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  • undertake it. I think he felt that these contacts were kept to the absolute minimum, and he knew the motivation would have to be one of last resort--that there was a need for presidential participation. Now President Johnson would inquire. As we talked about
  • and Republican opposition to national Democratic Party policies; anti-Catholic sentiment in Louisiana that diminished JFK support; the role of Mayor Robert Wagner in New York City patronage; Democratic Party organization in Chicago and Philadelphia; judgeships
  • again.for of your work. a long and Truly Yours, June 22, 19S2 Mr. Phillp w. o. Menalng 6100 MoOal.lua Street Oermantovn Philadelphia 44, Pa. Dear Mr. Mena1Dg, I•a terribly aorry to ban dlaappolntecl a:, aucllenoe regarding the fi71Jag aauoer bl.it
  • racketeer, may have been a contact between the Mafia and "Forever White." In any event, he is thought to have gone to Miami, Florida, between April 14 and 24, 1968, where ~e may have picked up money to be delivered to Philadelphia or new Jersey. Cockrell
  • • colored ears, by his insistence stuck stubbornly get ihe first to Philadelphia, paigning took the tight last against and all very long, thinks am. the the greatest and the gamest, Mickey Walker. the tight in both to Tunney. customers
  • *A. Philip Randolph - AFL-CIO *Eugene Ormandy - Philadelphia Orchestra Leonard Bernstein - N. Y. Philharmonic Samuel Eliot Morrison - Harvard Professor *John F. Gallagher - Vice President for International Operations of Sears, Roebuck - 2 - MEMORANDUM
  • Vessel Anton Bruun in ceremonies at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard in December 1962. Dr. Anton Bruun, until his death in 1961, was Denmark's leading oceanologist and one of the world's greatest marine scientists. He was a proponent of international
  • it possible for seven of our larger cities to become eligible for assistance under the Area Redevelopment Act. 2. The Area Redevelopment Administration and the Small Business Administration have cooperated in Philadelphia to help members of minority groups
  • •o le,. ~der Cla.1ms .. u ~~. article ident1r1.ed EDWARD HAAS, 42-;;ear-old Camden County~ N.J., re&ident;, as. t.he group• a Nei,1 Jersey leader W11;0 claimed. tt\a:t members of the ffl111Utemen gave Philadelphia J?:o l1ee Commissioner iRAltK L
  • was living in Philadelphia I was examined at the recruiting station; low and behold, they passed me. You know, once I was in the air force I didn't experi- ence trouble with blood pressure--passed it on every subsequent occasion. I joined the service
  • - the President will sign, in the Rose Garden, the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area Bill. It authorizes the creation of a 72,000 acre national park in Pennsylvania - half'way between New York and Philadelphia. Q. Is that all of the schedule? K>RE -5
  • , Robert E. , MPLS. OLEKSIW,Da."liel P. , USIA SIMMONS III, Joseph J., Interior ANNENBERG, Walter, Phila. Inquirer & STANTON,Frank, NYC Daily News STERN, Isaac, NYC BALBACH,Stanley B., Urbana, Ill. THOMAS, Dan.'1Y, Beverly Hills, Calif. BLOCKER,Dan
  • " that new department would "end in confusion." She also inquired about role Out of town; temporarily unreachable. 3/1 coF~a.ss ti·an.sit. 2 (New Yo1·k) All for it ' Ho1·ton Generally Rurnsfolcl No opinion. Dickinson No· comment favorable; Questions
  • to determine ·precisely when the President's letter was written. It may have been on February 6 or 7, or earlier. It was received by the North Vietnamese in Mo~cow on February 101 but Moscow may have had to inquire from H~noi as ;-.·. . to whether the letter
  • Wallaoe or possibly even P·e:pp$~. The proposed l?e ,itel" ~ -t iale$ ooul4 be scl-d to Stern I for the Philadelphia Record" $ill s-u re, So Ila.ah should get,, before. F:ep,p er leaves,.. a shert letter authorizing .him to aot as 11.i s literary
  • necicess1t.y". It 1.a s1Gnif1aant that deaf ears have been turned to ~ut:ldob representctiona that full detailS ot the case against Legoudontis should also ba made lmown to To.rkieh leaders. should be .inquired into by a neutral ':r.nesuggestion
  • the press had been hounding me about somebody Luci was dating or Lynda was dating, or something. They had inquired about it, and [asked] could we just tell them something. Or whether he was going to church, or this or that. I told him that they wanted
  • an, lnfflrmNI the verdict. by Mr. \thelan lhllt befc,re Hkinr any qu,•t• Accordlns to Mr. G11:mr,Newton Pearl• lions he fln,t Inquired "' th• juror u to wheth• man, a Juror, said tu, was ,-ontlcte4 bf Wiill•m ~~ ~ would be willing to an..,.·n his quauon, J
  • 30, 1961, SYLVIAM. BRENNER DEVINE, q15 South 50th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, advised that her former husband, JACKDEVINE,mentioned on December 17, 1960, that he was still in the CP and that the CP is his whole life. On J~ly 2~, 1963, a fifth
  • KENNETHBERNARDMURRAY. the On February 16, 1955, CE T-10 and the subject himself in an interview on January 24, 1955, provided the following background information. KENNETHXX MURRAY November 24, 1926, 1927, 1928 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Negro Male Also Known
  • . on a monthly basis, . have It will be wise for hi_m to do so. . continued . . ' ~,· -- .,,, THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER December 9, 1965 .' - . • S. C . p • g A number of foreign countries have repaid American generosity ·with abuse, but the anti-U. S
  • • Richmond, Virginia. lawyer, former President of the American Bar Assoc.iation. (Gene urges you check with Bernard Siegel of Philadelphia. i£ you're interested) Gerhard A. Gesell, Washington, D. C. lawyer (Covington & Burling} W. W. Rostow