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  • not provide a.n adequa.te basis for analysis, or for which the in­ formation suggests an hypothesis but the object or phenomenon ex­ plaining it cannot be proven to ha.ve been here or taken place at that time. In eva.lua.tin~ these sightings, the Air Force
  • in 1965--"it knew how to provoke the police"--but its leader, Clyde Cleveland, now works for the poverty program and it is no longer a force. It's decline came long before the disorder. Joyce knows of no evidence of planning, arms, or sniping
  • , November 30: Edward P. Morgan; from Steve Clark, WIL News, St. Louis, Mo.; Friday, and Geoffrey Drummond; Dick Wilson; also telephone and, again, John Hightower. The Plain Dealer, Cleveland. Other contacts. Monday, November 27: Kay Graham
  • the funeral. D~-MKN ... Formal daytime dress: Cutaway co.:a.t Black vest Striped trousers High hat, silk or dull black (non collapsible) Black plain street shoes Black hose Turned down, starched collar and four-in-hand bla..ck tie (The Swedish men will wear
  • mg, both berng pres~nt m C?11- President Thieu once again ex- processes noted in the principle I berra for the _memo~·~ service plained bis government's policy of one-man one-vote. Ifor the late Prune MllllSter Har- of reconc_iliation enunciated
  • for the Advancement . of Colored People told a leas acts is ·well. ~own to all. ~ia political strength press conference: ' alao well known. His leadership in advocating civil dis, "Regardless of legal· ac- edience - plain law-breaking - has undoubtedl.7 contribu
  • obvious to Indian grain dealers and politieiana that there will be a dip in November departures. No one argues that Indians would starve. But government grain stocks have been drawn down from 1 million tons on l June to 738,000 on 1 September
  • A. of Rifles and Shotguns in Disorders and proposed Coverage 1. Cities - The twenty-six covered by the Commission's report and Los Angeles, Cleveland, and (without publicity) Philadelphia. 2. Period - January 1, 1967 to December 31, 1967, for each
  • before publication. Jack Leacacos, Cleveland Plain Dealer: review of Middle East and Viet Nam, nailing down latest evidence on forward movement on whlch he ls quite clear. Robert Sha.plen, The New Yorker: as you know, he ls professionally pessimistic
  • + THAT I AUTHORIZZ HHl TO -DO so. I EX- PLAINED THAT I PREFERRED HANDLE ~ATTER AS OTH~R THAN -INTELLIG£NCE TYPEn OPERATION AND INTENDED HAVING E)i5ASSY OFFICER BRIEF APPROPRIATE SOUTH AFRICAN OFFICIAL AS SCCN AS I HAD RECEIVED REPLY TO MY ~ESSAGE
  • , but turned the conversation into~ phlloaophlcal discourse into the meaning of the passing of Ghe Guevara. Thursday, October 12 1 1967 Jack Leacacoa, The. .Plain Dealer, Cleveland, came 1n for another long session on his book. Ifdi~cussed in particular
  • was honorary the afternoon -- watched the Green Bay Packers. go wild and rip the Cleveland Browns apart the first quarter a short walk, and now back at the desk trying to catch ·up on paper. A lot ot things happened, but nothing too ·Overwhelming while we
  • - no one would truthfully deny tb4, rathe_r plain langua1re.. !{ouse· ~f Representatives, Hear- ,~nee had dwindled. l handed in a ,Wher.i-'-Woodtrie,d to say that.the. What is known as "legal" con- : mgs dating back to World -War I. new su.pplementary
  • character when a Communist military offensive drove neutralist forces from the area of the Plain of Jars they had held in 1962. Our response to these eveilts, the provision of additional T-28's to the Governmait of Laos and the carrying out of reconnaissance
  • over to an authorized Nikon dealer in town (moat of it wa• purcbaaed from National Camera Repair), a• trade-in, obtain the eecond-hand book value ln credit toward the new camera liat and pay the difference. Jim, needle ■• to •ay, thi• i• a big inve
  • reltriction ■ (a) firearms or ammunition except under and in upon manuaccordance with the t'erms of a Firearm Manu:a .facturer,' s Licence or a, Fir-earm Dealer's Licence ·, an firead rm ■ • • amm:n- i~-:; or (b)i any prohibited. weapon. 1 person .. who
  • - Cleveland, Ohi o (fr. mans. ) Bill Moyers Cong. Carl Albert (fr. mans. ) Senator Hubert Humphrey (fr. mans. ) Senator Clinto n Anderso n (fr. mans. ) To the office w/ JV HB J Valenti W Jenkins To Flower Garden Made remarks Sen. Birch Bayh Sen
  • Connectionsspeed on Corcoran's part, and the Linked with the Indignation agencies involved, went un~~plain- aroused among some officials by ed today. ~n t~e c~ of aspm.n, for Sterling's success in obtaining example, 1t was indicated that the large export licenses
  • ., these major holdings : The Macon (Ca.) ./ sional elections. In December he entered Victor F., and Joseph E.- whose holdings Telegraph anq News, The Gadsden spread from The Journal of Commerce (Ala.) Times, The Cleveland (Tenn.) the Columbia-Presbyterian
  • out.to "get Johnson.·" F: A lot of these wheeler-dealer charges that went on. that follow Mr. Johnson through the years really stem from this campaign, didn't 'they? P: Yes, and I suppose you could say some of it stemmed around the · fact
  • Wheeler-dealer charges; Gene Autry; 1948 Senate campaign; helicopter; Coke Stevenson; George Parr; State Democratic Executive Committee, 1948.
  • /~A t ID-d,I. _g,_4 9 < i:epgrt 1/30/68 / .,,,..,, .. Q4 38 C • BlaelcNetionelist Meve.,,¥,GiAeiRRati Dit.•isioA C w:: '"' ~ 216162 ;,' tC "I{- 2,
  • of the Senate, Mr. PEPPER. Mr. President, upon speaking r ecently at Cleveland, ignored the very eve of the all-important For­ the announced recommendation of Gen­ eign Ministers' Conference at Moscow, eral Marshall and threw his full weight, to determine
  • and was going to give it to him. Well, Jenkins told me later that Lyndon just jumped all over him for telling me about that. Well, it wasn't a question of him telling me. It was right there in plain sight, and I couldn't help but see it. I don't know why
  • INVESTIGATED, THE MIDWESTERN CARAVAN OF ABOUTSIX HUNDRED PEOPLE Is· ENDPAGETWO • ' f. PAGETHREE (OO~ifJ:,iEtlTIAl:.J TO TRAVELFROMDETROIT, MICHIGAN,TO CLEVELAND, OHIO, TODAY. ! . • COMMUNIST PARTY,·USA, HAS SENT TWODIRECTIVESTO ALL COMMUNIST
  • little they were paid. But you were given freedom to go into town and take part i.n things. So, I was such an enthusiastic New Dealer and such an admirer of Mr. and Mrs. Roosevelt. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • Farm Loan Board. Now President, Trust Company~ New Jersey. Member of the flnt Hoover Commission's Task FOl'QeonLend­ ing Agencies. Member of Commission'sTask Force on u,dfng Agencies. Braln~rd, '9orge C., Cleveland ,Ohio. Execu­ tive. Cornell
  • . But the President said in effect, "These are strange till8s, Lyndon, and I th~ you will find June 28 will not be an unhappy day for you." One does not quote the President unduely, but I think at the moment I have the right to make plain the taot
  • of ideas. In fact, I think most or the Judges are more concerned in legal debates than in establishing a system of Jurisprudence under which citizens may be secure. They do not sound like New Dealers or Old Dealers any more, but like first year law students
  • and Wirtz convinced FDR that the tax case was inspired by anti-New Dealers in Texas, that they were-(Interruption) C: He would hug up an enemy that didn't speak to him, shake hands, walk across the street. And a lot of them he won back were very much
  • . My chief activity was with Marvin Jones, and then the Agriculture Committee, on both sides of the Capitol. But I knew him as a young New Dealer, a fellow, congenial New Dealer. And then of course I became better acquainted with him during our
  • Corpora­ tion, his source of supply in his fertilizer business and the source of credit for his grain warehouse start and expansion. He was doing business as United Elevators with five elevators (grain warehouses) and as the South Plains Grain Co., Inc