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Congressman Arch A. Moore, Jr. (center) standing with six people in front of the steps of the Capitol.
Congressman Arch A. Moore, Jr. with Herschel Perdue and an unidentified group of men. They are standing in front of the door for the Ways and Means Committee, room H - 208 in the Capitol.
Congressman Arch A. Moore, Jr. turning to talk to someone. His daughters, Shelley and Lucy, are on either side of him. Three other unidentified people are standing in front of them.
Congressman Arch A. Moore, Jr. with two unidentified men from the House Ways and Means Committee. They are going over a document.
Congressman Arch A. Moore, Jr. with a group of student members of Moral Re-Armament. Moore is holding a copy of DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) magazine.
Congressman Arch A. Moore, Jr. on the steps of the Capitol with the Lewis County 4-H Club.
Congressman Arch A. Moore, Jr. standing on the steps of the Capitol with the Lumberport High School senior class.
Congressman Arch A. Moore, Jr on the steps of the Capitol with the Moundsville High School Band.
Congressman Arch A. Moore, Jr. on the steps of the Capitol with the Wellsburg Girl Scouts Troop 379.
Congressman Arch A. Moore, Jr. with a group of women from the West Virginia Business and Professional Women.
Congressman Arch A. Moore, Jr. standing on the steps of the Capitol with two unidentified young men.
Outlook for legislation that will affect the coal industry is being discussed by Congressman Arch A. Moore, Jr. (center) with Robert E. Lee Hall, vice president of the National Coal Association (right) and G. Don Sullivan associate director of Government Relations. They agreed that residual oil imports and subsidized atomic electric power are the major threats to continued increase in coal output, which that year will exceed 500 million tons. West Virginia's production, which accounts for almost one-third of the nation's total, is running at more than 7 percent above the 1964 output.