CLIFFORD L.
ALEXANDER, JR.
Third Chairman of the EEOC, August 4, 1967- May 1, 1969
Clifford L. Alexander, Jr. was named third Chairman of the U.S.
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission by President Lyndon Johnson
and served as Chairman from August 4, 1967 through May 1, 1969. He
also served as Special Consultant to President Johnson on civil
rights and voting rights issues.
During his tenure as Chairman of the EEOC, he directed
investigations for job discrimination in various industries, such
as textiles, utilities, labor unions, and movies. The EEOC assisted
approximately 70,000 people during Alexander's administration.
In all, Mr. Alexander served four consecutive U.S. Presidents;
Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon and Carter. In 1963, while in private law
practice in New York City, President Kennedy asked Mr. Alexander to
become part of the White House staff and serve as Foreign Affairs
Officer of the National Security Council. From 1959 to 1961, Mr.
Alexander served as assistant district attorney for New York
County, became executive director of the Manhattanville Hamilton
Grange neighborhood conservation project, and program and executive
director of Harlem Youth Opportunities. From 1977 to 1981, Mr.
Alexander served as Secretary of the Army. In 1978, Mr. Alexander
was awarded honorary Doctor of Law degrees from Morgan State
University, Wake Forest University, the University of Maryland and
Atlanta University.
Mr. Alexander received his B.A. degree, cum laude, from Harvard
University where he was president of the Harvard Student Council
and first marshall of his class. He received an L.L.B. degree from
Yale University Law School.
Born in New York City, Mr. Alexander is now the President of
Alexander and Associates, Inc., a Washington, DC, private
consulting firm providing planning and advice to corporations on
human resources management.
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