorganization," 17 December 1985 54 9 Reports:"Long range plan," December 1987 54 10 Reports:"The long range plan: an executive summary," February 1988 54 11 Budgets: Fiscal year 1981 54 12 Budgets: Fiscal year 1982 54 13 Budgets: Fiscal year 1983 and mission statement 54 14 Budgets: Fiscal year 1986 54 15 Budgets: Fiscal year 1987 54 16 Board members, 31 July 1967 54 17 Termination of director, Dr. Patricia Johnson, May-August 1984 54 18 Division personnel, no date 54 19 "DFCS Presentation," handout, 14 February 1983

39 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Subseries 8.4 Energy assistance files, 1979-1992 Boxes 55-61

Scope and Content Note The energy assistance files consist of materials concerning Frances Pauley's efforts on behalf of Georgians who were unable to afford their utilities. The files, dating from 1979 to 1992, include correspondence, meeting minutes, court documents, reports, and mailings relating to the Heating Energy Assistance Team (HEAT), Energy Assistance Program Task Force, and a case involving gasoline overcharge funds. In working with low income clients, Pauley found that Georgia Poverty Rights Organization (GPRO) was handling many calls for help with utility bills. In 1981, she appealed to various groups and agencies for assistance but was unable to propose a plan that was satisfactory to all concerned. In December 1982, the Atlanta Gas Light Company presented an idea to Pauley by which they would establish an emergency fuel fund. The plan, which would become known as HEAT, would call for the utility's customers to voluntarily contribute money with their gas bills to an emergency fuel fund. Atlanta Gas Light would make an initial contribution of $50,000 and then contribute up to $4000 a month by matching $1.00 with each $5.00 from customers. The fund would not only provide financial aid to those not previously assisted by the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) but it would also provide emergency heating assistance to needy households experiencing specific emergencies relating to home heating energy. In February 1983, the program met with the approval of the Georgia Department of Human Resources and was established under the administration of DFCS offices in every county on a year round basis. Frances Pauley served as chairperson for the HEAT advisory committee. In conjunction with promoting HEAT, Pauley served on an Energy Assistance Program Task Force committee from 1983-1991. This advisory committee was formed by Department of Family and Childhood Services to aid in the implementation of LIHEAP, particularly in regards to coordinating the program among the various governmental agencies. From 1983-1986, GPRO and various other community service organizations across the country were successfully represented by the National Consumer Law Center in efforts to secure gasoline overcharge funds for low-income consumers. This litigation had arisen over allegations brought by the Department of Energy that the oil companies had violated pricing regulations which were in effect from 1973-1981.

Heating Energy Assistance Team Box Folder Content 55 1 Background 1981-1983, narrative, 7 November 1986 55 2 Bylaws, 24 January 1983 55 3 "Concept Paper on Operations of HEAT," 7 January 1983 55 4 Resolution, House of Representatives, 17 February 1983 55 5 Financial records, receipts, 1984 55 6 Committee memberships, 1986-1987, 1991-1992 55 7 Publicity statements, 1983, 1984, 1991, and no date

40 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

55 8 Press releases, 1983, 1984, and no date 55 9 Mailings, 1983-1985, and no date 55 10 Printed material, 1983, and no date 55 11 Power meeting, 10 September 1981: Agenda and minutes 55 12 Atlanta Gas Light Company Consumer Roundtable meeting: Agenda, 22 September 1981 55 13 Alliance for Human Services Planning Project Study, Rent Mortgage and Utilities Subcommittee, 1983

Energy Assistance Program Task Force 55 14 Correspondence, minutes, reports, 1983-1984 55 15 Correspondence, minutes, reports, 1986 55 16 Correspondence, minutes, reports, 1987-1988 55 17 Correspondence, minutes, reports, 1989-1990 55 18 Correspondence, minutes, reports, 1991, and no date 56 1 Correspondence, 1979 56 2 Correspondence, 1980 56 3 Correspondence, 1981 56 4 Correspondence, 1982 56 5 Correspondence, 1983 January-June 56 6 Correspondence, 1983 July-September 56 7 Correspondence, 1983 October-December 56 8 Correspondence, 1984 January-March 56 9 Correspondence, 1984 April-June 56 10 Correspondence, 1984 July-December 57 1 Correspondence, 1985 January-June 57 2 Correspondence, 1985 July-September 57 3 Correspondence, 1985 October-December 57 4 Correspondence, 1986 January-March 57 5 Correspondence, 1986 April-June 57 6 Correspondence, 1986 July-December 57 7 Correspondence, 1987 57 8 Correspondence, 1988-1992, and no date 58 1 Conferences, 1980, 1982, 1986

William James Raines family, utility assistance case 58 2 Correspondence, 1981 January-April 58 3 Contributions, 1981 January-February 58 4 Clippings and notes, 1981 January 58 5 Other cases

41 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

Utility hearings 58 6 Utility rate policies, 1979, 1980 58 7 GPRO v. Atlanta Gas Light Company, 1983, 1984 58 8 GPRO v. Georgia Power Company, 1979-1984, no date 58 9 GPRO v. Southern Bell, 1982-1985 58 10 Frances Pauley testimonies, no date

Oil overcharge hearings 58 11 Exxon, court documents, May-June 1986 58 12 Stripper Well, court documents, May 1986 58 13 Stripper Well, "Plan for expenditure of funds,"December 1986 58 14 Distribution of oil overcharge funds, reports: 1982-1984 58 15 Distribution of oil overcharge funds, reports: 1985 58 16 Distribution of oil overcharge funds, reports: 1986-1987, no date 58 17 Public hearings: Notices and F. Pauley testimonies, 1985-1988, 1991

Reports 59 1 "A look at electric rate regulation in Ga.," April 1981 59 2 "Energy and the poor," 26 August 1981 59 3 LIHEAP and state energy assistance efforts, 1983, 1984 59 4 "Low income energy assistance: program resources and requirements for the future, April 1984 59 5 "Energy costs and the poor: the federal program response and the challenge to the states," 28 November 1984 59 6 Guaranteed utility service plan, 1985-1986 59 7 "In partnership with Georgia: a blueprint for addressing the energy needs of low and fixed income Georgians, 24 October 1986 59 8 Disconnection of utility service, 1979, 1988 59 9 State by state look of impact of residential energy costs on the poor, [1989?] 60 1 Atlanta Gas Light Co.: Collected material, 1980-1989, no date 60 2 Georgia Power Co.: Collected material, 1980-1987, no date 60 3 Budget request (DFCS), emergency heating assistance, 8 July 1985 60 4 Statistical information, 1982-1991, no date 60 5 Directory of community action agencies, 6 August 1986 60 6 Directory of human services (Ga.), no date 60 7 Law: Energy assistance bill, SB 29, 1981 60 8 Law: Energy assistance, printed material, 1983, 60 9 Law: Universal telephone service preservation act, 1984 60 10 Sample energy assistance programs, 1980-1982, no date 60 11 Notes

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60 12 Newsletters: NCLC Energy Updates, 1983-1986 60 13 Newsletters: NCLC Energy Updates, 1987-1991 60 14 Newsletters: OER Energy Updates, 1986, 1987 60 15 Press releases: "News from Joe Frank Harris," 1983-1986 60 16 Press releases: General, 1982-1984, 1987 60 17 Fliers, 1986, 1990, and no date 60 18 GPRO mailings, 1981-1986, and no date 60 19 Clippings, 1979 60 20 Clippings, 1981 60 21 Clippings, 1983 60 22 Clippings, 1984 60 23 Clippings, 1984: Energy grant and Capitol renovation 60 24 Clippings, 1985 60 25 Clippings, 1986, no date 60 26 Clippings, 1987, 1990, and no date 60 27 Energy assistance: Printed material, 1981-1986, no date 61 1 Dept. of Human Resources, Funds Available Status Reports: 1983 61 2 Dept. of Human Resources, Funds Available Status Reports: 1984 61 3 Dept. of Human Resources, Funds Available Status Reports: 1985 61 4 Dept. of Human Resources, Funds Available Status Reports: 1986 61 5 Dept. of Human Resources, Funds Available Status Reports: 1990

43 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Subseries 8.5 Georgia politics files, 1972-1989 Boxes 62-66

Scope and Content Note The legislative reference files contain materials relating to budgets, state of the state addresses, bills, and voting records. Pauley used this information for the extensive mailings which were routed to the Georgia Poverty Rights Organization (GPRO) membership. Initially, GPRO focused attention on individual welfare cases through, in part, a telephone hotline service. Clients who contacted the office with welfare problems were interviewed and referred to the appropriate agencies for assistance or in emergencies, donations were collected on their behalf. By the eighties, however, the organization found that it could be more effective as a lobbying group. As Mrs. Pauley noted to one newspaper reporter in 1985, "We saw all we were doing was just applying Band-Aids...we saw that the most important thing we could do would be to change the system." Pauley and GPRO members visited the Capitol regularly in their efforts to maintain a vigilant watch over the state's budgeting process. This monitoring program was often thwarted, however, because committee meetings were not well publicized. In 1987, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed a lawsuit on behalf of Frances Pauley charging that such secrecy violated the state constitution. Although Ms. Pauley and the ACLU lost the suit, the state sunshine law was expanded. Information regarding this case will be found in box 63. The national politics files contained in box 66 relate primarily to the Reagan administration's plan for economic recovery issued in February 1981; see folder 5. A significant feature of the plan was the lessening of federal funding and regulatory control for a wide variety of human service programs. A Transitional Planning Committee of the Alliance for Human Services Planning (which included the Atlanta Regional Commission, the Georgia Department of Human Resources, Economic Opportunity Atlanta, and the United Way), was formed in July 1981 to provide guidance to the Atlanta community and the state of Georgia in the face of federal funding cutbacks and to minimize competitiveness among various programs for funds which would be available. Frances Pauley served on the General and Social Services subcommittee of this group which considered the impact of the cutbacks on the AFDC, Food Stamp, and energy assistance programs. These files include correspondence and reports of the Transitional Planning Committee and its subcommittees as well as reports, press releases, position statements, and printed material concerning Reagan's budget proposals.

Telephone tree project Box Folder Content 62 1 Correspondence, summer 1981 62 2 Contact list and mailings, June, July 1981, no date 62 3 District maps

Taxes 62 4 Coalition against the local option sales tax: Minutes, 1982 62 5 Coalition against the local option sales tax: Correspondence, 1979-1982, no date

44 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

62 6 Coalition against the local option sales tax: Position papers, 1979, 1982, no date 62 7 Coalition against the local option sales tax: Informational papers, 1982, no date 62 8 Coalition against the local option sales tax: Press releases, 1979, no date 62 9 Coalition against the local option sales tax: Newsletter, no date 62 10 Coalition against the local option sales tax: Flyers, no date 62 11 Coalition against the local option sales tax: Mailing and response, no date 62 12 Coalition against the local option sales tax: Mailing lists, 1982, no date 62 13 Coalition against the local option sales tax: Printed material, no date 62 14 Coalition against the local option sales tax: Notes 62 15 Georgia task force against tuition tax credits: Correspondence, 1981 62 16 Georgia task force against tuition tax credits: Printed material, 1981, no date 62 17 Collected material, 1976-1988, no date 62 18 Clippings, 1978, 1979 62 19 Clippings, 1982 62 20 Clippings, 1983 62 21 Clippings, 1989

Open government 63 1 Correspondence, 1986-1988 63 2 Petition, 3 February 1978 63 3 ACLU v. Tom Murphy: Complaint and response, March-September 1987 63 4 ACLU v. Tom Murphy: Appeals, November-December 1987 63 5 ACLU v. Tom Murphy: Docket, 18 August 1988 63 6 ACLU v. Tom Murphy: Briefs, September-November 1988 63 7 ACLU v. Tom Murphy: Verdict, 3 November 1988

Open government monitoring project 63 8 Financial records, October 25, December 2, 1987 63 9 Training and planning, December 1987 63 10 Notations, December 1987 - March 1988 63 11 Legislative information, 1988, 1989, no date 63 12 Lists of monitors, 1987, 1988, no date 63 13 Public hearing, 8 February 1988, Pauley testimony 63 14 "Wheeling and dealing sunshine," Jack Jersawitz, no date (1988?) 63 15 Sunshine laws (S.B. 394, 435), no date 63 16 Constitutional regulations, no date 63 17 "Common cause," newsletter, 27 October 1987 63 18 Clippings, March 1987 - March 1988 63 19 Notes 63 20 "Legislative Journal," F. Pauley, 16 December 1987-16 January 1988, no date

45 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

63 21 Public hearing hosted by DeKalb delegation, re legislative issues, 25 January 1988

Elections 64 1 City Council, 1973: Bradley, Panke 64 2 Bd. of Education, 1973: Griggs, Margaret 64 3 Mayoral, 1973: Clippings, October 1973 64 4 Bd. of Education, 1974: Mills, Roger 64 5 House Rep., 1974: Sinkfield, Georganna 64 6 "Candidates for federal and state offices," 2 November 1976 64 7 Gubernatorial: Returns, 1982 64 8 Senate, 1986: Bond, Julian 64 9 Senate, 1986: Clippings, July-September 1986 64 10 Lieutenant Governor, 1987: Howard, Pierre 64 11 Lieutenant Governor, 1987: Clippings, 1987 64 12 Clippings, 1982, 1984, 1986

Governor's Office, Busbee, George 64 13 State of the state addresses, 1978-1980 64 14 Budget: FY 1976, press release 64 15 Budget: FY 1978 64 16 Budget: FY 1979, press releases 64 17 Budget: FY 1980, press releases 64 18 Budget: FY 1981, proposal 64 19 Budget: FY 1981, general information

Governor's Office, Harris, Joe Frank 64 20 State of the state address, 1985 64 21 Special education address, 16 January 1985 64 22 Budget: FY 1983, Proposal 64 23 Budget: FY 1985

Georgia Legislature 64 24 Agendas (?), 1976, 1978 64 25 Bills: H.B. 474, taxes 64 26 Bills: H.B. 741, fair employment practices 64 27 Bills: H.B. 1068, county health boards 64 28 Bills: H.B. 1201, housing 64 29 Bills: H.B. 1281, AIDS 64 30 Bills: H.B. 1296, maternal health 64 31 Bills: H.B. 1329, prescription drugs

46 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

64 32 Bills: H.B. 1339, Industrial Loan Act 64 33 Bills: H.R. 558, McKinney Homeless Assistance Act 64 34 Bills: H.R. 1720, Family Welfare Reform Act of 1987 64 35 Bills: H.R. 2807, 3222, 3224, health services 64 36 Bills: H.R. 4460, Family Welfare Improvement Act 64 37 Bills: H.R. 9030, Better Jobs and Income Act 64 38 Bills: S.B. 39, mental retardation 64 39 Bills: S.B. 319, transfer of patient property 64 40 Bills: S.B. 410, firearms 65 1 Bills: Executive Reorganization Act of 1972 65 2 Bills: Georgia Human Rights Act 65 3 Bills: AFDC 65 4 Bills: Summaries, 1977-1988, no date 65 5 Bills: Printed material, 1984, 1988, no date 65 6 Black membership, 1975-1976 65 7 Black caucus: Press release, 28 November 1980 65 8 Senate membership, 1977-1985, and no date 65 9 House membership, 1977-1984, and no date 65 10 Committee membership 65 11 Legislative summaries, 1982 65 12 Howard, Pierre: Reports of sessions, 1981-1983 65 13 NAACP and lobbying, 1977 65 14 Voting records: House, 1976-1986 65 15 Voting records: Senate, 1975-1988 65 16 Voting records: House and Senate, 1978 65 17 Georgia Legislative Forum, 1975-1981 65 18 "SRC Legislative Bulletin," 1981-1984 65 19 Maps, government office buildings 65 20 Notes 65 21 Collected material: 1970-1980, no date

National Politics: Ronald Reagan Administration: Budget, fiscal year 1982 66 1 Alliance for Human Services Planning: Correspondence, July 1981-August 1981, no date 66 2 Alliance for Human Services Planning: Meeting schedule, 1981-1982 66 3 Alliance for Human Services Planning: Committees, 1981 66 4 Alliance for Human Services Planning: Reports, 1981 66 5 Alliance for Human Services Planning: "A Program for Economic Recovery," 18 February 1981

47 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

66 6 Alliance for Human Services Planning: Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1981 (H.R. 3982), 31 July 1981 66 7 Impact of budget: Georgia Legal Services Program, fact sheets, 1981, no date 66 8 Impact of budget: Articles, 1981 66 9 Impact of budget: Reports, 1981 66 10 Impact of budget: Printed material, 1982, no date 66 11 Reaction: Press releases, April 1981, no date 66 12 Reaction: Position statements, 1981, no date 66 13 Alternative budget: Proposal, December 1981 66 14 Alternative budget: Position statements, no date 66 15 Clippings, 1981-1983, no date 66 16 Printed material, 1981, 1983 66 17 "Civil Liberties Alert," newsletter, 1978-1988 66 18 Printed material, 1981-1985, no date

48 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Subseries 8.6 Allied organizations files, 1967-1990 Boxes 67-74

Scope and Content Note The effectiveness of the Georgia Poverty Rights Organization (GPRO) could be attributed in no small measure to Ms. Pauley's skill in coordinating the work of GPRO with that of other community action organizations across the state such as Christians Against Hunger in Georgia (CAHIG), Emmaus House, Public Assistance Coalition, and the Georgia Citizens Coalition on Hunger (GCCH). This subseries documents the activities of a number of these non-profit service organizations whose interests and goals paralleled those of GPR Frances Pauley served on the Board of Directors for many of these groups. Other organizations represented in the Allied Organizations series are the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), Georgia Homeless Resource Network, Georgia Interchurch Association, Georgia Rural Hunger Project, Georgia Statewide Coalition on Hunger and Homelessness (which merged with GCCH), Georgians Against Hunger (which became CAHIG), Governor's Homeless Study Commission, and Metro Fair Housing Services. Frances Pauley's association with the ACLU spans some thirty years, beginning in the early sixties. Box 67 of this subseries includes materials dating primarily to her years of service as a board member from ca. 1973 until 1986 and includes minutes, reports of meetings and committees, information on conferences, policy statements, and clippings. Box 67, folder 10 contains a telephone survey which Pauley conducted for the ACLU as part of its litigation in the Atlanta school desegregation case. For related material, see boxes 22, 23, and 24 of the HEW series. See also box 63 of the Georgia Politics series for information concerning the ACLU and Georgia's sunshine laws. Christians Against Hunger in Georgia (CAHIG), formerly Georgians Against Hunger, was formed in 1978 as a non-profit statewide organization of church leaders and members seeking to promote social welfare and to draw attention to the state's hunger problem. CAHIG, comprised of church leaders and lay members, worked to establish a statewide network to inform the religious community of public assistance issues, particularly in regards to the AFDC program. The group published a monthly newsletter, presented programs on the hunger problem to various other groups, participated in public hearings, and kept its membership abreast of current issues in the legislature. Together with the PAC and GPRO, CAHIG sponsored a program called Poor People's Day at the Capitol, an effort to bring poor people in to Atlanta to meet and talk with legislators about issues affecting them. CAHIG disbanded in December 1988, turning its activities over to the PAC. Emmaus House, a social action community center in southwest Atlanta, was established in 1967 by the Episcopal Diocese of Atlanta. In August 1970, a Poverty Rights Office (PRO) was formed by the Director of Emmaus House, Father Austin Ford, and volunteers at the center with the assistance of the Georgia Council on Human Relations and Frances Pauley. Welfare recipients were encouraged to contact volunteers at the office for information concerning welfare rights and services. Also, in 1970, the PRO office began printing a monthly newspaper called "The Poor People's Newspaper" which was mailed to welfare recipients free of charge to keep them abreast

49 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 of the latest developments in housing, employment, and welfare benefits. Issues for the years 1970 through 1987 are to be found in box 70. For related materials on welfare, see subseries 8.3 of GPRO. There is additional information in this subseries concerning the various activities Emmaus House sponsored for the years 1967-1987, including the Educational Council of Concerned Parents, Tenants United for Fairness (TUFF), and a children's program. The Concerned Parents group was organized in 1974 in response to the integration of the Atlanta Public Schools via court ordered busing. The meetings allowed parents a forum for discussing problems associated with their children and busing. TUFF was formed in 1969 as a type of union through which tenants of the public housing projects could voice grievances to the Atlanta Housing Authority. The Emmaus House children's program formed a vital component of the work the center performed in the community. During the school year, children from ages 5 to 15 participated in after school and weekend educational and social programs as well as outings to art exhibits, concerts, and plays. These activities were expanded in the summer for an eight week full day program with morning classes and afternoon recreation. Special emphasis was placed on reading skills, African American culture, and political awareness. In addition to her volunteer work as a welfare counselor at PRO, Pauley played a key role in raising funds for the various programs, and the newspaper, contacting individuals, churches, and foundations for financial assistance. These files include correspondence, minutes, reports, mailngs, and publications produced by the neighborhood center. The Georgia Citizens' Coalition on Hunger (GCCH) was organized in 1974 to combat hunger and malnutrition in the state of Georgia. The primary objective was to strengthen and expand federal and state food programs so that more eligible people would be able to participate and the quality of the programs would be improved. The work of the Coalition involved outreach and community education with the Food Stamp Program, the Special Supplemental Food Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC), the School Breakfast Program, and the Child Care Food Program (CCFP). The Coalition initiated a statewide food stamp outreach campaign from 1975 to 1976 to promote participation in the program. As part of this campaign, the Coalition operated a food stamp telephone hotline, involved the media in advertising the program, published a newsletter "Bread N' Better," canvassed neighborhoods, and made presentations to community groups. The Coalition organized the Georgia WIC campaign which increased the number of women and children receiving WIC using volunteer outreach. In 1976, the Coalition formed the Atlanta School Breakfast Committee to increase participation of Atlanta schools in the breakfast program. The Coalition established itself as a sponsor for family day care homes, assisting them in meeting state licensing requirements so that they could be subsidized by CCFP. These files include correspondence, meeting minutes, brochures, and administrative records dating primarily from 1974 to 1979 when Frances Pauley served on the Board of Directors as GPRO's representative. The Public Assistance Coalition (PAC) was formed in 1978 to allow various groups throughout the state share information and plan strategy toward improving public assistance without losing their separate and unique group identities. The organization's membership included the ACLU, Christians Against Hunger in Georgia, Emmaus House, Georgia Citizens Coalition on Hunger and GPRO. As GPRO's representative, Frances Pauley served on the board as secretary treasurer.

50 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

Like CAHIG, the Public Assistance Coalition focused its efforts initially on increasing benefit levels for the AFDC program, but later campaigned to increase appropriations for food stamps, Medicaid, social security, and emergency fuel assistance. The Coalition worked to disseminate accurate information about public assistance to its members, legislators, AFDC recipients, and the general public through press releases, brochures, public service announcements, speaker presentations, public meetings, workshops, and newsletters. The PAC was also involved in coordinating the Poor People's Day at the Capitol program. For related materials concerning Poor People's Day, see box 68.

American Civil Liberties Union Box Folder Content 67 1 Constitution, 19 February 1974 67 2 Meeting minutes, 4 May 1981 67 3 Policy statements, various issues, no date 67 4 Committee on constitutional rights and economic benefits: Report, 20 September 1979 67 5 Committee on civil liberties and economic justice, November 1983 67 6 Reports: Various issues (Biennial Conference Papers), 1976, 1985 67 7 Reports: Poverty (Biennial Conf. Papers) 1983, 1985, 1986 67 8 Reports: Special committee report on board operations and board staff relationships, 4 February 1987, no date 67 9 "Report to ACLU of Georgia legislative committee," 18 March 1987 67 10 School desegregation, telephone survey, no date 67 11 Fund raising solicitations, 1980-1986 67 12 Board members and officers, lists, 1974-1976, no date 67 13 Advisory committee, members list, 1975-1976 67 14 Conferences: "Quality education and the black community," 16-17 January 1976 67 15 Conferences: "Health care: right or privilege?": Grant proposal, 9 May 1977 67 16 Conferences: "Health care: right or privilege?": Conference schedule, 3-4 November 1977 67 17 Conferences: "Health care: right or privilege?": Purpose and agenda statement, no date 67 18 Conferences: "Health care: right or privilege?": Health conference committee, activity sheets 67 19 Conferences: "Health care: right or privilege?": Summary report, no date 67 20 Conferences: Biennial conference, 1985: Resolutions 67 21 "Reaganism and the new right," program, no date 67 22 Newsletter, and clipping, 1977-1986 67 23 Printed material, 1964, 1977-1986

Christians Against Hunger in Georgia 68 1 Articles of incorporation, 22 May 1980

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68 2 Bylaws, 12 June 1980 68 3 Director's reports, 1978-1981 68 4 Executive committee: Minutes, 1978-1981 68 5 Steering committee: Minutes, 1978-1982 68 6 Correspondence, 1978-1987, no date 68 7 Financial records, 1978-1980 68 8 Treasurer's reports, 1980, 1981 68 9 Contributors 68 10 Agendas, 1985, and n.d. 68 11 Schedule, January - March, no date 68 12 Evaluation of organization, no date 68 13 Organization and staffing committee: Recommendation, no date 68 14 AFDC: Information and H.B. 4904, 1979 68 15 AFDC: Information packet, no date (1980?) 68 16 AFDC: Position statements, 1978, 1979, 1985 and n.d. 68 17 AFDC: Job opening announcement: Executive director, 1980 68 18 Poor People's Day at the Capitol: Background, February 1990 68 19 Poor People's Day at the Capitol: Correspondence, 1984-1987 68 20 Poor People's Day at the Capitol: Correspondence, 1984 68 21 Poor People's Day at the Capitol: Correspondence, 1985 68 22 Poor People's Day at the Capitol: Correspondence, 1986 68 23 Poor People's Day at the Capitol: Correspondence, 1987 68 24 Poor People's Day at the Capitol: Photograph, 1987 68 25 Poor People's Day at the Capitol: Photograph, 1990 68 26 Poor People's Day at the Capitol: Press release, 3 January 1979 68 27 Poor People's Day at the Capitol: Newsletter, 1978-1988 68 28 Poor People's Day at the Capitol: Brochures 68 29 Poor People's Day at the Capitol: Mailings 68 30 Poor People's Day at the Capitol: Clipping, 10 May 1980

Emmaus House 69 1 Historical background, 1967-1971: Narratives 69 2 Constitution and bylaws: Emmaus House Chapel Steering Committee 69 3 Correspondence, 1967-1974 69 4 Correspondence, 1975-1987, no date 69 5 Chapel financial reports, 1975-1985 69 6 Financial receipts, 1975, 1977, 1981, and n.d. 69 7 Funding requests, 1984, and n.d. 69 8 Educational Council of Concerned Parents: Minutes, August 1974 - April 1975 69 9 National Welfare Rights Organization: Clippings, 1968-1983, and no date

52 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

69 10 Printed material, 1973, no date 69 11 Public housing:TUFF (Tenants United for Fairness), 1969, no date 69 12 Public housing:Clippings, 1968-1972, 1974, no date 69 13 Public housing:Printed material, no date 69 14 Summer program: Policy statement, no date 69 15 Summer program: Financial reports, 1977-1985, and no date 69 16 Summer program: Childrens' correspondence, 1977 69 17 Summer program: Children's writings, 1972 and n.d. 69 18 Citizens Participation in Government Project, 1981-1982 69 19 Senior citizens program: Flyer, no date 69 20 "Emmaus House News," 1967-1982 70 1 "Poor People's Newspaper," 1970 70 2 "Poor People's Newspaper," 1972-1975 70 3 "Poor People's Newspaper," 1976-1979 70 4 "Poor People's Newspaper," 1980-1983 70 5 "Poor People's Newspaper," 1984-1987 70 6 Financial receipts, 1978, 1981, 1982 70 7 Postal records, 1979, 1980, no date 70 8 Mailings, 1970-1979, no date 70 9 Mailings, 1980-1986, and no date 70 10 Donor records, 1971-1976, 1986, and no date 70 11 Donor records, 1973-1975 (columnar book) 70 12 Summer program donor lists, 1973, 1980-1983, and n.d. 71 1 Contact lists 71 2 Photographs, 1973, 1981-1984, and no date 71 3 Clippings: Emmaus House, 1968-1986, [1992?] 71 4 Clippings: Ford, Rev. Austin, 1971-1986, no date 71 5 Collected material, 1971-1980, no date

Georgia Citizens' Coalition on Hunger 72 1 Historical background,1974: Narrative 72 2 Bylaws, no date (1978?) 72 3 Mission statement and employee policy, no date 72 4 Minutes, 1978-1979 72 5 Correspondence, 1978-1979, no date 72 6 Financial records, 1977-1978 72 7 "Community food and nutrition proposal," 26 July 1977 72 8 Hearings re the child care food program: Testimony of Faye Hagood, 11 April 1978 72 9 "WIC in Fulton County," fact sheet, no date

53 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

72 10 Job description: Executive director, no date 72 11 Board of directors, no date 72 12 Press release, 19 November 1979 72 13 Atlantans against the budget cuts, flyer, no date 72 14 "Bread 'n Better," 1975, 1981, and no date 72 15 Brochures

Georgia Homeless Resource Network 72 16 Collected material, 1987-1989, no date

Georgia Interchurch Association 72 17 Correspondence, 1978-1979, and no date 72 18 Welfare reform task force, 1978-1979 72 19 Clippings, 1978-1979 72 20 Printed material, 1978

Georgia Rural Hunger Project 72 21 Report, no date; Public hearing notice

Georgia Statewide Coalition on Hunger and Homelessness (merged with Georgia Citizens' Coalition on Hunger) 72 22 Minutes, April-October 1987 72 23 Proposal for organizing, 17 July 1987 72 24 Director's reports, April-September 1987 72 25 Mailings, 1987-1988, and no date 72 26 Flyers, 1988, and no date

Georgians Against Hunger 73 1 Steering committee minutes, January-June 1978, no date 73 2 Correspondence, February-March 1978, and no date 73 3 Schedules, 1978 73 4 Steering committee members, 1978, and no date 73 5 AFDC, 1977-1978, and no date 73 6 Notes 73 7 Printed material, no date

Governor's Homeless Study Commission 73 8 Creation of, May 1987 73 9 Activities, June-July 1987 73 10 Laney Homeless Committee meeting: Report, 23 October 1987 73 11 Interim reports, no date

54 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

73 12 Final report, December 1987 73 13 Notes 73 14 Clippings, 1982, 1984, 1987

Metro Fair Housing Services 73 15 Board of directors: Minutes, September 1984-December 1985 73 16 Executive committee: Minutes, September 1984-January 1985 73 17 Annual meeting: Minutes, 18 October 1984 73 18 Staff meeting: Minutes, 22 July 1985 73 19 Correspondence, January-December 1985 73 20 Board members, 1985 73 21 Executive director's schedule, May 1985 73 22 Clippings, 1977, 1981-1985, no date 73 23 Collected material, 1975, 1978, no date

Public Assistance Coalition 74 1 Background, 1978-1980 74 2 Agendas, 1978, 1985 74 3 Minutes, 1978-1987 74 4 Activity schedules, 1985, no date 74 5 "PAC Legislative priority for the 1990 session" 74 6 Correspondence, 1977-1979 74 7 Correspondence, 1980-1983 74 8 Correspondence, 1984-1989 74 9 Financial reports, 1978-1985, and no date 74 10 Expense reports, 1978 74 11 Receipts, 1978-1979, and no date 74 12 Metropolitan Foundation grant proposal, 1980 74 13 AFDC: Position statements, 1978-1985, and no date 74 14 Statistics, 1978, 1980, 1985, and no date 74 15 AFDC Updates, 1978-1979 74 16 Catch-Up plan for public assistance and community improvement, January 1986 74 17 Middle Georgia Public Assistance Coalition, 1978 74 18 Welfare Reform Campaign, September 1987 74 19 Family Welfare Reform Act, 1988: Analysis 74 20 Press releases, 1978-1985 74 21 Members and contact lists 74 22 Notes 74 23 Clippings, 1979 74 24 Printed material, 1979, and no date

55 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Series 9 Other affiliations files, 1940-1989 Boxes 75-76

Scope and Content Note Frances Pauley served as vice-president of the DeKalb Clinic, located at 318 East Howard Street in Decatur, from circa. 1940 to 1946. The Clinic provided general medical care, including dental and pediatric, to people who were unable to afford such services otherwise. The Clinic was funded by donations from individuals, organizations, and the county. One of its major projects was a Child Health Program, which sought to establish an adequately equipped lunchroom in every county school. The Clinic also sponsored a school lunch program, which supplied free lunches to some 800 county school children of indigent families. These files include annual reports, donor records, and clippings for the years 1940-1946. The Committee on School Lunch Participation, based in Baltimore Maryland, sought to promote the full participation of children from low income families in the National School Lunch Program. The Committee conducted a nationwide study of the National School Lunch Program from 1967 to 1968 to learn how greater participation could be achieved. The study was sponsored by five volunteer agencies: Church Women United, National Board of the YWCA, National Council of Catholic Women, National Council of Jewish Women, and National Council of Negro Women. These files document Frances Pauley's activities as a consultant for the project in the South. Travelling from state to state, she conducted interviews with school lunch administrators, and coordinated the work of other volunteers in the region. The Gillespie Selden Community Center, located in Cordele, in southwest Georgia's Crisp county, was originally founded as a mission by the Presbyterian Church in 1902. Becoming a community center in the fifties, it provided a variety of services including adult education classes, day care, recreational activities, and a library. These files include minutes, financial records, and correspondence relating to Pauley's involvement with the Center as a member of the Board of Directors from 1967 to 1971. The Georgia Forum was organized in 1985 as an affiliate of the American Forum to study educational, political, and social issues of particular interest to Georgians through the preparation and dissemination of articles to the local media, i.e., newspapers, television, and radio. The work of the Forum was supervised by an editorial board which was responsible for generating article ideas, contacting potential authors, scheduling publication dates, and fundraising. Once topics were selected for articles an editorial board member was assigned to "shepherd" the piece. The shepherd was responsible for developing a synopsis of the story to assist the author in understanding the concept sought by the editorial board. Then the shepherd edited the author's first draft. The final version was then reviewed by the full board. As an editorial board member, Frances Pauley contributed her own articles, including one on the budgetmaking process and the state's sunshine laws (see Box 76:folder 11, 19 February 1987), and shepherded op-eds on various topics including AIDS, daycare, foodstamps, homelessness, prisons, and emergency heating. These files include minutes, correspondence, articles, and clippings relating to Pauley's association with the Georgia Forum.

56 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

DeKalb Clinic Box Folder Content 75 1 Annual report, 1942, 1944 75 2 Fund raising: Donations, 1944, and no date 75 3 Community farm project: Donations, 1945 75 4 Receipts, 1945 75 5 Speeches: Frances Pauley, n.d. 75 6 Clippings, 1940, 1944 75 Card File Box: Donors Building fund

Committee on School Lunch Participation 75 7 Correspondence, 1967, and no date 75 8 Questionnaires, 1967, and no date 75 9 Travel expenses, 1967-1968, and no date 75 10 Statistics, 1947-1967 75 11 Contact lists, notes 75 12 Printed material, 1966, 1967

Gillespie-Selden Community Center, Cordele, Ga. 75 13 Historical sketch, 1902-1967 75 14 Board of directors, no date 75 15 Board of directors: Meeting agendas, 1967, 1969 75 16 Board of directors: Meeting minutes, 1967-1969 75 17 Staff, 1967 75 18 Board and staff manual, January 1967 75 19 Problem clinic subcommittee minutes, 15 January 1969 75 20 Budgets, 1967, 1969 75 21 Financial reports, 1967, 1968 75 22 Correspondence, 1967-1971 75 23 Notes 75 24 Reports, 1966, 1968, and no date 75 25 Semi-annual reports: various, 1968, 1969 75 26 Community action program: Application, 1969 75 27 Collected printed material, 1961, 1969, and no date

Georgia Forum 76 1 Organizing meeting minutes, 12 December 1985 76 2 Bylaws, 1986 76 3 Editorial board members, no date 76 4 Editorial board development plan, 1988, no date

57 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

76 5 Editorial board: Meeting agendas, minutes, 1986 76 6 Editorial board: Meeting agendas, minutes, 1987 76 7 Editorial board: Meeting agendas, minutes, 1988 76 8 Editorial board: Meeting summaries, 1987-1988 76 9 Correspondence, 1985-1989, and no date 76 10 Briefing paper for authors, no date 76 11 Articles, 1986-1987 76 12 Articles, 1988-1989, and no date 76 13 Press releases, 1987, and no date 76 14 TV editorials, 1987 76 15 Usage reports, 1987 76 16 Notes and printed material 76 17 Florida Forum: Articles, 1987, 1989 76 18 North Carolina Forum: Articles, 1987-1989 76 19 South Carolina Forum: Articles, 1988 76 20 Virginia Forum: Articles, 1986, 1987 76 21 Clippings, 1986-1987, and no date

58 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Series 10 AIDS files, 1983-1990 Boxes 77-79

Scope and Content Note The AIDS files consist of three hollinger boxes and include correspondence, reports, newsletters, and clippings dating from 1983 through 1990. These materials reflect Frances Pauley's concern that the civil rights of HIV positive persons be protected and her subsequent involvement with AID Atlanta, the Georgia AIDS Legislative Coalition, and the Lamba Legal Defense and Education Fund's National Lesbian and Gay Civil Rights Roundtable. Her activism on behalf of AIDS victims began in the eighties when she lobbied for AIDS research in the Georgia legislature as a GPRO representative. Related materials may be found in box 34 and 64: folder 29 of the GPRO series.

AID Atlanta, Inc. Box Folder Content 77 1 Historical background, narrative, [1989?] 77 2 Articles of incorporation, March 1983 77 3 Bylaws, 28 January 1987 77 4 Meeting agendas, 1988, 1989 77 5 Meeting minutes, 12 April 1988, 13 March 1989 77 6 Long range planning documents, 16 December 1988 77 7 Training procedures, no date 77 8 Correspondence, 1987-1988 77 9 Correspondence, 1989, and no date 77 10 Internal reports, 1986-1989, and no date 77 11 Names Project, 1988 77 12 Names Project, clippings, 1988 77 13 AIDS Interfaith Network, 1989 77 14 Financial information, 1987, and no date 77 15 Membership lists, 1987, 1988 77 16 Notes and collected material, no date 77 17 Press release, 27 July 1989 77 18 Conference, 11-12 June 1988 77 19 Newsletters, 1987, 1988, 1989 77 20 Brochures, 1988, 1989, and no date 77 21 Fliers, 1988, and no date 77 22 Article, [1988?] 77 23 Clippings, 1987 77 24 Clippings, 1988 77 25 Clippings, 1989

59 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

Georgia AIDS Legislative Coalition 77 26 Statement of purpose, no date 77 27 Meeting agendas, August-September 1989 77 28 Correspondence, 1980, 1987-1989 77 29 Reports, 1987-1989, and no date 77 30 AIDS Legislation, 1987, 1988, 1990, and no date 77 31 Lists, no date 77 32 Notes, no date 77 33 Fliers, 1987 78 1 Correspondence, 1986-1990 78 2 Dept. of Human Resources' AIDS policy: rules and regulations, 5 November 1986 78 3 Georgia Task Force on AIDS, meeting, 20 October 1989 78 4 State budget, 1987-1989 78 5 AIDS information fact sheets, 1985, 1986 78 6 AIDS reports, 1986 78 7 "100 questions and answers," report, no date

AIDS hearings 78 8 Bowers v. Hardwick, court documents, 1986 78 9 Other cases, court documents, 1986-1987

Subject files 78 10 Homosexuality and religion, 1985, 1989 78 11 AIDS and testing, 1987 78 12 AIDS in schools, 1987 78 13 AIDS in schools, clippings, 1987 78 14 AIDS and the Black community, 24 February 1988 78 15 AIDS and confidentiality, no date 78 16 AIDS and homelessness, no date 78 17 Legislation: Frances Pauley address to legislature, H.B. 1281, 18 February 1988 78 18 Legislation: Bills and amendments, 1987-1988 78 19 Notes, no date 78 20 Press releases, 1987, 1988 78 21 Press kit, 1986 78 22 Conferences, 1985, 1988 78 23 Newsletter: AIDS Update, Lamba Legal Defense and Education Fund, 1986-1987 78 24 Newsletters: Other, 1986 78 25 Brochures, 1987, 1988, and no date

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78 26 Fliers, 1988, and no date 78 27 Printed material, no date 79 1 Articles, 1985 79 2 Articles, 1986 79 3 Articles, 1988, 1989 79 4 Clippings, 1985 79 5-6 Clippings, 1986 79 7 Clippings, 1987 79 8-9 Clippings, 1988 79 10 Clippings, 1989 79 11 Clippings, 1990 79 12 Legislation, various, clippings, 1990 79 13 Legislation, various, clippings, 1990

61 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Series 11 Restricted files, 1966-1988 Boxes 80-83

Scope and Content Note Several items were pulled from Frances Pauley's papers and restricted from research use for privacy reasons. These items are filed in box 80 under the series from which they were separated and include correspondence, resumes, performance evaluations, questionnaires, and case files. It was determined that public use of the information contained herein might infringe upon the privacy rights of the individuals represented.

Restrictions on Access Entire series is closed to researchers.

62 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Series 12 Unprocessed additions Box 84-100, OBV1, AV1

Arrangement Note Unprocessed.

Organizations [Accession 95-06-01] Box Folder Content 84 1 Ponce Improvement Association, 1990-1991 84 2 Imperial Hotel, 1990-1991 84 3 Open Door, 1993 84 4 Fulton County Bob Holmes, 1991 84 5 DeKalb Health, 1993 84 6 Georgia Homeless Resource Network, Members list, 1987-1989 84 7 AIDS, 1990-1991 84 8 Hardwick Decision, 1985-1986 84 9 AIDS 1990 Coalition 84 10 AIDS Task Force, 1987-1991 84 11 Etc. AIDS, 1990 84 12 Sodomy, 1985 84 13 Welfare and Poverty, 1990 84 14 Population-Per Capita Income-Poverty level, 1970-1978 84 15 Underclass, 1986 84 16 Poverty Bill of Rights, 1966, 1984, 1980-1984 84 17 AIDS / HIV Georgia 1990 84 18 Atlanta Interfaith AIDS Network, 1989-1991 84 19 Registration, 1986-1990 84 20 People for Urban Justice, 1991 84 21 People for Urban Justice, 1990 84 22 DeKalb Schools Supreme Court, 1992 84 23 Georgia Council, 1967 84 24 Georgia Council, 1967 85 1 Freeman, 1990 85 2 DeKalb County Biracial Committee, 1978-1980 85 3 Maps and Figures 85 4 School Correspondence Biracial, 1977-1983 85 5 DeKalb Schools 1990 85 6 DeKalb Clippings, 1977-1984 85 7 DeKalb, 1969-1989

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85 8 DeKalb Schools General, 1977, no date 85 9 DeKalb Biracial, 1977-1978 85 10 DeKalb Biracial, 1979-1983 85 11 DeKalb Schools and LWV, 1990, no date 85 12 DeKalb School Case, 1990 85 13 Desegregation Kids BxW 85 14 DeKalb Supreme Court, 1991 85 15 DeKalb Desegregation School Court, 1990 85 16 School Desegregation, 1982-1984 85 17 DeKalb Schools LWV Resignation. 1991 85 18 DeKalb County Board of Health Task Force on AIDS, 1988 85 19 Untitled: School desegregation, 1991-1992 85 20 AFDC Rankings WS (sents) 1988 86 1 Frances Pauley: Biracial Committee, 1977 86 2 Housing, 1987-1990 86 3 Georgia Homeless Resource Network, Correspondence, 1988-1989 86 4 Georgia Homeless Resource Network, 1987 86 5 Questionnaire, July 1987 86 6 Georgia Homeless Resource Network, 1988 86 7 Homeless 87-State Groups and Alt 86 8 DHR-Homeless, 1985-1988 86 9 Why-Homeless, 1989 86 10 HUD 86 11 Housing 1960s 86 12 1990-Housing 86 13 Housing 1989 86 14 Housing mad houses 86 15 Housing "finding," 1966-1986 86 16 Housing Clippings, 1989 86 17 Hannah's LWV Committee Social Policy, 1990 86 - Status of Health in DeKalb, 1990-1991 [accordion file] 86 18 Labor Pools, 1983-1985 87 1 National Council of Women of the United States, Award, 1974 87 2 Status of Health in DeKalb Program, 1992 87 3 G Council 1960-1967 [empty] 87 4 Hope-60, 1962-1964 87 5 Lists [various membership lists] 87 6 DeKalb Poverty, 1989-1991 87 7 Poverty-Statistics, 1989-1990

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87 8 National Health Plan, 1991 87 9 Letters, 1986-1987 87 10 Maps 87 11 Notes 87 12 Georgia Residential Finance Authority -Law, 1986-1987 87 13 Georgia Residential Finance Authority, 1991 87 14 Homeless Clippings, 1988 87 15 Clippings, 1984-1987 87 16 Bob Hayes, 1987 87 17 Savannah Coalition, no date 87 18 Atlanta Homeless Task Force, 1987-1988 87 19 School-Homeless, 1989 87 20 Homeless, 1989 clips 87 21 Homeless, November 1988 87 22 Networker, 1988-1989 87 23 Georgia Residential Finance Authority, 1987-1989 87 24 Safety Network National H.C., 1987-1989 87 25 National Coalition of the Homeless, 1987-1990 87 26 McKinney Homeless Act, 1987 87 27 Homeless Legislation, 1987-1988 87 28 Georgia Homeless Resource Network, Minutes, 1987-1989 87 29 Housing History, 1968, no date 87 30 At Housing Authority, 1987-1988 87 31 Housing, 1983-1991 88 1 Heating Energy Assistance Team, 1983-1994 88 2 Heating Energy Assistance Team, 1990 88 3 Bylaws Position Paper, 1983-1984 88 4 Heating Energy Assistance Team History, 1979-1993 88 5 Heating Energy Assistance Team Proclamation, 1983 88 6 Heating Energy Assistance Team Financial Report, 1983-1988 88 7 Preston's Report 1990 88 8 Other State Fuel Legislation, 1984-1986 88 9 State Plans, 1980-1993 88 10 D.H.R., 1983-1984 88 11 Municipal Gas Co., 1983 88 12 Heating Energy Assistance Team, Minutes, 1983-1989 88 13 Heating Energy Assistance Team, Untitled 89 1 Center on Social Welfare Policy and Law, Notebook, 1989-1993

Printed materials [Accession 95-07-17]

65 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

90 1 "The Lightning Struck," Aug 1988 90 2 Georgia Flag 1991 90 3 WW Law, 1992 90 4 Clippings re Civil Rights, 1994 90 5 Clippings re homeless, 1993 90 6 [Georgia] Forum, 1991 90 7 Atlanta Project, 1991-1993 90 8 Les Holes Housing, 1992 90 9 League of Women Voters, History, 1954-1956, 1978-1979 90 10 Physicians for Natural Health Program, 1989 90 11 LWV Committee 1991 90 12 "Georgia's Job Opportunities and Basic Skills Plan for Services Provided Under Title II of the Family Support Act of 1988" 90 13 "Georgia Supportive Services Plan for Services Provided Under Title III of the Family Support Act of 1988" 90 14 "Because People Matter...1990 Annual Report of the Georgia Department of Human Resources" 90 15 Lobbying, 1988 90 16 How to Book, no date 90 17 Rich and Poor Population, 1992 90 18 Newspapers 90 19 "The Common Good: Social Welfare and the American Future," Ford Foundation Project on Social Welfare and the American Future, 1989 90 20 Biographical material: "60 Years of Activism Aids Downtrodden, Poor" by Geri Taran, 1989; clipping 90 21 Correspondence, 1990, 1993, 1995 90 22 Georgia Homeless Resource Network, 1993 90 23 The Open Door Community 90 24 Heating Energy Assistance Team, 1994 90 25 Georgia Forum, 1994 90 - "Money Income and Poverty Status of Families and Persons in the United States: 1984" 90 - "The Georgia County Guide," 5th ed., 1985 90 - "The Georgia County Guide," 7th ed., 1988 90 - "The Georgia County Guide," 9th ed., 1990 90 - "The Georgia County Guide," 12th ed., 1993 90 - "Atlanta History: A Journal of Georgia and the South," v. XXXI, no. 4, winter 1987-88 90 - "Georgia Poverty Journal," winter 1988 90 - "Georgia Poverty Journal," fall 1986

66 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

90 - "Health Care in the South: A Statistical Profile," June 1974 90 - "King Week '91": Program 90 - "CRS Report for Congress: Progress against Poverty in the United States (1959 to 1986)," 2 September 1987 90 - "State Center for Human Service Statistics: Planning Aid," 1978 90 - "1980 Census of Population: General Population Characteristics: Georgia" 90 26 Atlanta, [1989-1991] 90 - "Human Services Planning Statistics for Georgia, 1988" 90 - "Human Services Planning Statistics for Georgia, 1989" 90 27 "Assignment Rescue" 90 28 "Budget System and Concepts," Budget of the United States, FY 1982 90 29 "Frances Pauley: Stories of Struggle and Triumph Part III" 90 30 People for Urban Justice: Stationery 90 31 Stationery 90 32 League of Women Voters of DeKalb County, Inc. Social Policy Committee, Fall 1991 90 33 Unidentified notes, AIDS information 90 34 Misc. membership and business cards 90 35 Energy Assistance Program Task Force, 1991-1992 90 36 Notes: AIDS, Open Door, Sex Ed 91 - Atlanta, October 1991 91 - "Indicators of Needs for Human Services in Georgia, 1978" 91 - "Indicators of Needs for Human Services in Georgia, 1980" 91 - "Indicators of Needs for Human Services in Georgia, 1983" 91 - "Indicators of Needs for Human Services in Georgia, 1986" 91 - "Indicators of Needs for Human Services in Georgia, 1987" 91 - "Child Poverty in America," 1991 91 - "Profiles of Rural Poverty: Facing Barriers to the Food Stamp Program," 1987 July 91 - "Status of Health in DeKalb: Opportunities for Prevention and Community Service 1990" 91 - "Racism in America and How to Combat It," January 1970 91 - "Georgia's Changing Social, Economic and Demographic Environment: A Historical Perspective," 1988 December 91 - "Women and Poverty: Staff Report: United States Commission on Civil Rights," 1974 June 91 - "The State and Education: The Structure and Control of Public Education at the - State Level" 91 - "Kids Count Data Book, 1991"

67 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

91 - "End Results: The Impact of Federal Policies since 1980 on Low Income Americans," 1984 September 91 - "State and Local Government" 91 - "Homeless in Georgia: Report of the Special Study Committee on the Problems of the Homeless in Georgia," 1987 December 91 - "Homelessness in America: A Forced March to Nowhere" 91 - "Homelessness in Atlanta: The Local, State and Federal Response," 1985 December 91 - "A Place to Call Home: The Crisis in Housing for the Poor" 91 - "Georgia's Bloc Population," 1986 December 91 - "Nonprofit Housing Supply: Atlanta Case," 20 May 1989 91 - "Social Policy," v. 19, no. 3, winter 1989 91 1 "Georgia's Response to Brown v. Board of Education: The Rise and Fall of Massive Resistance, 1949-1961" by Thomas V. O'Brien, 1993 91 2 Children's Defense Fund Publications catalog, 1991-1992 91 3 "Homelessness-Housing Issues/Solutions" 91 4 "1980 Census of Population and Housing: Advance Reports" 91 5 American Foundation for Continuing Education discussion course: The Supreme Court and American Democracy, 1959 Spring 91 6 Welfare clippings, 1975 (1 of 2) 91 7 Welfare clippings, 1976 (2 of 2) 91 8 National Low Income Housing Coalition 91 9 Georgia Poverty Rights Organization, 1975, 1976, no date (1 of 4) 91 10 Georgia Poverty Rights Organization, 1975, 1976, no date (2 of 4) 91 11 Georgia Poverty Rights Organization, 1975, 1976, no date (3 of 4) 91 12 Georgia Poverty Rights Organization, 1975, 1976, no date (4 of 4) 91 13 Georgia Legislature: Department of Human Resources, 1989-1992 91 14 1991 Legislature 91 15 Georgia Legislature: Misc., circa 1989 91 16 Budget Figures: DHR-AFDC 92 1 Georgia Legislature: Misc., circa 1989 92 2 Georgia Legislature: Committee on Conference Reports: HB226, HB 226, HBl- Ex, circa 1986-1989 92 3 Georgia Legislature: Conference Committee Reports: HB1350, HB94, HB179, HB474, circa 1976-1977, 1989 92 4 Georgia Legislature: Amended budget report FY ending 30 June 1986 92 5 Georgia Legislature: Committee on Conference report: HB1288, HB1, HB1300, circa 1984-1987 92 6 Georgia Legislature: Comparative Summary, circa 1986-1987 92 7 Georgia Legislature: Revenue, 1986-1987

68 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

92 8 Georgia Legislature: AFDC, 1985-1987 92 9 Georgia Legislature: Misc., circa 1984 92 10 Georgia Legislature: Misc., circa 1984-1987 92 11 Georgia Legislature: Misc. circa 1985 92 12 Georgia Legislature: Conference Committee: Reports and Substitutes, circa 1978-1981 92 13 Georgia Legislature: Committee on Conference: Reports, circa 1984-1986 92 14 Georgia Legislature: AFDC Figures, 1974-1976

Members of the General Assembly of Georgia 92 - First session of 1983-84 term 92 - Second session of 1983-84 term 92 - First session of 1985-86 term 92 - Second session of 1985-86 term 92 - Second session of 1987-88 term

General Appropriations Act 92 - July 1, 1974-June 30, 1975 92 - July 1, 1975-June 30, 1976 92 - Supplemental Appropriations Act FY 1978-1979

Printed material 92 - The Constitution of the United States 92 - Civil Rights Digest, Spring 1970 92 - Civil Rights Digest, Fall 1970 92 - Atlantic, April 1972 92 - Newsweek, 22 August 1966 92 - Newsweek, 11 May 1964 92 - Cosmopolitan, 1964 August 92 - Harper's Magazine, 1961 June (1 article only) 92 - Time Faces in the News, 1923-1976 {2 copies) 92 - Ebony, 1965 December 92 - The Saturday Evening Post, 10 November 1962 92 - Life, 4 August 1967 92 - "The Second Battle of Atlanta," Look, 25 April 1961 92 - The Saturday Evening Post, 25 December 1976 92 - Look, 16 November 1965 92 - Ebony, September 1963 92 - Life, 28 June 1963 92 - Kennedy and His Family in Pictures, 1963

69 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

92 - Misc. clippings, 1961 92 - Life, 19 March 1965 92 - Look, 23 March 1965 92 - Life, 29 December 1972 92 - "Lives in the Balance: Establishing Programs for the Homeless" 92 - The Crisis, October 1963 92 - "Out of Reach: Why Everyday People Can't Find Affordable Housing," 1989 September 92 - Martin Luther King Memorial 92 - Twenty Years After Brown: Equality of Educational 92 - Opportunity, 1975 March 92 - "Civil Liberties," 1975 April 92 - "The Least Among Us" 92 - "Task Force on AIDS: Report and Recommendations," 11 July 1990 92 - Civics for Today, Teacher's Edition, 1980 [used by FFP in talking to classes about government] 92 15 Materials laid in Civics for Today textbook 93 - "Public Law 89-750" 93 - "Constitution of the State of Georgia" (2 copies) 93 - Quentin Rogers v. Herman Lodge, U. S. Supreme Court, October 1980 93 - Southern School Desegregation, 1966-67 93 - "Promise of Progress: Memphis School Desegregation, 1972-1973" 93 - Educational Amendments of 1972 93 - "Internal Security and Civil Rights," The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, July 1955 93 - "Let's Talk about the Democratic Party in Georgia" 93 - "Herman E. Talmadge Investigation: Report of the Subcommittee on Ethics" 93 - "Racial Desegregation and Integration," The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, March 1956 93 - "Use of AFDC Funds for Homeless Families," 1989 93 - University of Pennsylvania Law Review, v. 131, no. 6, May 1983 93 - "American Foreign Policy" (3 volumes) 93 - "Readings in American Foreign Policy Session Guides" H. R. 1720 93 - Science and Human Values 93 - "Readings in World Politics" 93 - "World Politics" 93 - "The Case of the Impenetrable Cloud" 93 - United States of America and Linda Stout and Blevin Stout v. Jefferson County Board of Education, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit

70 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

93 - United States of America and Linda Stout and Blevin Stout v. Jefferson County Board of Education, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, corrected copy 93 - "Count 93 - "A Time to Listen...A Time to Act" 93 - "Count Down for Schools" 93 - "In Their Own Words" 93 - "Readings in American Democracy" 93 - "Readings in American Democracy" 93 - "Georgia School Laws," 1961 93 - "Public Law 89-313" 93 - "Unofficial Government: Pressure Groups and Lobbies," The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, September 1958 93 - "Summary of Social Security Amendments of 1967" 93 - "Know Your Rights" 93 - "The Case of the Handcuffed Sheriff" 93 - "Christ Comes in the Stranger's Guise: A History of the Open Door Community" 93 - "Politics 1960" 93 - "Proposed Constitution of the State of Georgia," 1982 93 - "Give the Government Back to the People" 93 - "Let's Talk About Elections in Georgia," 1948 93 - "Racial Crisis and the Press" 93 - "New South: Dr. Robert Cole son Two Boys of Conscience and Courage; Arts and Amusements for Southern Negroes," September 1962 93 - "Discovering Modern Poetry" 93 - "Beyond the Myths: The Families Helped by the AFDC Program," 2nd ed. 93 - Program: Arnold and Victor Steinhardt in Concert, 23 April 1994

Accession 95-09-09 94 1 Stories Frances Pauley, 1993 94 2 ASB Accts. Bond C. U., 1993 94 3 Articles about Frances Pauley, includes a folder entitled Frances Newsweek, 1981, 1989, 1991, 1993-1994 94 4 1970s Frances Pauley [correspondence, collected material] 94 5 Bill-Fernbank, 1949 94 6 Speeches [includes some by Frances Pauley and by others, 1962, 1963, 1969, 1975, 1977, 1979, 1981, 1987, 1988 94 7 Speeches [mainly by Frances Pauley, 1968, 1970, 1987, 1989, no date] 94 8 1960s Frances Pauley [correspondence, collected material] 94 9 Georgia Council on Human Relations Welfare Manual, 1969 94 10 F. HR Council Diary, 1961-1967, 1988

71 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

94 11 Speeches [includes speeches by Frances Pauley and by others, 1987, 1990, 1991, no date] 94 12 Speeches [includes some speeches by Frances Pauley, but mainly writings of others] 94 13 Foundations, circa 1983-1987 94 14 Adopt a Grandparent, 1992 94 15 Untitled: "Healthy Advances in Aging," Winter 1994 94 16 YWCA Award Frances, 1992 94 17 Common Cause May 11 [1990?] 94 18 W of GA Black Woman Civil Rights, 1991? 94 19 My Friends, 1963, circa 1984-1990 95 1 Frances Civil Rights, 1985 95 2 Correspondence, 1986-1989 95 3 DeKalb Schools, 1992-1993 95 4 Black History, 1991 95 5 Prisons, 1993 95 6 Legistative 1993 95 7 AIDS, 1991 95 8 Poverty Homeless, 1983, 1993 95 9 Paul Mertz interview with Frances Pauley, August 1, 1983, June 10, 1988: Typescript transcription. AV1 - "Atlanta Forum" a public affairs program of WGNX-TV hosted by Zeke Segal, 1987 [original: VHS] Use copy. Subjects include: "Sunshine Laws." AIDS, homelessness, and some person information on Pauley AV1 - Sunshine Law, undated [original: VHS] Included on "Atlanta Forum" access copy tape AV1 - Atlanta Forum: Atlanta Homeless [original: VHS] Included on "Atlanta Forum" access copy tape AV1 - Foundation Annual Meeting Luncheon, Botanical Gardens, Athens, GA, June 24, 1989 [original: VHS] AV1 - The Flame Report, 41st Edition, Atlanta Gas Light Company, 1994 December [original: VHS] (2 copies) AV1 - DFCS Client Interview [original: VHS]

Accession 98-06-04 96 1 Articles, 1980s 96 2 Articles, 1990s 96 3 Awards, Certificates, Programs 96 4 Biographical Birthdays

72 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

96 5 Correspondence, 1959-1989 96 6 Correspondence, 1990-1997 96 7 Correspondence, n.d. 96 8 Datebooks, calendars, 1987, 1995 96 9 Newspaper clippings, n.d. 96 10 Newspaper clippings, 1943, 1979 96 11 Newspaper clippings, 1980-1985 96 12 Newspaper clippings, 1987-1989 97 1 Newspaper clippings, 1990-1995 97 2 Newspaper clippings, 1996 97 3 Organizations: Coalition for Justice for Women in Prison 97 4 Organizations: DeKalb Clinic, 1940s 97 5 Organizations: DeKalb YWCA 97 6 Organizations: Georgia Forum 97 7 Organizations: Jeanette Rankin Foundation 97 8 Organizations: League of Women Voters 97 9 Organizations: National School Lunch Program 97 10 Organizations: Open Door 97 11 Organizations: Wesley Woods-Foreign Policy Association 97 12 Photographs 97 13 Speeches 97 14 Stories of Struggles and Triumph 97 15 Subject files: Child Welfare 97 16 Subject files: Civil Rights 97 17 Miscellaneous AV1 - Stories of Struggle and Triumph, nine parts, 1987 March 1 [original: audio cassette] (9 use copies) formerly box 98 99 1 Yearbook, Decatur High School, 1921 99 2 Yearbook, Decatur High School, 1922 99 3 Yearbook, Agnes Scott College, 1927

Accession 2004-05-08 100 1 Correspondence from Francis Pauley to Harry Boardman 100 2 Miscellaneous

Accession 2004-05-09 OBV1 Emmaus House, scrapbook 100 3 Emmaus House, summer program, 1980 100 4 Welfare rights, clippings

73 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659 Index of Selected Correspondents

Abrams, Morris B. Subseries 8.6: Box 74, Folder 7

Allen, Ivan Subseries 8.6: Box 69, Folder 3

Arrington, Marvin Subseries 8.5: Box 62, Folder 5

Barker, Ed (Georgia Senate) Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 1 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 3

Beasley, Ruth Subseries 8.6: Box 73, Folder 2

Bertrand, John Series 4: Box 7, Folder 19

Blackshear, Jesse (Georgia House of Representatives) Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 16

Bond, Julian Series 1: Box 1, Folder 5 Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 17 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 4 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 7

Boozer, Ruth Series 4

Bostock, Cliff (reporter) Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 16

Bradley, Panke Subseries 8.5

Broun, Paul (Georgia Senate) Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 17 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 3 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 5 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 2 Subseries 8.6: Box 73, Folder 2

Buchsbaum, Aaron L. Series 1: Box 4, Folder 3

74 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

Bullard, Helen Series 4

Busbee, George D. (Georgia Governor) Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 14 Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 16 Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 17 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 1 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 2 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 3 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 4 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 5 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 6 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 8 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 1 Subseries 8.6: Box 68, Folder 6

Childs, Peggy (Georgia House of Representatives) Series 1: Box 1, Folder 4 Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 14 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 1 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 5 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 7 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 3 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 5

Clayton, Xernona Series 6: Box 15, Folder 5

Collins, Annie S. (City Commissioner) Series 10: Box 77, Folder 9

Coverdell, Paul D. (Georgia Senate) Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 4 Subseries 8.6: Box 68, Folder 19

Crouch, Kathleen D. Series 1: Box 1, Folder 3

Darden, Buddy (U.S. House of Representatives) Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 6 Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 8

Dean, Roscoe Emory, Jr. (Georgia Governor) Subseries 8.6: Box 73, Folder 2

Davis, Walt (Georgia House of Representatives)

75 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 16

Dixon, Lavonia Subseries 8.2

Dodds, David E. Series 1: Box 1, Folder 3

Dunbar, Leslie (Southern Regional Council) Series 5: Box 9, Folder 12 Subseries 8.6: Box 69, Folder 3

Edelman, Marian Wright Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 7 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 8

Felton, Dorothy (Georgia House of Representatives) Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 1 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 3

Floyd, John Series 1

Ford, Austin Series 3: Box 6, Folder 3 Series 7: Box 17, Folder 5 Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 16 Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 17 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 8 Subseries 8.6: Box 69, Folder 3 Subseries 8.6: Box 69, Folder 4 Subseries 8.6: Box 74, Folder 6

Ford, Harold E. Subseries 8.3

Fowler, Wyche Series 1: Box 1, Folder 4 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 6 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 7 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 8 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 1 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 2 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 3 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 4 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 5 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 6 Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 5

76 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 6 Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 8

Fuqua, J.B. Series 5: Box 9, Folder 8

Fuller, Millard Series 1: Box 1, Folder 4 Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 6

Gaines, Martha Wren Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 4

Gignilliat, Arthur M. (Georgia House of Representatives) Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 16

Glasser, Ira (ACLU) Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 7

Griggs, Margaret Subseries 8.5

Guerrero, Gene (ACLU) Series 1: Box 1, Folder 4 Series 7: Box 17, Folder 5 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 7 Subseries 8.5: Box 62, Folder 15 Subseries 8.5: Box 63, Folder 1 Series 9: Box 76, Folder 9

Gwin, Yolanda Series 3: Box 6, Folder 5

Haygood, Faye Subseries 8.6

Hames, Margie Pitts Series 7: Box 17, Folder 5

Hamilton, Grace Series 3: Box 6, Folder 5 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 1 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 3 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 5 Subseries 8.2

Harris, Joe Frank Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 17 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 3

77 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 5 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 6 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 4 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 5 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 6 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 7 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 8 Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 9 Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 10 Subseries 8.4: Box 57, Folder 1 Subseries 8.4: Box 57, Folder 2 Subseries 8.4: Box 57, Folder 6 Subseries 8.5 Subseries 8.6: Box 68, Folder 8 Series 10: Box 77, Folder 8

Harris, Julian LaRose Series 2: Box 5, Folder 1

Harris, Patricia (Secretary, HEW) Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 6

Hartsfield, William Berry Series 4

Hawkins, John (Georgia House of Representatives) Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 16

Henderson, Vivian (President, Clark College) Series 6: Box 15, Folder 5

Henry, Aaron Series 6

Hesburgh, Theodore Martin Series 6: Box 15, Folder 5

Hollowell, Donald Series 3: Box 6, Folder 3

Holmes, Hamilton Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 7

Howard, Pierre Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 3 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 7 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 8 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 1

78 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 5 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 7 Subseries 8.5 Series 10: Box 77, Folder 8

Jackson, A.B. Series 1

Jackson, Maynard Series 1: Box 1, Folder 3

Jenkins, Ed (U.S. House of Representatives) Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 6 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 7 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 6 Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 8

Jersawitz, Jack Subseries 8.5

Johnson, Lyndon Baines Series 6

Jones, Boisfeuillet (Board of Human Resources, Georgia) Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 3 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 4 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 5 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 6 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 1 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 3 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 4 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 5 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 9 Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 3 Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 5 Subseries 8.6: Box 68, Folder 6

Jordan, Vernon Series 1

Kennedy, John F. Series 1

Kennedy, Robert F Series 1

Kidd, Culver (Georgia Senate) Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 1

79 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 3

King, Coretta Scott Series 1: Box 1, Folder 4 Series 3: Box 6, Folder 6

King, Martin Luther, Jr Series 1: Box 1, Folder 5

King, Martin Luther, Sr. Series 1 Series 3: Box 6, Folder 5

Kovach, Bill (Editor, Atlanta Journal & Constitution) Subseries 8.5: Box 63, Folder 1

Laney, James T. Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 8 Subseries 8.6

Lenoir, Lora (League of Women Voters) Series 2: Box 5, Folder 1

Lester, Charles T. Series 5: Box 9, Folder 9

Levinson, Marc Subseries 8.6: Box 74, Folder 6

Levitas, Elliott H. (U.S. House of Representatives) Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 14 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 1 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 2 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 4 Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 8

Lokey, Hamilton Series 4 Subseries 8.6: Box 69, Folder 4

Lokey, Muriel (Poverty rights worker) Series 1: Box 1, Folder 4 Series 4: Box 7, Folder 6 Series 4: Box 7, Folder 7 Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 17 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 4 Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 3 Subseries 8.4: Box 57, Folder 8

80 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

Subseries 8.4: Box 58, Folder 2 Subseries 8.6: Box 69, Folder 3 Subseries 8.6: Box 69, Folder 4

McDonald, Larry F. (U.S. House of Representatives) Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 7 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 5

McDonald, Lauren ("Bubba") (politician) Subseries 8.5: Box 63, Folder 1

McGill, Ralph Emerson Series 3: Box 6, Folder 3

Mackey, James Series 4

McGovern, George (US Senate) Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 6

Martin, Jim Subseries 8.3 Subseries 8.6: Box 74, Folder 6

Massell, Sam, Jr. Series 6: Box 15, Folder 4

Mattingly, Matt Series 7: Box 17, Folder 6 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 2 Subseries 8.6: Box 73, Folder 19

Mead, Margaret Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 3

Meyer, Sylvan Series 6: Box 15, Folder 4

Miller, Zell Series 1: Box 1, Folder 3 Series 1: Box 1, Folder 5 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 4 Subseries 8.5: Box 63, Folder 1

Mills, Roger Subseries 8.5

Mitchell, Ervin Series 4

81 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

Morris, Aubrey Series 3: Box 6, Folder 7 Series 4

Morse, Wayne Series 7: Box 17, Folder 1

Moynihan, Daniel E. Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 6 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 7 Subseries 8.3

Murphy, Thomas B. Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 3 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 1 Subseries 8.5: Box 63, Folder 1

Murrow, Edward R. Series 4

Nunn, Sam Series 7: Box 17, Folder 6 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 6 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 7 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 1 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 2 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 8

Paschall, Eliza K. Series 4v7, Folder 5

Pendergrast, Nan Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 16

Perdue, Tom Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 6

Remar, Robert B. (attorney) Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 7 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 8 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 7 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 9 Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 1 Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 2 Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 3 Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 4 Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 5

82 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 6

Richardson, Eleanor L. (Georgia House of Representatives) Series 1: Box 1, Folder 4 Series 1: Box 1, Folder 5 Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 16 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 3 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 8 Subseries 8.4: Box 57, Folder 2 Subseries 8.4: Box 57, Folder 3 Subseries 8.4: Box 57, Folder 6 Series 10: Box 77, Folder 28

Russell, Richard Series 5: Box 9, Folder 12

Seeliger, Clarence F. Series 1: Box 1, Folder 4 Subseries 8.6: Box 69, Folder 4

Sherrod, Charles Series 6 Series 9: Box 75, Folder 21

Sibley, Celestine Series 3: Box 6, Folder 5

Sims, Bennett J. Series 1: Box 1, Folder 4

Sinkfield, Georganna Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 4 Subseries 8.5

Stancil, Alice W. Series 4

Starr, Terrell (Georgia Senate) Subseries 8.5: Box 63, Folder 1 Subseries 8.6: Box 74, Folder 8

Steinberg, Cathey W. (Georgia House of Representatives) Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 3

Stephens, Robert G. Series 5: Box 9, Folder 12

Stone, Betsey B. Subseries 8.6: Box 74, Folder 8

83 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

Strauss, Anna Lord (League of Women Voters) Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 13

Stumbaugh, Lawrence (Bud) (Georgia Senate) Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 1 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 3 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 3

Swindall, Patrick L. Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 6 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 8

Talmadge, Herman Series 2: Box 5, Folder 1 Series 5: Box 9, Folder 12 Series 5: Box 9, Folder 13 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 7 Subseries 8.4: Box 56, Folder 1

Tate, Horace E. (Georgia Senate) Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 1 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 3 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 1 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 8

Tate, Shirley (Department of Family & Childrens Services) Subseries 8.6: Box 74, Folder 8

Tillinghast, Muriel Subseries 8.6: Box 73, Folder 2

Townsend, Kiliaen V.R. (Georgia House of Representatives) Subseries 8.1: Box 32, Folder 16 Subseries 8.1: Box 33, Folder 5 Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 3

Ward, Judson C. Series 4

Watters, Pat Series 4: Box 6, Folder 6

Weicker, Lowell, Jr. (U.S. Senate) Subseries 8.1: Box 34, Folder 2

Weltner, Charles Longstreet Series 4

84 Frances Freeborn Pauley papers, 1919-1992 Manuscript Collection No. 659

Wiley, Bell I. Series 1

Wilkins, Roy Series 7: Box 17, Folder 5

Young, Andrew Series 6: Box 15, Folder 5 Subseries 8.6: Box 69, Folder 3

Young, Whitney M., Jr. Series 5: Box 9, Folder 7

85