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  • INTERVIEWEE: MORRIS ABRAM INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. Abram's office, New York City Tape 1 of 2 A: I don't know the year, but it was probably around l963-64. Arthur Krim called me and asked whether or not I would be willing to be the president
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • NARA.DateUJ19-gQl,3 Sither RfCflVED WHCA ':966SEP 3 Q 00 ;8-10 P~ 9-7-66 EFH TO WHITE HOUSE SITUATION ROOM, ATTN: FRO~ DIRECTOR FBI \2 SECRET SERVICE UJ9HP:!8f!!H Ii!Ct> VISIT OF VICE PRESIDENT HUBERT H. HUMPHREYTO BUFFALO, NEW YORK, SEPTEMBEREIGHT
  • Check. FORM B.NO. PAN .~., AMERICAN "',4IRWAY.S SY.STEM WIREL .ESS 47 YORK aYON STREET EY S'I'ATION ............................. ............................................... .... D,ate
  • :!'!__ Pnll, OHIO -~ -- - - - -· ----- . ~ n NEW YORK I .... "s . . r • Pl - ... .... - -- 16.r o_ I ZOllnll. A-- NEVADA 21 r.lJ o- " IS --- ------ ·--------- .... .:. ,,.,.,_ 11 NEW JERSEY •• -· s.ild;., -· RHODE
  • , although Lyndon Johnson always thought I was from the Northeast. I'll explain why later. I was born in Chicago the day the United States entered World War I, April 6, 1917. parents had migrated westward from New York two years previously. My My father
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • : ManganJW St,, Jtw Uorklimt• .>7.IW£S1113SlnCF.I NEW YORK N 'f. 100.lfi August 2, 1977 Mr. Louis Boccardi Executive Editor Associated Press Plaza 50 Rockefeller New York, N. Y. 10020 Dear Lou: I'd like to thank you---and through you, Jim Mangan Lyndon
  • This folder contains notes from Peter Mangan on his father’s reporting; correspondence from and to James Mangan; and a copy of James Mangan article in the Houston Post, July 31, 1977.
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • -American communities). Dr. Garcia contacts reporters from the Corpus Christi Caller and cables Texas senators, congressmen, military officials, Drew Pearson and Walter Winchell regarding this discrimination. The next day The New York Times carries a front
  • Abe Fortas ~T~' I 9:50a t *———^—— — Johnson to New York at 8:40a) "" ~ Sen. Everett Dirksen ~~~ j • I „ „ ~~ ! ' ' :" ——- - ~ I _ I . ; ~~~~~ III!,,..!-! .1.. •- r I ! . _ _ . ,1 T.l. „I , ! «... . ! !•,,•.!. I
  • O'Connor --to be the Democratic candidate for Governor of New York Sen. Herman Talmadge Sen. Joh n Stennis Sen Stennis called MM to request appt, saying that he and Sen Talmadge would like to see the President 4-5 minutes any day this week regarding
  • can remember seeing he signed his name in one of those— G: Okay, and then May [April?] 25 he went out to Kansas City to see Truman, and then on to New York to see “Advise and Consent.” V: I didn't see that though. It says here, I notice where
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , 1986 INTERVIEWEE: LAWRENCE F. O'BRIEN INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. O'Brien's office, New York City Tape 1 of 2, Side 1 G: Of course [in 1966] you had big majorities: sixty-eight Democrats, thirty-two Republicans in the Senate
  • Chairman of the House Agriculture Committee Harold Cooley; the creation of the Department of Transportation and pressure to keep the Maritime Administration separate; the 1966 minimum wage increase; the Demonstration Cities/Model Cities Program; parcel post
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • was to illustrate the fact that Mr. Weisl, who is Johnson's long-time friend in New York and his lawyer, became his committeman in New York City. Yet he had met few members of the press. Mike O'Neill knew the President very well; if I gave the impresston otherwise
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , 1987 INTERVIEWEE: LAWRENCE F. O'BRIEN INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. O'Brien's office, New York City Tape 1 of 2, Side 1 G: Okay, one more question about Chicago. Did you make an effort there to have [Eugene] McCarthy support
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • for the reason that while the people from Roosevelt's home country of New York and New England who were in some sense identified with the financial community were not willing to back him in the great LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Douglass, which played to a full auditorium at the Library. 2 OtherProgramsAt The Library.• • . . . included Verne Newton, new Director of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library in Hyde Park, New York (below right), who discussed "The Cambridge Spies," whose
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • . to review ~ its rum (withdrawn moment at the Kennedy Round) .. GONFIBENTIAL countries COOFil)Ettl'IAL~ TEE PROORAM October 13, 1967 Prime Minister Shearer's party will be flown by US Air Force plane from La Guardia Airport, New York, to Andrews Air
  • , let me ask you about some specific things and see if you've gotten into it. Have you had anything to do with the high-speed surface transportation between here and New York? L: Yes sir. M: Is this rail that you're involved in? L: It’s rail. M
  • ; high-speed train transportation between Washington, D.C., and New York City; the high-speed train system in Japan; research on short-takeoff and vertical-takeoff aircraft; NASA and FAA involvement in aircraft research; the Supersonic Transport program
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • around the country to New York, Chicago, the West Coast, everywhere, to explain this. of this had been done. rea lly mean it, II All Then to suddenly say, "Oh, sorry, we don't or to say very frankly even worse, liThe Pres i dent has countennanded
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Schweitzer Chair in the Humanities, The Graduate School and Univer­ sity Center of lhl' ity University ol New York "The Evolution of Government as an Instrument for Achieving Social Ri •hL~" ~fonda>, S •ptt'mber 1:1 Address James Tobin, Chairman, Department
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • ~ race can.lead to "a very dangerous to, convert the International! 1 of serious injury to another riots m three day~ m New ~scalation" of' 'the Nation's ra- Amphitheater into a near-forperson. ' York City-nearly ten times ' • In his speech here y~sterday
  • , not even the pay hospltAI expenses and other j L'o ngoria family, whether the dead costs. I soldier was en route to New York There ls no segregation here in t . from San Francisco, to Arlington the school after pupils pass the 11 National Cemetery, Fort Sam
  • Washington in the papers, we'll say-- because I consider the Washington Post an excellent paper, the New York Times and the Pittsburgh Gazette--Post Gazette is a very good paper too. However, if you read a Washington paper, you'll find out a good deal
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , 1973 INTERVIEWEE: MRS. ANNA ROSENBERG HOFFMAN INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: Mrs. Hoffman's office in New York City Tape 1 of 1 F: First of all, when did you first become aware of Lyndon Johnson? H: I'm very bad on dates. F: Yes. t'/ell
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • . Jack, we were discussing the last time the campaign of '64 and we shut off on the campaign swing through New England. Now then, as you know, along about that time when the President was up in New York we had the unfortunate episode of Walter Jenkins
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • . ' NEW YORK. N. Y. DeOClllber Twenty-fourth 1965 .... Dear Bobs Ma7I first ' take this opportunity to express the unprecedented pleasure I have experienced 1n working w1th this •secret" task force. Having bad a mmber ot assignnents ot similar nature
  • , New York Stanley Steingut - Count y Chairman , Brooklyn, New York Chuck Roche also e group out, bu t Watso n stil l in "| __11:31a To 1968 (includ e visited by) George 10:45a Sgt _/_ ' °USe Day i or t Activity L D 10:39a 10:41a OFF 10:47a
  • make them? Aren't you liable to slander? K: What did Coach [Darrell] Royal do when he was quoted as having made a derogatory statement about one segment of our population, and having made the statement in New York, whereas in truth and in fact, he
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , THROUGH AUGUST31, 1964, AND YOUTHDISTURBANCES SEPTEMBER 4, 1964 1 THROUGH SEPTEUBER7, 1964 STA'£E OF NEW YORK New York City July 17 2 1964, through July 31, 1964 • Following the shooting of fifteen-year-old James :>owell, a Negro, in New York City
  • . McNamara was thinking? LG: No. Because even at the end, he told many different stories about the purpose, when the New York Times started to publish these things. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B
  • ; staff who worked on study; study plan; lack of direction or certainty of what was expected reflections on the need for historians to do the study; role of Robert McNamara; speculation about the purpose of study; reaction to publication in the New York
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , but one of particular relevance here, which was a conference in New York sponsored by an organization called Peace Without War. November I believe. It was last And there then that was all on the record. I gave a talk on the issues of press relations
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • during the Civil :lar, a t a time when 1~e1ationships of the Union with power s outsi de its borders were in a particularly shaky s t at e , t he :
  • Mr. Ken Scheibel, Donrey Media Group Capt. Walter M. Schirra, Jr. , astronaut Mr. Benno Schmidt, New York, NY Mr. Abe Schrader, NY, NY Mr. Rod Serling, TV writer and producer, NYC Alvin A Spivak, UPI Mr. Orrin Staley, New Farm Organization, Corning
  • ; and William Batten, chairman of the Board of th New York Stock Exchange. Other members of Congres wh Look part, aside from Senators Baker and 10 Bentsen, were Rep. Clarence J. Brown, Rep. Richard Boll­ ing, Rep. Henry Reuss, Senator William Roth, Rep. Parren
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Connecticut, Delaware, Florida; Georg i a, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey; New York j iNorth Carolina, Rhode Island1 South Carolina, Virginia WHEREAS, the Atlantic coastline of the United States is subject to frequent vicious and destructive hurricanes
  • Busch and August A. Busch, Jr., and I went to New York and took this contribution of ten thousand dollars, which was made up of the various members of the family. While we were in New York, of course we had an appointment, and we met Mr. Garner and Sam
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , and such was the fervor that the New York Sun ran a note, "Positively tomorrow at three o'clock Theodore will walk on the waters." It was something of that tre- mendous populist movement. As we thought of it at the time, President Theodore Roosevelt, whom the President
  • Biographical information; involvement with Roosevelt's administration; newspapers' importance to the government; summary of politics in New York State when Roosevelt was governor; genesis of the New Deal; Harvard graduates in FDR's administration
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , "There are three places that I will not go, so don't even schedule me ." I said, "What's that? " He said, "New York, Chicago, and California ." I said, "Well, you east mentioned the three largest states . " He said, "Yes, but i'm not going in there and have
  • Biographical information; John Connally; 1941 Senate race; war years; 1960 presidential campaign; advancing; campaign trips; New York City; convention; Nixon; Texas politics; Alvin Wirtz; Johnson personality; Mrs. Johnson
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • the Endowments for Len years, and he sponsored legislation that established th Institute of Museum Services, which provides modest 6'Tants lo museums of every kind. Now president emeritus of the nation's largest private university, New York University, Brademas
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • --- Disapprove __ of Pittsburgh. . Approve___ ✓ _ Richard Stewart, Superintendent of Insurance, New York. Everyone agrees that he is one of the outstanding men in the country in this field7·should be on this advisory group. Approve___ Disapprove
  • in December 1833, a year after in Richland, revivals, he and Oswego County, N. Y. Then he was converted to MorJOOnism. On hearing of the new gospel of Joseph Smith [q.v.], so the account runs, he "immediately received of the message 11 (Jenson, post, 11