Senator John F. Kennedy today announced the
formation of a civil rights section for the 1960 campaign.
The announcement was made following an hour-long
conference here Friday (July 29) between the Senator and Frank Reeves,
a Washington attorney and Democratic National Committeeman for the District
of Columbia. Mr. Reeves, who has been named an assistant to Senator Kennedy,
will accompany him on his campaign trips.
The civil rights section, working on organization
and research, will advise Senator Kennedy on civil rights matters and assist
in the preparation of position papers and statements. The Senator stated
that this will not be a minorities section working only on the Negro vote.
Instead, Negroes will he integrated on a functional basis in all parts
of the campaign. The section will he focused on the issue of civil rights
- and working on all the problems involved in that field will be a representative
group of people of all races and creeds from all sections of the country.
This is a departure from previous practices.
Marjorie McKenzie Lawson, a longtime adviser
to the Senator, will be a director of the civil rights section. Mrs. Lawson,
a Washington attorney and nationally known leader, is general counsel of
the National Council of Negro Women. Working with her will be Charles
S. Brown, on leave as administrative assistant to Governor Williams of
Michigan, and Herbert Tucker Jr., of Boston, assistant attorney general
of Massachusetts, NAACP leader and friend of Senator Kennedy.
Also in this section will be John Feild, assistant
to Senator Hart and former executive director of the Michigan FEPC, who
will work on regional, State, and local activities; Louis Martin, vice
president of the Defender Publications who will be a consultant on various
parts of the operation; and Prof. Harris Wofford, an assistant to Senator
Kennedy on leave from the Notre Dame Law School and formerly a member of
the staff of the Civil Rights Commission and an editor of the Commission's
1959 report.
Robert Sargent Shriver, Jr., president of
the Chicago Board of Education and brother-in-law of Senator Kennedy, will
represent the Senator in the planning and carrying out of this program.
Mr. Shriver is also president of the Catholic Interracial Council of Chicago.
Congressman William L. Dawson, vice chairman
of the Democratic National Committee, will play an important role in all
aspects of the campaign and the civil rights section will report to him
regularly.
Working in close liaison with the section
will he Arthur Chapin, Jr., who is vice chairman to Congressman Frank Thompson
in the national registration drive, and Mrs. Christine Davis, staff director
of the House Committee on Government Operations, who will be working with
Vice Chairman Margaret Price on women's activities. Adam Yarmolinsky, Washington
attorney, will act as consultant and coordinator of research on civil rights.
Frank Reeves will explain the operation of
the civil rights section to State and local leaders on a cross-country
trip this week. He will accompany Robert Kennedy, campaign director; Lawrence
O'Brien, executive director for organization in the Democratic National
Committee; Congressman Frank Thompson, chief of the registration drive;
Byron White, chairman of the Citizens for Kennedy organization, and Mrs.
Margaret Price, vice chairman of the Democratic National Committee. The
group left Washington Tuesday on the first leg of the tour.