Johnson writes to Dawson (Cincinnati, Ohio) that he does not desire election to Congress and discusses his plans for the national convention. ; https://www.exhibit.xavier.edu/dawson_correspondence/1091/thumbnail.jpg
Regrets they could not have a school under Partridge's system of education; contemplates sending his son to Norwich. ; Transcription by Joel Kindrick. Transcriptions may be subject to error.
Examines the relationship between President Lyndon Johnson and those who take published polls. As his poll ratings declined, Johnson used a number of methods to convince those with influence that he was more popular than the polls indicated. These methods included direct and indirect attacks on the polls, leaks of private polls, attempts to influence the polls, and courting the pollsters. Argues that the last of these poses a danger to the objectivity of pollsters. (AM)
Intro -- Charles S. Johnson -- Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- 1. From Bristol to Nashville -- 2. From Riot to Renaissance -- 3. The Mentor: Robert E. Park -- 4. The Park-Johnson Model -- 5. The Johnson Model -- 6. Park to Johnson to Myrdal -- 7. Internationalism: Between the World Wars -- 8. The Department of Social Sciences -- 9. Beyond the Classroom: Service Intellectual -- 10. The Publications -- 11. The Best of Booker T. Washington -- 12. The Rest of Booker T. Washington -- 13. The Department of Race Relations: Confronting de facto Segregation -- 14. The Race Relations Institutes: Confronting de jure Segregation -- 15. Internationalism: World War II and the Cold War -- 16. Conflict over Fisk Leadership -- 17. The Basic College: Nurturing Scholars and Leaders -- 18. The Red Scare Hits Home -- 19. Solomon on the Cumberland -- Epilogue -- Appendix I. -- Appendix II. -- Appendix III. -- Notes -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Y.
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In: A Nation of Widening Opportunities? The Civil Rights Act at Fifty, Samuel Bagenstos and Ellen Katz, eds., University of Michigan Press, 2014, Forthcoming
Claire Rhein discusses volunteering at the University of Montana's Archives and Special Collections in the Mansfield Library and how she created the oral history program in 1978. Rhein and Dale Johnson describe how Archives and Special Collections increased access to its oral history interviews by uploading catalog records of the interviews into a national database. The two also discuss the origins of particular oral history collections: Mike Mansfield Political Speeches and Interviews (OH 022), Smokejumpers 1984 Reunion (OH 133), Twentieth Century Montana Fur Trappers (OH 099), and Depression Years in Montana (OH 131). Rhein and Dale discuss transcription equipment, the importance of transcription, and their thoughts on the expansion oral history collection. ; https://scholarworks.umt.edu/umhistory_interviews/1009/thumbnail.jpg