Box/Folder
[former box-folder if applicable] Title or Folder Contents
9/1
[32-3] Correspondence concerning the REA, rural telephone services, Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, includes also a booklet from the REA on the finances of its co-ops, and a map of the co-ops and their regional of control around Groesbeck. January - October 1953
9/2
[32-4] Correspondence concerning the REA, the NCEC, the REC, the TP&L and the Hoover Commission's findings on the REA. 1954 - May 1956
9/3
[32-5] Correspondence concerning the REA, the NCEC, the REC, the Hill County Electric Cooperative, publicity campaigns of independent power companies, the Federation of Independent Telephone Exchanges, Texas Telephone and Telegraph Company, and the Corn Belt Power Cooperative of Iowa. 1957 - November 1958
9/4
[32-6] Correspondence concerning the REA, the Texas Telephone and Telegraph Company, and the Texas and Southwestern Meat Packers Association; also included is a copy of a speech given by W.B. Murphy, President of Campbell Soups, on contract farming which was presented to the faculty and graduate students of Texas A&M. January 1957 - January 1962
9/5
[32-7] Correspondence concerning the REA, the TP&L, the NCEC, Texas Telephone and Telegraph, and the Texas Electric Co-Ops, Inc. July 1958 - November 1960
9/6
[32-8] Correspondence concerning the REA, the General Telephone Company, Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, and two pamphlets: "1961 Report of the REA", and "Changing Pattern of the REA". January 1960 - October 1962
9/7
[32-9/10] Correspondence concerning the REA, the REC, TP&L, Gulf States Utilities, the National Rural Electric Cooperatives Association (NRECA), protesting a $56.5 million-dollar loan to Louisiana Electric Co-ops, and a copy of a House Bill to amend the Rural Electrification Act of 1936. December 1964 - May 1965
9/8
[32-11] Correspondence concerning the REA, the NRECA, the NCEC, the REC, the Hill County Electric Co-op, the Tri-County Electric Co-op, the Johnson County Electric Co-op, the Sam Bernard Electric Co-op, the Texas Electrical Service Co. Texas Telephone and Telegraph Co. November 1966 - December 1968
9/9
[32-12] Correspondence concerning support for the REA supplemental financing bill being debated in the House. March 1967 - August 1967
9/10
[32-13] Correspondence concerning the REA, the REC, the Bluebonnet Electric Co-op, the Tri-County Co-op, the Wharton County Electric Co-op, the Johnson County Electric Co-op. January 1969 - December 1969
9/11
[32-14] Correspondence concerning the REA, the REC, and agriculture, Sugar Land Telephone Company, the NCEC, the Brazos Electric Power Company, the 1970 Cotton and Feed Grain Programs, the Wholesome Meat Act, the importation of cattle semen, problems in the meat and peanut industries. January 1970 - December 1970
9/12
[32-17] Correspondence concerning problems in the farming industry, i.e., cotton export quotas, food prices; and meat prices and controls. October 1950 - August 1953
9/13
[33-1] Correspondence concerning discrimination against Texas warehouses and what to do with surplus food supplies. March 1954 - April 1956
9/14
[33-2] Correspondence concerning drought conditions, the readjustment of 1955 cotton acreage, Willis A. Hawkins et.al. Versus the State Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Committee. October 1954 - February 1956
9/15
[33-3] Correspondence concerning drought relief, Strip-Cropping regulations, the Export-Import Bank, Mexican farm labor, the importation of beef from New Zealand, and the distribution of federally donated foods to the needy people of the U.S. August 1956 - August 1958
9/16
[33-4] Correspondence concerning problems in the peanut industry, the National Grange, the 1959 Cotton Price Support Program, grading of cotton in Limestone County, the Southern Forest Experiment Station, Farm Constriction and Allotment Record and Regulations, transfer of cotton allotments out of condemned lands, and the United States Forest Service. March 1957 - December 1960
9/17
[33-5] Correspondence concerning the Landrum-Griffi Bill and its effect on labor; problems in the peanut, cotton, chicken, and dairy industries; the National Cotton Acreage Allotment Program, and the World Food Forum. February 1960 - October 1962
9/18
[33-6] Correspondence concerning LAMAS, the Consumer Food Programs, the Government School Lunch Programs, Problems in the dairy livestock and poultry industries, the "Farm G Cotton Loan Program", price supports for the honey industry, and the preservation of the Sequoias. January 1965 - August 1966
9/19
[33-7] Correspondence concerning the Consumer and Marketing Service, the lack of veterinarians, and the annual report of the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation. July 1967 - May 1968
9/20
[33-8] Correspondence concerning the exportation of lard to Haiti and the United Kingdom, the Sugar Act, the importation of cattle or cattle semen, the Farmer's Home Administration, the Avalon Water Supply and Sewer Service, the Cotton Research and Promotion Program, and the distribution of surplus food. February 1969 - December 1969
9/21
[33-9] Correspondence concerning the Resource Conservation and Development Project Plan, abuses in the Surplus Commodity Foods Distribution Program, the Rural Environmental Assistance Program, widespread infection of horses with Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis and Vibriosis in beef cattle, and the problems in the rice industry. February 1971 - October 1971
9/22
[33-10] Correspondence concerning the REA, the FHA, price supports in the dairy industry, and the infestation of Texas with Fire Ants. February 1972 - December 1972
9/23
[33-11] Correspondence concerning Social Security benefits for Farm Loan and Production Credit Association employees. April 1947
9/24
[33-12] Correspondence concerning the Farmer's Home Administration and the Soil Conservation Service. January 1946 - July 1949
9/25
[33-13] Correspondence concerning the Soil Conservation Service, includes 8 photographs - Brazos-Robertson SCD (September-October 1946). January 1946 - November 1948
9/26
[33-14] Correspondence concerning the Soil Conservation Service, the Trinity River Improvement Program, and possible graft in the Hill Country SCS. May 1952 - November 1953
9/27
[34-1] Correspondence concerning the Soil Conservation Service, the Trinity River Improvement Program, and the Richland - Chambers Creek watersheds. January 1954 - February 1956
9/28
[34-2, 1 of 2] Correspondence concerning the Soil Conservation Service, the Watershed Protection and Flood Prevention Act of 1944, also contains the annual reports of various soil conservation districts. November 1955 - June 1957
9/29
[34-2, 2 of 2] Correspondence concerning the Soil Conservation Service, the Watershed Protection and Flood Prevention Act of 1944, also contains the annual reports of various soil conservation districts. July 1957 - December 1958
9/30
[34-3] Correspondence concerning the Soil Conservation Service, the Watershed Protection and Flood Control Act, and the Tehuacana Creek Water Control and Improvement District, also contains a booklet entitled "Conservation Research Needs for Texas", January 1957 - February 1960
9/31
[34-4] Correspondence concerning the Soil Conservation Service, the Richland-Chambers Creeks Watershed, the Aquilla-Hackberry Creeks Watershed, the Tehuacana Creek Watershed, also included are two pamphlets: "Soil and Water Conservation in Texas" and "Special Storm Report - Lower East Fork Laterals Watershed", September 1958 - October 1962
9/32
[34-5] Correspondence concerning the Soil Conservation Service, Annual Report of the Hood-Parker Counties Soil Conservation District and the recommendation and the Soil-Water-Plant Relationship Center be situated at Texas A&M, also included is a booklet entitled "Conservation Research in the Texas Blacklands", February 1960 - December 1960
9/33
[34-6] Correspondence concerning Public Law 566: The Watershed Protection and Floodwater Control Act, the Nolan-Aquilla Soil Conservation District, the Pin Oak Watershed, the transfer of Soil Conservation Service personnel, and possible corruption in the Wortham Soil Conservation Office; also included is a 44-page memo from the SCS on the benefits of Watershed Projects. September 1963 - October 1964
9/34
[34-7] Correspondence concerning the Soil Conservation Service, possible reorganization of the SCS, the Chambers Creek Watershed, and the Nolan-Aquilla Soil Conservation District; also included is a map of the soil conservation districts of Texas. October 1962 - October 1963
9/35
[34-8] Correspondence concerning the Soil Conservation Service, the Brazos Water Control and Improvement District and the Soil Bank; also included are annual reports of Soil Conservation Districts in the 6th Congressional Districts, and the following booklets: "Soil and Water Conservation Resource Facts for Texas", "America's Conservation Districts", "Grassland Restoration: Part II… Brush Control", "Application for Assistance in Developing a Resource Conservation and Development Project Plan", "Special Storm Report", "What is a Watershed?", "Multiple Purpose Watershed Projects", "Small Watershed Projects", and "Public Law 566 - Watershed Protection and Flood Prevention Act", July 1964 - October 1966
9/36
[35-1] Correspondence concerning the Soil Conservation Service, civil service appointments, the Tehuacana Creek Watershed, and the Chambers Creek Watershed; also included is a booklet entitled "Chambers Creek Story: Progress Report 1955-1968", August 1966 - March 1968
9/37
[35-2] Correspondence concerning the Soil Conservation Service, budget cuts in the SCS, and cotton acreage allotments; also included is the annual report of Texas' watersheds. May 1967 - March 1968
9/38
[35-3] Correspondence concerning the Soil Conservation Service, bond election for the Big Creek Watershed, budget cuts in the SCS, cotton acreage allotments, and cotton price supports. November 1967 - March 1968
9/39
[35-4] Correspondence concerning the Soil Conservation Service; budget cuts in the SCS, the closing of the SCS office in Italy, Texas, the 1967 Upland Cotton Program, the Chambers Creek Watershed, the Nolan-Aquilla Soil and Water Conservation District, and problems in the U.S. grain sorghum industry. March 1968 - December 1968