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HAYS, Lawrence Brooks, a
Representative from Arkansas; born in London, Pope County, Ark., August
9, 1898; attended the public schools in Russellville, Ark.; University
of Arkansas at Fayetteville, A.B., 1919; law school of George
Washington University, Washington, D.C., J.D., 1922; was admitted to
the bar in 1922 and commenced practice in Russellville, Ark.; served in
the United States Army in 1918; assistant attorney general of Arkansas,
1925-1927; Democratic National committeeman for Arkansas, 1932-1939;
NRA labor compliance officer for Arkansas in 1934; assistant to the
administrator of resettlement in 1935; held administrative and legal
positions in the Farm Security Administration, 1936-1942; elected as a
Democrat to the Seventy-eighth and to the seven succeeding Congresses
(January 3, 1943-January 3, 1959); unsuccessful candidate for
reelection in 1958 to the Eighty-sixth Congress; president, Southern
Baptist Convention, 1957-1958; member of the Board of Directors of the
Tennessee Valley Authority 1959-1961; Assistant Secretary of State for
congressional relations, 1961; Special Assistant to the President of
the United States from December 1961 until February 1964, when he
became professor of political science at Eagleton Institute of Rutgers
University; visiting professor of government at University of
Massachusetts, 1966-1967; director of Ecumenical Institute at Wake
Forest University, 1968-1970; elected as co-chairman, Former Members of
Congress, Inc., in 1970; chairman, Government Good Neighbor Council of
North Carolina; unsuccessful candidate from North Carolina for election
in 1972 to the Ninety-third Congress; resided in Chevy Chase, Md.,
until his death there on October 11, 1981; interment at Oakland
Cemetery, Russellville, Ark.
Bibliography
Baker, James T. Brooks Hays. Macon,
Ga.: Mercer University Press, 1989; Barnhill, John Herschel.
“Politician, Social Reformer, and Religious Leader: The Public Career
of Brooks Hays.” Ph.D. dissertation, Oklahoma State University, 1981;
Hays, Brooks. Hotbed of Tranquility; My Life in Five Worlds. New York: Macmillan, 1968.
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