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  • . \V. W.R. The Baltimore Sun, January 19, 1967 .' 0 ' rag a ic u. • 0 elF'or es e e te . By P HILIP POTT ER [Washington Bureau of The Sun] Washington, Jan. 18 - When in "transition" from an era in the ·J ohnson Administration which "romantic
  • Oliver and later with Phil Graham who accompanies him to the Speaker’s office. LBJ and Jenkins meet Connally’s plane upon his arrival in Washington this evening. Reedy sends LBJ a report on the West Virginia primary. Howard Norton of the Baltimore Sun
  • not know whether or not the Soviets knew about or prompted this incident. The President showed the correspondents a dispatch from Adam Clymer, correspondent for the Baltimore Sun. That item is attached at APPENDIX B. Clymer said that one
  • a t (Place) : T;m Telephone Tune f !. In Out Lo 6:57p 7:27p White House Flag Day £ t Expend.Activity Code LD • Day--Ebd* Wednesday (include visited by) ture Phil Potter -Baltimore Sun George Christian re Middle East 7:37p 8:25 The crisis
  • Ward [of] the Baltimore Sun; Tom Lambert [of] the Los Angeles Times. The network people in those days--John Scali was with ABC; Elie Abel, NBC; Marvin 2 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson
  • Ward [of] the Baltimore Sun; Tom Lambert [of] the Los Angeles Times. The network people in those days--John Scali was with ABC; Elie Abel, NBC; Marvin LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson
  • . Sure happened. But I had the same thing happen another time. Senator [J. W.] Fulbright had gone to Baltimore to make a speech, and the Mayor, Tom D'Alesandro, was our friend. about forty miles away. So I was holding up a vote. Baltimore is So I
  • and admitting to how much ordnance we'd put in there, which was an extrordinary amount of bomb-power . The other was a thing when policy came by reverse . There was a speech to be given in Baltimore to the Jay Cee's about a year ago, and it was determined
  • (Chicago Sun-Times 9/9/63), The Thunderbolt has appeared regularly except for a few-­ issues at the end of 1963, when Fields was under indict­ ment. It has increased from 4 to 12 pages and costs $3. 00 annually. During 1962 it received the subscrip­ tion
  • at 315½ Eddy, Ithaca, New York. '1'he November 8, 1966, issue of the "Cornell ( Daily Sun,'' a Cornell University daily ne'1spaper, contained an advertisement signed, mong others, by one David J. Rindos, class of '69. This advertisement stated
  • Charles w. ~enney of the Baltimore County (I-ti.) Police Btitreau, Special Service Unit, Intelligence Se.,ction, 1' he relayed the following information: t-_ •_¼ll< 1 J-'l/.,1 ~ !l 11 ,t/•..., ·h . , ,_ ~ , 'f:,.t.XV~ /
  • , and this would be used to train the Klansro.en. Confidential Infor1r!1tnt PR T-15 advised on May 23, 1966, that ROY FRAN1CiOUSER had spoken at a Klan rally held !/fay 21, 1966., at RisL.~g Sun, Md. · Confide:.rt;:ia 1 I!'l£o~j\3.nt -PH :r•..:.,1 advised on June 2
  • courted them too much at the start, and then they fell out. I think he gave great weight to what was said in the eastern newspapers, the New York Times and Washington Post and Baltimore Sun. that are read in this town. Those are the papers I think he
  • Angeles, Philadelphi~ Detroit and Baltimore. Each year, in the coming generation, we will add the equivalent of 15 cities of ZOO,000 each. • • • • RE_C.tl.Y£o MAR3 19• In this message the word city is used· to mean the entire urbarfftJ.'(FJTJ :. §_5 1
  • wife, is thanking. "The day they were closing up the sun room"--that would be in his headquarters at the Stephen F. Austin [Hotel]--"I went down to tell them all goodbye and thanks for you and also for me. They've all been grand: Julia Bryden and sweet
  • -- I -- 4 C: Well, I could certainly check between these cities exactly. Two hundred and fifty sounds like a reasonable distance, because I think flying between here and Washington, we'd always have to stop in Baltimore for fuel, so it sounds like
  • Great Britain means to us -- and means to the world in which we live -- we are moved by a more meaningful English voice from the past. It was Robert Browning who spoke the truth for our time,. "My sun sets to rise again." Yes, these are difficult times
  • a daily column. By that time Pearson, who'd collaborated on the book, had been discharged by the Baltimore Sun for writing a chapter in the second Merry-Go-Round, called "More Merry-Go-Round" about Pat (Patrick Jay) Hurley, then Secretary of War, and his
  • Expenditure Code LD 10:30a 1:00p lying in sun 6:00p 6:30p 7:00p lying in sun LunchUSSRanger,honoringVPandGovernors stoppedby Governor Vandiver's room for drinks with Georgia people stopped by Tom Deegan's room for drinks CINCPAC Fleet spoke to Governors
  • and George Christian 11:30 Breakfast with all guests Talked to guests, read, sunned 2:30 Lunch - hamburgers Sunned, nap 6:00 Watched TV: news Dinner: Stroganoff 9:30 Returned to second w/ President 10:30 Retired H.G. George Christian
  • DISCOUNT. HIM. IF YOU NEED ADVICE OR HELP CHECK PLATO. GOD HELP . YOU ALL P'~S. THERE IS NOTHING· NEW UNDER SUN. JOHN KENNEDY .CERTAINLY . . ASKED FOR THIS ONE. HE HAS MY PRAYERS. DO vou· FINE GENTLEMAN KNOW HOW FAR OUT IN LEFT FIELD YOU ALL ARE I JOHN F
  • , New Jersey, Penn­ sylvania; and Maryland; and (3) malt beverages . from New York, N.Y., Baltimore, Md., Philadelphia, Pa., Newark, N.J., from Buhl, Idaho to points 1n Arizona, and Reading, Pa~ to Milford, Del. NoTE
  • Lady Bird's birthday, ana. the police se:i.zure 01· guns from weekend kangaroo hunters be1·ore his arrival at Port Darw:i.n . MELBOURNE : The Sun carried a story abou't Christopher Holt with the headline "My Pal the Presiuent . 1 The paper said
  • below, Phil Potter of the Baltimore Sun and a lot of these guys. "What the hell's up?" So I went down and said, He said, "Johnson's going to be vice president. He's going to take the vi ce pres; dency. II I said, "You're out of your mind." He said
  • Wednuday but might flare up again next wNJt. LN White ha• a memorandum from Adm1n1atratcwW••• on lt. Faata are the1e1 sun-tia•• ran a T\atllrday leptelllber 14 Th• C2u91gg atory awtely embarraa.Sng to both Dal.,. and W•nr. It 1aJd Weav• baa held up a,sro
  • the Tkkater - for MASS said by Rev. William J. Kaifer, S. J. Depart Theater --and walked back to Hicsx Aspen Sun Jan 12, 1969 Camp David J. C. Kellam Mrs. Yolanda Boozer Jim Jones Depart Aspen - via auto Arrive helipad Depart Camp David - helicopte r
  • yesterday about the Baltimore freeway plan he's working on and a little village in New Mexico that he's been working to save. I think he wanted to report on these two matters to the Committee for a More Beautiful Capital. It was her feeling that we should
  • lifeline is Georgia's gateway to world trade, and foreign trade port between Baltimore and New Orleans. linesa 33 deep water terminalsa in 1963 more than 1500 at the porta water borne commerce in 1963 1 -,110,000 tQna. the Southeast's leading Served by 109
  • it just about the same way. Two others, Sun in Pennsylvania, Maryland Shipbuilding in Baltimore, haven't gone quite this far, but t.hey are specializing in s:i,ngle ship designs, and as they buila more and more of those individual or single ship designs