Box 10
Contains 10 Results:
HOMER MARTIN ADKINS, 1941-42
Files 36-37 contain correspondence and materials concerning matters related to state politics and Homer Adkins' administration, including some Adkins correspondence. Significant correspondent is Lamar Williamson.
HOMER MARTIN ADKINS, 1940-41
Files 36-37 contain correspondence and materials concerning matters related to state politics and Homer Adkins' administration, including some Adkins correspondence. Significant correspondent is Lamar Williamson.
CARL EDWARD BAILEY, 1937, 1941-42
File contains personal correspondence with Carl Edward Bailey concerning matters related to Arkansas government and politics.
JAMES WILLIAM FULBRIGHT--CLIPPINGS, 1939-40, 1942
File contains newspaper clippings and political advertisements concerning largely James William Fulbright's campaign for Congress, Third District, Arkansas, 1942.
JAMES WILLIAM FULBRIGHT, 1942
File contains largely personal correspondence with James William Fulbright; also, telegrams, newspaper clippings, magazine articles, notes, news releases, and memorandum. Much of the material concerns James William Fulbright's election as Third District Congressman, 1942.
JACK HOLT--CLIPPINGS, 1940-42
File contains newspaper clippings and political advertisements, largely 1942, concerning Jack Holt's campaign for the U. S. Senate.
HUBERT HORATIO HUMPHREY, JR., 1968
File contains correspondence concerning the presidential campaign of 1968; memorandums related to area development programs, including rural areas development; also, other material concerning miscellaneous subjects. Significant correspondent is Edmund Sixtus Muskie.
HUBERT HORATIO HUMPHREY, JR., 1964-66
File contains largely personal correspondence with Hubert Horatio Humphrey, Jr.
JUDSON KING, 1942
Files 45-46 contain personal correspondence with Judson King, Director, National Popular Government League, Washington, D. C. and the organization's letter-bulletins concerning the war situation, 1942.
JUDSON KING, 1942-43
Files 45-46 contain personal correspondence with Judson King, Director, National Popular Government League, Washington, D. C. and the organization's letter-bulletins concerning the war situation, 1942.