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  • • (1ecoaclary eaplo ■loa.1: 3. 929 from New 1966 - Sep 1967 ver ■ u• 1, 224 from Hew 1965 - Sep 1966); ancl - enemy effort to prepoelttoa &Dtlclpation of tb• ltarrler. euppll•• W. W. 2 farther Ro ■tow 1outb in ..-6filOllli'l!-- VleatiaM 2912, N8Yemltel
  • primarily through state governments. It is making a significant contribution toward the health of the new generation in India, but what may be even more important in the long run, it is helping the states to establish and gain operating experience
  • ±ed :tn:fo . #'.l!l--me~~-Hrn--nn~~e-H~t-..:l~ffl-4"1efj~~ #80b cable text of New Delhi 1025 secret 4 p ·10/19/65 A F I LE LOCATION NATIONAL SECURITY FILE , . . . .. . McGeorge Bundy - Memos to the President , vol . 16 , Oct 15 - Nov. 19
  • , 1973 INTERVIEWEE: CLIFFORD ALEXANDER INTERVI [VIER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: Mr. Alexander's office in Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 F: You're the new head of the EEOC. A: I found a number of things through various techniques that we use
  • Joseph Resnick made the point that it was a big step for the Federal. Government to do this and take it away fran local. people. he sa~d there were two of his counties in New York that ~imply refuse~ As to go aJ.ong with the Food Stamp plan and he
  • FOR A MASS CI VIL RI GHTS DEMONSTRAT I ON SUNDAY AFTERNOON I N LAFAYETTE SQUARE JUST ACROSS PENNSYLVANI A VE. FROM THE WHI TE HOUSE . WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY REEDY HELD UP HI S USUAL MI DDAY NEWS BR I EF I NG UNTIL THE CI VIL RI GHTS CO NFERENCES WERE
  • into the retirement program . So, if you do it the way I provided for suggest, you will automatically get the new programs when 2 1/2 million federal employees, and you will not become a target each time improvements that you're bound to want come along ." Mr
  • INTERVIHJEES: GOVERNOR AND NRS. RICHARD HUGHES (Betty Hughes) INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: The Hughes' home in Princeton, New Jersey Tape 1 of 2 F: First of all, Governor Hughes, tell us briefly where you came from, how you gradually moved up
  • Meeting LBJ in 1959; Governor of New Jersey, 1961; LBJ and Kosygin held a meeting at Glassboro State College; Kosygin’s daughter, Dr. Gvishiana, joined Lady Bird, Lynda and Mrs. Hughes for lunch at Island Beach; Ramsey Clark; candidates, 1966-1968
  • support for any candidate for chairman of the Credentials Committee. Meanwhile, Pat Harris became subject to pressure. She was pressured by Coleman Young, mayor of Detroit, and by a congresswoman from New York. G: Was that Shirley Chisholm? O: Shirley
  • support to Democratic Party unity; Jimmy Carter's role in the 1972 presidential election; Edmund Muskie's campaign leading up to the 1972 election and how it was affected by attacks in the Manchester [New Hampshire] Union Leader; John Lindsay's 1972
  • , 1987 INTERVIEWEE: LAWRENCE F. O'BRIEN INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. O'Brien's office, New York City Tape 1 of 3, Side 1 G: We finished last time with a discussion of the Salt Lake City speech which, I believe, was the end
  • of vice-presidential debates; Spiro Agnew's reputation; Wallace's support from organized labor; money to promote voter registration in New York; the campaign status in September 1968; campaign committee meetings; the recording and release of the Salt Lake
  • House staff, and with Bob Kennedy. The March on Washington civil rights thing came on the scene very quickly after I left the government, and I became deeply involved in that. represented ~Ja Her I Reuther on the committee, both in New York
  • , 1987 INTERVIEWEE: LAWRENCE F. O'BRIEN INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. O'Brien's office, New York City Tape 1 of 3, Side 1 G: Let's start with some of the legislative developments in 1967. The Republicans gained forty-seven House
  • ; the rail strike settlement; funding proposals for rat control; William Manchester's book, The Death of a President; Doris Kearns' involvement in a 1967 New Republic article that was critical of LBJ; a July 1967 memo regarding Irish airlines' opposition
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh (Tape #1) NOVEMBER 10, 1969 F: This is an interview with Helen Gahagan Douglas in her apartment in New York on November 10, 1969. The interviewer is Joe B. Frantz. Mrs. Douglas, briefly run over your career, at least get
  • · , · .., . ..CH · - ·. . :'!'- .· ·. : . . . - -R~%m~1~:·-aiVci ·. '-: • . ··. . --fii1 •·. · . .:. ··. ·. .. . - .' ..·. --- ·._:. · .:"-: · rir s ·ed : :·-~ -~ - ~~· : .. ·. . . . ·:7 f. 877-2222 . ... . •. .. AJ,buQ,UCrqiiQ • .-New :M&;XiCO
  • -: Two__ Texans _ ,. . .. 1;,._ ~ ~....;.~..-._• • "J I LABOR is proud to honor two Texans, Lyndon B. Johnson-the new senator i from Texas-and .Felix Long~ia, . an American with ·Mexican ancestors. \ ·.Longoria died 11.ghting for his country
  • .ago. described toughness The relatively staple situation in the North, coupled with what is officially as "a very favorable" military situation in the South, explains the new and confidence that foreign visitors note in Hanoi at present. A member
  • , 1971 INTERVIEWEE: LAWRENCE E. LEVINSON INTERVIEWER: Joe B. Frantz PLACE: Mr. Levinson's office, New York City Tape 1 of 1 F: Larry, we haven't in previous interviews said much on the personal side. We've been strictly programmatic, you might
  • White House staff deciding what to do after LBJ's presidency; LBJ asking Levinson to move to Texas rather than work for Gulf and Western; LBJ's expectation of long-term loyalty; final Cabinet meeting; Levinson's decision to move to New York; where
  • . If this is followed by an arms move on behalf of Jordan which appears to tip the balance, we may have real political trouble with the Jewish community in the U.S. He added that Max Fischer, a substantial figure in the Detroit Jewish community, is now working
  • the fifteenth? C: Yes. Is that right? (Long pause) To meet with Governor Brown, yes. G: So it must have been the fourteenth. C: Well, it says, "Brown arrives in Los Angeles, vows to restore law and order. News conference." They have this August 15, page l
  • , and O'Daniel's--the gist of his speech was "Well, what we need is a whole new legislature," and this guy got beat, the guy that introduced him. B: It backfired on him. Well, in 1947, the Texas legislature enacted the so-called right-towork law. Do you remember
  • ; higher education for African Americans; Morehead's work for Southern Education Reporting Service and Southern School News; negative press coverage of the South; school integration and racial violence in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1957; the legal
  • -- the other side shows the college, and the words, "Duty Honor MacArthurs in New York and Country" and brought their greetings. Then he presented the medallion to the his library. KOK IKAVF.'I. Atrnvi-'rv Page President, which the President-accepted for N 7o
  • . HH^ Young has been in the W. H. Dispensary for three years and gat is ^ a new assignment. RECORD: A l a n #])^Barth OFF The Washington Post editorial writer (The President asked to see Barth when he was present for the signing of the Animal Welfare
  • In/Cleveland In/Detroit FG 291 FG 165 FG 145-10 FG170/Ntt FG216-1 FG2.32 *Natl. Canmission on Urbe.n Problans President ancl Mrs. Joh."lSon invite you to an informal reception at the White House honoring the President's Council on on Friday, March 29
  • to languish in the Agriculture Committees of both bodieo. Every year Farm Magazines, Trade Journals and the NAC News inform us of the ever-increasing amounts of economic poisons used in agriculture in this Country. The Apr:iJ. 1968 issue of NAC News states
  • and all, he would put in a plug for Johnson to try to help him and so forth. But he did make some trips. Detroit and it seems to me to a Midwest meeting. Albuquerque I think to a New Mexico state meeting. He went to He went to He did some traveling
  • from Governor Richard J. Hughes of ·New Jersey who, in a letter to me, says: - - , r •ff "I returned from this trip with a high respect for the courage of the Vietnamese people and with a confirmed belief in the • honesty of the September 3 elections
  • New Year. Si.nee re l y M ye r Fe lcima n C ounse l t o t he P r esident Dr. M chael E . De Ba k~ Bayl•> r Univer ~i C vllege , ,f M~d1ci T exas Me d ic al Cen er H u.:. t vn , Texas f,l~TIVE I J..~7 ·'If! My41ear Fri. . .: YOU" nptftclllll
  • of the Liuzzo home in Detroito A fiery cross burns in Detroit. Congressional Record, House Un-American Activities Committee and the Klan. Extension of remarks of Hon. William F. Ryan. Congressional Record, 4/5/65, p. A1649-Al650. Reprinting editorial from New
  • ~ng we do the required work,or we wnll have to aga.in wvrk over­ t.Jlle i uvur W.&.tnvut pay. Such is the New Deal tr~ttt~ng usl hn1le they prencb snorter nours to organized laborl" ( Thia o1"f1c1al nas been 1n the Poatetf1ce aerv~ce tor twenty years
  • most people would have guessed that the city of Detroit was the last place that would have gone and yet it was one most violent. what went into keeping peace in New York. So I don' t really know I'd like to think that we influenced it, I don' t k
  • assassination -- to reassure a nervous world that "the gove nment in Washington lives", and to acquaint millions abroad with the new leader of America and the free world. Minutes after the bullets struck John Kennedy, USIA threw all its resources into this task
  • buzzed me and said Mrs. Johnson had called. She was inundated by mail on the subject of beautification. She'd had an interview with U.S. News and World Report, which I think had come out in either a December or January issue. In this she had particularly
  • . also be covered in new tasking for CIA collection efforts. 1. 2. We should do more to exploit the intelligence as sets of other countries. The Australians, for example, should be encouraged to add at least one officer to-their :.Wlilitary Attache
  • . The Kennedy strategy in those days was to try to please everybody, so he would appoint a Thurgood Marshall in New York but also appoint a Cox in Mississippi. B: We might make it clear, that would be now Justice Marshall's appointment to the lower courts
  • there, but we need them more in Washington, so we brought Hobart here. Actually Hobart didn't come here from Texas; he came from Detroit, where he was practicing law. (Laughter) Hobart was brilliant, and worked very well with Vice President Johnson. They were
  • to change the system . The system was changed, and in thirty days thereafter a general election was held and I lost under the new system . wide plurality at-large election of nine men . It was a city­ Just the mathematics of the vote, the Negro vote
  • mile in Los Angeles in 1962 was 1,350. The corresponding figures for other major American cities were: Chicago, 1,541; Detroit, 1,580; New York City, 2,220; Philadelphia, 3,730; and Washington, D.C., 4,100. Mr. MacKenzie also presented data
  • , 1964 . 'SUl~JARY_ANALYSI~ OF THE RACIAL : DISTURBANCES ANDRIOTING DURING : THE PERIOD FROMJULY 17, 1964, THROUGH AUGUST31, 1964, AND YOUTHDISTURBANCES SEPTEMBER 4, 1964 1 THROUGH SEPTEMBER 7, 1964 STATEOF NEWYORK New York City ~uly 17, 1964, through
  • :) "Here are three statements." I San Antonio formula August - Detroit . New Orleans - won't increase U.S. casualties. ... .::.>i:~ ·J,i
  • : are they griping f about the way we're handling the news Christian (pl) \ about the Mid-East? GC replied: No, they're used to it by now. Pres. \ asked: "Any criticisms? G C replied Christian (pl) - the President asked GC