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  • WILLIAM C , JACKSON, JR , MORRISS. .JAFFE M. BOYD KEITH F . LEE LASSETTER R , CARLTON LAWLER MURRAY LEACH THOMAS G, LEACHMAN DR, UMPHREY LEE DR , DAVID LEFKOWITZ WILLIAM M. LINGO CLIFTON M, LINZ CLAUDE L, LITTLEPAGE FRANK G, LOVE HERBERT MARCUS , SR. GLENN
  • know the President will talk to you about it." I said, "Fine." He said, "You know that Commerce Department Building, that's a big building? It's a whole square block." I said, "Yes, I know that." He said, "Well, as big as it is, it isn't big enough
  • of Mississippi, he did all in his power to block the school dese­ gregation decision of the U.S. Supreme Court. He was instru­ mental in handing over $163,000 to the infamous White Citizens' Council, a group whose avowed aim is to "preserve the integrity
  • , who was the co-chairman--Woodrow is now a federal judge-was the leader of the liberal wing and certainly was a Kennedy man. think the Reverend [Herbert] think that's his name, was the one Meza~ I who proposed the idea originally. I Woodrow
  • discovered a car registered to Sirhan a few blocks from the hotel. An empty box of 22 caliber bullets were found. The handwritten notes contained rambling and repeating references to the need for assassinating Senator Kennedy. Some vague reference is made
  • makiD& in the ~enate , ot how the backbone ot er1oan buainesa--a 11 buaiAeu- &b,t haYe al raer part 1A world lor thia taak I waa acoOJa.panie4 by Mr . Herbert Ebelabera, speoial trade. oouneel to JD1 Senate Co trat1oa. 1ttee, sent b7 the Poreip
  • existing federal programs and relocation) to requirements for integration. b4. Condition an lan for the redistribution or sharing of federal revenues or for tax credits·· and block grants) on state and local progress toward urban integration. bS
  • •• ••• •••••••••••••••••• : OTHER LINES OF ATTACK FOR FUTURE l. 2. 3. 4. /\ S. 6. 7. 8. ••• •• 18 STUDY ••••••••••• Z0 • •• zo New Communities ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••• Research and Development ••••••••••••• -••••••••••• Block Grants for Municipal Operating
  • nomination for President. As the temporary chairman of my precinct convention I guess I was foolish, but I tried in a very calm way to say that the Republicans were holding their meeting just down on the other end of the block, and I thought the lady
  • up the money to establish Texas Southern University down in Houston. It had a law school in it. There was another law school a block away over at the University of Houston. But after the courts--after the color barriers were removed, so far as I know
  • Guardsmen SP-4 Peter Alan Putala and SP-3 John c. Almli while ignoring command to Jto9 the automobile he was driving at a ro~d-block located at Mack and E. Gd Blvd., and then drivinP, the auto at the Guardsmen. Homicide File #7167. Assigned to Everett
  • , and this is an asset." He said, "Yes, we do. It's very difficult." I said, "But I'm curious about your state hospital. It's only two blocks away. When was the last time you visited there?" "Oh," he said, "about twelve years ago." I said, "Don't you feel any sense
  • protested U.S. intervention in Vietnam. Speakers, con­ demning the United &tates for starting the war in Vietnam, included Herbert Aptheker, a member of the National Committee of the Communist Party, U.S.A., and other party members who "just happened
  • to the Office of Management and Budget, not to the Executive Office Building, but to the Executive Office Building number two, the new one which had just been built, which was just a block away, and then spend the rest of the day there. At the end of the day, I
  • . The war in Europe had just ended, and he went as part of an investigating team with Edward Herbert and Sterling Cole. IG: Yes, and wasn't Cook on that trip? MG: Yes. IG: Yes. I remember the trip and that's all. I was not there. Cook telling me he
  • that the Senate should have majority rule so that the filibuster can't prevail. In that December a group was assembled--it was Paul Douglas, Hubert Humphrey, Wayne Morse, Herbert Lehman--that all agreed to a proposal that I had made some time back. The proposal
  • was [Commander Herbert L.] Ogier, I believe that's correct--what did they know about the South Vietnamese operations? Were they told, "Don't go near here on such-and-such a day, you may get mixed up in something," something to that effect? M: No, I don't think
  • and those in attendance were requested to recruit as many sympathizers as possible for thi ■ purpose. There was an indication that efforts would be made to infiltrate the opera house and there was some talk of an attempt to block the routes of travel
  • the last world war, I designed a method of drops to the partisans in Norway, Denmark, some of France of combining blocks of TNT for sabotage of railways and so forth with instructions, and combining it with chocolate which people needed terribly and wanted
  • as to blr>ckor partially block s•ch lan"s ia proltibited. No vehicle may be parked in excess of 18 hours in one locatioa, anless pfior permiulon for such extended parking has been obtaiaed (1011tile Captain, U. S. Special Police, Penta,oa Buildiac
  • case it marked my next involvement with Walker, because I got a call from Jack [Herbert J.] Miller, as I recall, who was then the assistant attorney general in charge of the Criminal Division, and someone whose name I don't recall who was one of Bobby
  • about the only one he can talk to, in that nature, and as far as I know, well maybe the only one that didn't quite do it that way was Roosevelt at first with Herbert Hoover. But before Mr. Roosevelt got out of his office he was talking to Mr. Hoover
  • assignments to advance legislation? R: Oh, of course. G: For example, if one senator were blocking a piece of legislation in his corrmittee, would Johnson offer him a better corrmittee assignment in order to get rid of him? R: Oh, I don't know of any
  • and Structural Chan e, 8. Princeton, Princeton U. ress, 1 8-1 1954. Maki, John M. Government and Politics in Japan: The Road to Democracy. New York, Praeger, 1962. Maraini, Fosco. Meeting With Japan. New York, Viking PreBB, 1960. Norman, E. Herbert. Japan's
  • to the foreign policies of both Democratic presidents and Eisenhower, but they did it on the grounds that they had to block the foreign policy moves that were being made by the Democratic presidents and Eisenhower until something was done about the Nationalist
  • Subcommittee I guess had an office or offices in one of the SEC buildings a couple of blocks from the Senate Office Building, B: is that right? Do you remember? At the bottom of the Hill there used to be a temporary building built during World War II
  • , the evenlng of his arrest, Jenkins went to a party given by ~,rwswgs;_k magazine to celebrate its· riiove into a new office, I½ blocks down Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House. Jenkins was in good spirits. He had one or two highballs, chatted about his
  • , the evenlng of his arrest, Jenkins went to a party given by ~,rwswgs;_k magazine to celebrate its· riiove into a new office, I½ blocks down Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House. Jenkins was in good spirits. He had one or two highballs, chatted about his
  • U. 3. Disarmament Activities Dr. James A. Perkins, Mr. Arthur K. Watson, Trade Corporation President Cornell Chairman of the Board, Mr. William System S. Webster, President, Dr. Herbert Engineering, F. York, formerly Director, Department
  • at WALLACE rallyo Columbus NOi headed by HERBERT HOOVER FUQUA, but unable to establish local mosque because of insufficient · m~mberso Dayton extremist organizations are Dayton Alliance for .Raci_? ,l Equality (DARE), local civil rights group headed
  • a But whole blocks around there, people [are] coming in by the thousands in this bicentennial year. And I like it up there. I think I've got the best home. seen it and the yard there and everything. You've You sit out and dictate LBJ Presidential
  • to say was okay, this is a loser, but look, how about conser­ vation, how about cotton, how about this, that and the other? G: Another tactic of Johnson's-­ Tape 2 of 3 G: Another tactic seems to have been to try to force a corrmitment out of [Herbert
  • . 128. How should our defense of a town! ti-001ls be dispc.~~ 150 Questions tor a Guerrilla 79 for the necessary to de.fond a block. They i'an recruit others for the cause, encourage the timid, distiibute ammunition and load weapons. _135. What
  • block No. 1. · the two s trong legs of recovery, '. did 1 Roooevelt's task -was rendered have both been more than doubled. appr difficult enough by the ~pposilion · Business profits have been dow1 of Hitler abroad. But his handi• ·stored and increiu.ed
  • Herbert Marcuse. Like Marcuse, it despaired of the feasibility of genuine reform in a system in which both major parties allegedly had become spokesmen for a _g~gantic technocracy (The Establishment). Like Marcuse, the State- ment saw little cause
  • . 20.333 for further reviev and necea·sary action. FOR THE CHIEF OF STAFF · HERBERT T. CLOUGH Jr. Colonel, USAF , MC Directorate of Professional Services Office .of the Surgeon General l Atch n/c B/Ltr ident ·same as above Request the attached med exam