Box 15: Judiciary (1954) -- Labor (1949).
F 1: Judiciary (1954).
Fireworks; patents; copy of statement by William Jenner in Congressional Record on interpretation of acts of Congress on state law. Correspondents include: Oklahoma Congress of Parents and Teachers; William Langer.
F 2: Judiciary, Private Bills (1954).
Persons named in private bills include: Leendert de Witte and Flor DeMaria Sanchez de Witte; Jaber Hassan El Assaad; Joseph Feghali and Roger Feghali; Viktor R. Kandlin.
F 3: Judiciary, Private Bills, Mohammed Akbar Ashraf (1954-1956).
Correspondents include: Emanuel Celler.
F 4: Judiciary, Private Bills, Ibrahim Eldib (1952, 1954-1955).
Correspondents include: Harley M. Kilgore.
F 5: Judiciary, Private Bills, Irene Essley (1954, 1960-1961).
Correspondents include: William Langer; James O. Eastland.
F 6: Judiciary (1955).
Copy of S.J. Res. 8: To amend the Constitution to allow governors to fill temporary vacancies in Congress; lottery; patents; national holidays. Correspondents include: Harley M. Kilgore; Estes Kefauver; Thomas C. Hennings; Karl E. Mundt; Ed Edmondson; Joseph C. O'Mahoney.
F 7: Judiciary, Congressional Salary Increase (1955).
Correspondents include: Congress of Industrial Organizations; Ferman Phillips; National Association of Letter Carriers.
F 8: Judiciary, John Marshall Harlen (1955).
Correspondence concerning Harlen's appointment to the Supreme Court.
F 9: Judiciary, Juvenile Delinquency (1955).
Notes of Senate Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency; speech on juvenile delinquency.
F 10: Judiciary, Private Bills (1955-1959).
Persons named in private bills include: Robert George Bulldeath and Lenora Patricia Bulldeath; Beryl Roberts Irrer; Gerhard Kamp; Maria Stela Leitao; Ella Madden; Anna Bodner Nicholas; Induk Pahk; Joao-Pinguel Rodrigues; Mary Rose and Alice Rose Spittler; Christa Linek Toth. Correspondents include: Harley M. Kilgore; Victor Wickersham.
F 11: Judiciary, Private Bills, Richard Rhen-Yang Lin and Julia Lam Lin (1955-1958).
Correspondents include: John Wesley Raley (president of Oklahoma Baptist University); Brooks Hays; Tom Steed; Francis E. Walter.
F 12: Judiciary, Private Bills, Marika Pacini (1955-1957).
F 13: Judiciary (1956-1957).
Copy of S. 3308: To revise federal election laws, to prevent corrupt practices in federal elections, to permit deductions for federal income tax purposes of certain political contributions; narcotics; Federal Election Bill; judiciary; holidays. Correspondents include: Price Daniel; Lyndon B. Johnson; Olin D. Johnston.
F 14: Judiciary, Private Bills (1956-1959).
Persons named in private bills include: Helga Binder; Hans Hirth; Gertrud K. Rupp; Frances Irene Smart. Correspondents include: James O. Eastland; John Jarman.
F 15: Judiciary, Private Bills, Maria Spada Browning (1956-1958).
Correspondents include: James O. Eastland.
F 16: Judiciary, Private Bills, Elizabeth Lesch and Minor Children, Gonda, Norbert, and Bobby (1956-1958).
F 17: Judiciary, Private Bills, Paz Tupas Meeker (1956, 1960).
Correspondents include: James O. Eastland.
F 18: Judiciary, Private Bills (1957-1958).
Persons named in private bills include: Steven Lee Hays (Yoo Hee Yun) and Nancy Karen Hays (Yoo Deebies); Lois Eleanor Higgs; Tamae Koonce; Wayne Bryan McKinney (Cho Byung Oh); Kim Lynn Nix (Kim Kyoo Im). Correspondents include: James O. Eastland.
F 19: Judiciary (1958-1960).
Robert E. Lee; nomination of B. Hayden Crawford as United States District Attorney; various court matters. Correspondents include: Olin D. Johnston; Thomas C. Hennings, Jr.
F 20: Judiciary, Private Bills (1958-1960).
Persons named in private bills include: Maria Ioannou and Vassiliki Ioannou; Mathilde Ringol; Hughie D. Martin and Ione Martin; Mathilde Gombard-Liatzky; Chi Tien; Cesar S. Wycoco. Correspondents include: Ed Edmondson.
F 21: Judiciary, States' Rights Bill (1959).
Copy of H.R. 3 re: effect of acts of Congress on state laws.
F 22: Judiciary, Anti-featherbedding Bill (1960).
Correspondence re S. 3548, a bill introduced by Everett Dirksen to amend the Norris-LaGuardia Act, the National Labor Relations Act, and the Railway Labor Act. Legislation was result of Supreme Court decision in the case of Order of Railroad Telegraphers vs. Chicago and North Western Railroad Company.
F 23: Judiciary (1961-1962).
Earl Warren; Supreme Court; private bill for James M. Cook; proposal to establish a federal court in Duncan; private bill for Amis Construction Company and San Ore Construction Company; Assignment of Claims Act with pertinent correspondence and copy of bill, H.R. 9382; literacy test; steel companies. Correspondents include: Thomas J. Dodd.
F 24: Labor (1947-1948).
Copy of H.R. 3020: To prescribe fair and equitable rules of conduct to be observed by labor and management in their relations with one another which affect commerce, to protect the rights of individual workers in their relations with labor organizations whose activities affect commerce, to recognize the paramount public interest in labor disputes affecting commerce that endanger the public health, safety, or welfare (1947); Conference Report on H.R. 3020; Public Law 80-101; Railway Labor Relations, a pamphlet by the Railway Labor Executives' Association.
F 25: Labor (Jan. - Mar. 1949).
Copy of H.R. 3190: To provide for the amendment of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938; House Report on H.R. 3190; materials on coal mining; strikes; Fair Labor Standards Act; statement by Harold V. Story of Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Company; correspondence from Illinois State Chamber of Commerce with attached reports on labor-management relations. Correspondents include: National Independent Meat Packers Association; United Mine Workers of America; Textile Workers Union of America; J. G. Puterbaugh.
F 26: Labor (Apr. - Dec. 1949).
Copy of S. 2196: To legalize maritime hiring halls; copy of H.R. 5008: To amend the National Labor Relations Act; copy of report of Joint Committee on Labor-Management Relations on labor-management relations; firing of employees of Fairmont Creamery in Lawton for union activities; coal mining; workplace safety; consideration of foremen as part of management; Fair Labor Standards Act; statement by Warren R. Pollard of American Transit Association; copy of letter from Philip Murray to CIO affiliates; copy of letter from Textile Workers Union of America to Vice President Alben W. Barkley; workplace safety; unions. Correspondents include: National Labor Relations Board; Oklahoma Railway Company; Oklahoma State Department of Labor; J. G. Puterbaugh; Chicago, Rock Island, and Pacific Railroad.
F 27: Labor, Minimum Wage, In-State Correspondence (n.d., Jan. 1949).
Pamphlets on wage and hour laws. Correspondents include: Oklahoma Telephone Association.
F 28: Labor, Minimum Wage, In-State Correspondence (Feb. 1-8, 1949).
Correspondents include: Oklahoma Cotton Ginners' Association.
F 29: Labor, Minimum Wage, In-State Correspondence (Feb. 9-16, 1949).
F 30: Labor, Minimum Wage, In-State Correspondence (Feb. 17-28, 1949).
Correspondents include: J. G. Puterbaugh.
F 31: Labor, Minimum Wage, In-State Correspondence (Mar. 1949).
Correspondents include: Oklahoma Restaurant Association; Oklahoma Cotton Ginners' Association; Oklahoma Retail Merchants Association; Associated Motor Carriers of Oklahoma.
F 32: Labor, Minimum Wage, In-State Correspondence (Apr. - June 1949).
Correspondents include: J. G. Puterbaugh; Oklahoma Retail Merchants Association.
F 33: Labor, Minimum Wage, In-State Correspondence (July 1949).
Correspondents include: Oklahoma State CIO Council; Oklahoma Hotel Association; Oklahoma Telephone Association; Oklahoma Bankers Association.
F 34: Labor, Minimum Wage, In-State Correspondence (Aug. 1949).
Correspondents include: Oklahoma Cotton Ginners' Association; Oklahoma Hotel Association; Oklahoma Farm Bureau; Oklahoma Telephone Association.
Go to Box 16
Robert S. Kerr Collection Box List
Robert S. Kerr Collection Description
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