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  • ~~~e~">':_•_ Walter Reuther, Mr. Potofsky and Mr . Dubinsky · -at ll:TO on Wednesday, March 10. I i; .I Ii Group of Negro publishers at 1: 00 p . m . on Thursday, March 11. ____ ..._.........~_.. • • • g• •~.;· ~ r ~~ ·._ I - ' I .. I
  • ) - By , NARA, Datc?- -14 3 CONFIDENTIAL ., ,< I ·2- Nov. 27, 19M Labor believes we can wo:rk tbh out wlth Reuther attd bl• pe.ople. The lmmedlate problem la to get Wilbur Mille to agree to pueh the necoeeary Implementing leglalatlon. You do· not now havo
  • to be right away without that year to sleep it off. But he signed it, although with a regret and maybe it's the best thing at this point. I'm trying to do some forward thinking here as to how we close book. I've talked to John Schnittker and Walter Wilcox
  • Scranton is coming to the end of his term, and is not eligible for reelection. He has worked in the Department (1958-60).. Walter Reuther has won elections in his union as well as sought to influence them on the national level. In the Board of Consultants
  • by the Viet Cong-runs the Newark Community Union Project. Hayden launched his project with a $5,000 grant from United Auto Worker's President Walter Reuther. There are nine others. All are underfinanced; the SDS workers live in conditions of poverty
  • . Said C.1.0. 's Political A:ction Committee bou, Jaok Kroll, ~The job of preeident is too much for a man of your age• • • •" Barkley replied, "I'm a very vig9roua man. I'm like a man of 40." Said Auto Work­ en' President Walter Reuther, "Life teaches us
  • of Lobsinger's speeches. I asked Joyce what he thought about the NBC program on the disorder and he said that it had been discredited, adding that Walter Sheridan was not to be trusted. I referred again to PAR's decision to move into the suburbsi he mentioned
  • be heavy leakage and no supply cutback and I just called Walter Jenkins in the White House to alert so I won't get any political pressure him and also the President from that end. This morning I spent over an hour talking with Willard Cochrane, who
  • There was not a word , however, that any objective, middle-of-the-road liberal (are there any other kinds?) could fault. It was a dispassionate view of American history, illuminated by the light shed on our past and present by such critics as Walter Reuther, Stokely
  • on the urban problem (Reuther, W}'itney Youns:, Edaar Kaber, Profeaaor• Haar and Wooc:1, and Kermit Ci9rdon)thi• Friday at noon. We have aet December 15th a• the deadline for the firat interim report (in time for your $tat• of the Union M••••a• if the panel
  • ARLINGTON, VA. VICTORY ,. :u BANQUET Ill FIGHTERS u, w -I .J Ill C ~ I;. 0 I FUTURE I Banquet Committee (Partial Listing) Rear Admiral Walter Ansel Brig. General Eugene S. Bibb Maj, General Robert Blake Commander Homer Brett, Jr. R. W. Brooks
  • , O.C. 20315 10 August 1967 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT Attached is my memo for ~ecord of a meeting I had with General Eisenhower at Walter Reed Hospital yesterday. I covered the three points about which Mr. Ro stow had spoken to me - - the possible
  • . it this way, he sa:id, had been reselved a.f'ter long and caref'uJ. thought down at the Ranch by a Task Foree which included Walter Heller, Kermit Gordon, and others. They had decided that the program shoUld be held together' should be dramatized
  • tor gotii;n the a1.nora t lMlliea. la~r leaurs . !le 1eek1 , through atrike power, 1:io barpui with m.ore -mod.•n.te In e!'teot la• ay1 , •1 will p\lll the hOlae• d.o1m • • •xt year, the .aw• heed ot uit•d labor . • un.10 ■ 1 ,ou let me Reuther