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  • Contributor > White, Lee Calvin, 1923-2013 (remove)

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  • King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1929-1968
  • Telephone conversation # 8578, sound recording, LBJ and MARTIN LUTHER KING, 8/20/1965, 5:10PM
  • MARTIN LUTHER KING
  • , but not hatred. For this, St. Augustine should be grateful perhaps to Martin Luther King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference for taking over leadership in the festering racial tension in t hat city. This leadership says to the N e·groes : "Do not think
  • September 1963 – July 1964 material on federal participation in the Quadricentennial of the city, racial unrest, and SCLC request for protection and charges of federal inaction during a demonstration, including a 5/29/64 telegram from Martin Luther King, Jr
  • leader­ ship community is centered basically on three kinds of boycotts: a. A boycott against all Mississippi products (as stated by Dr. Martin Luther King after receiving the Nobel Prize). b. A boycott of bond issues from local governmental
  • RELATIONS SERVICE Dr. · Fr~d Holmes Wright I • t• DEPAR'JNENT OF .DEFENSE 1 Lt. Col. ~ohn S~~phen ~. T. Martin Shu~cian D•. C •. .GOVERNMENT Al Mindi.i n EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY ' COMMISSION Al Blumrosen HEALTH, EDUCATION & WELFARE Richard
  • and in our Regional Office in San Francisco. [2 of 2] DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL COMMITTEE 1730 K STREET, WASHINGTON N.W. 6, D.C. August 23, 1965 LOUIS MARTIN TELEPHONE DEPUTY CH A IRMAN FEDERAL 3-8750 MEMORANDUM FOR MR. LEE WHITE The attached
  • was somewhat of a restraining influence. F: For instance? W: The President wanted to have a group of leaders like Roy Wilkins, ~.fnitney King, Young, Philip Randolph, and a few others come down to Texas a~d go out to the Ranch and have dinner with him
  • stated that if a court held this to be a legal requirement,, . he woultj sign. · At the conclusion of the meeting Commissioner King said .he would ~alk with the State Board f:urther to ascertain i f the state wished to sigJ:?.. Two we~ks la"!er he advised
  • in the privacy of his own thoughts, and ::1a.'Ybe even in his own office, the President would have a few salty things to say about various players on this great national stage. F: Did you ever work directly with Dr. King? H: Oh, yes. 22 LBJ Presidential
  • was with the so-called leadership of the Negro organizations--Roy Wilkins, Dr. King, Whitney Young, I think the head of CORE then was Jim Farmer-­ F: Philip Randolph maybe? W: I'm not· sure whether Randolph came. But why it is so sharp in mind is that I