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  • Congressional Record, etc. Paramilitary - Minutemen, N.S.R. also, "Paramilitary Organizations Thomas C. Lynch - Nazis, N.S.R.P., Black Muslims. American A. Nazi General American College Party, articles on these groups in California," by Cal. Att. Gen
  • Chairman, N. C. Demo• cratic Executive Committee of Legi slative The Honorable Woodrow Teague, Chairman Wake County Demo• cratic Executive Committee J. Jyle s Coggins J. Ruffin Bailey ) Nominees for the Senate ) 16th District A. A. McMillan Thomas D
  • ] Fulbrights. And always our Texas delegation, Lyndon never lost contact with them. Lera [Mrs. Albert] Thomas was one of my good friends. We would go to dinner there occasionally. She was a great collector of antiques, one of those lively, undefeatable women
  • n o r and Mrs. Tom Dewey o f New York and one moment i n t h e l i n e he and I la u g h e d t o g e t h e r o v e r t h e l a s t t i m e he h a d been a t th e W hite H o u se . P ro b a b ly nobody e v e r s p e n t a more h e c t i c day and n ig
  • a pleasant reception for a Democratic State to the visit of Govenor Warren, asking funds for himself and Dewey. Truly this is a pleasant and courteous State. Mad at nobody but very much more interested. in the fall foot ball schedule than with Dewey
  • . Truman had in 1948 when he ran so well in the rural areas where he wasn't supposed to run well . They took a look at Mr . [Thomas] Dewey with his little mustache and LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B
  • [For interviews 1 and 2] First meeting with LBJ in 1948; Thomas C. Henning, Jr.; Joseph R. McCarthy; Senator Earle Clements; Senate Campaign Committee; Walter Jenkins; George Reedy; John Connally; Eisenhower inauguration; LBJ's organization
  • in Philadelphia, and Governor Thomas Dewey emerged from that as their nominee. Lyndon went on in the helicopter but got stopped. Well, first he did Hillsboro and Meridian. At Hillsboro, all of Mary Rather's folks turned out. Her younger brother, Ed Rather
  • . Welfare and Mrs. CELEBREZZE GRISWOLD, Erwin N. HAAR, Charles M. HAYDEN, Carl HALL, Peter EASTLAND, James o. HOYT, Palmer LONG, Russell B. Sir Robert and Lady JACKSON DIRKSEN, Everett McKinley JENSEN, Howard SMATHERS, George A. JORDAN, James KUCHEL, Thomas
  • . I might mention a couple of things that perhaps would make it a little more accurate. You d i d n ' t mention the fact that I was defeated for the legislature in 1948 in the [Thomas E.] Dewey year [Republican presidential candidate]. Also, you d
  • me t i n 1.'-nhi l o s o hy i n a c t . i.ty of u Volt a i r e , _. h il oso phy in th h e t "' ~e d. i n ' v o on o to n one e. lmo s t h8 s t bn of the m, ? ,,.._ _; A,.,icr .c . .•.• i s ,1 id , , Dewey(?) o thf•r e i s 021 :..y t
  • .......................................35 Photographed for LIFE by N. R. Farbman and Thomas D. McAvoy Adlai Stevenson .....................................55 ARTICLE Chang-Eng's American Heritage, by Archie Robertson.66 SCIENCE Will the Rat Get the Cheese? ........................45
  • p 6/2/67 A Houston for the Record re financial claim against CIA 3 p 6/2/67 A 4/19/67 A 4/4/67 A ? to ? re forthcoming article by Thomas Braden in the Saturday Evening Post c+e:~ ~Pr 8 f'5 ~ 2 p ~pt- l/l~J 11.9 ptf Nt..'J/RAc. 1'3·2!.9'2
  • bedroom and duplex as needed to accommodate press and the First Lady's It will travel over six rail lines. Campaigning by train has been done since the 1880 1s according to Dewey Long, Assistant Chief of Transportation. Long, who first handled train
  • convention? W: In 1952? P: When they nominated Strom Thurmond, with Truman versus [Thomas] Dewey in 1948. W: In 1948? P: Yes. W: Well, of course, I've always felt that the party should support the nominee, whoever that nominee may be. That those
  • the decision made for him, he wanted-- K: That's right. And I also remember being in Atlantic City when Arthur Schlesinger came to me and said, "It's going to be Senator [Thomas] Dodd and there's going to be all hell to pay," because Dodd had been called
  • to be reckoned with? Was he involved? C: I have no sense of that. I have no recollection of our talking about it or being worried about it. This one, I see, talking to [Thomas] Dewey. That was obviously on some crime message. G: Really the bottom line
  • . 2) Salutation: my nickname, "Ep". You have always addressed me by 3) This Thomas Ross 1 column re the CIA and Rostow is a syndicated column distributed by the Chicago Sun-Times to several hundred newspapers. It seems to me it would be a good idea
  • . presidential election in mind, had dragged in Dulles' name On his return to Washington, Hiss spoke to Under Secretary simply to belabor the Republican candidate, Thomas E. Acheson, indicating that he would like to leave the State Dewey. Hopelessly, Mundt let
  • running, yelling and looting. . Add to that "the nonaction of -the police, and you have a recipe for chaos and riots-perfect food for revolutionaries,' • Within two hours 12th was a human jungle. Dewey Shanks, who lives in the ghetto, and is attached
  • Dodd, Thomas J. (Thomas Joseph), 1907-1971
  • had never sought anything himself. And he did--I don't remember how much, but I'm sure we put into it just as much as we could. My brother, throughout all this period, through every race that Lyndon had, Thomas Jefferson Taylor III was county man
  • in order to be in Selma, Alabama, on August 29, 1966, in U.S. District :Court to, defend a client charge~ with assaulting an FBI Agent. On August 6, 1966 ,· Lieutenant THOMAS VEDITZ, Maryland State Police, Salisbury, Maryland, advised that J.B. STONER
  • Tobi n Susan Leppe r Mr. an d Mrs. Wilbu r Cohe n Joseph Walk a Samuel Coh n William McChesne y Marti n Dewey Daan e Edwin S . Mill s Robert Wallac e Douglas Dillon , Sec y Edwin Nours e Ramsay WOOD Otto Eckstei n Theodore Osgoo d Franz B . Wolf Joseph
  • contact man who offered our Chinese fri ends a J500,ooo bribe and who boasts tha t he gambl es with President Truman. know Wong around Senator El mer Thoma s ' office. Cullum g ot to Wong used to supply Thomas with liquor, whi ch Wong could get t hrough
  • Gray and Smith and Gray stopped ' and ."broken off" have Fellx Longoria!. tl!e soldi~r . ijl­ , and Thomas s. SuthQrland execu- the same meanmg. volved, was buried at Arlmgton tive secretary of the body. ' _. "I think we've got no right to Natio~a.l
  • Thomas E. Dewey. This precedent has spurred individual aspirations. Although Democratic Texas is not a doubtful populous state such as both parties traditionally favor for Presidential and ; Vice-Presidential nominees, one Texan, John Nance Garner
  • had suggested to him on Saturday that an independent investigation of the President's assassination should be conducted by a high level group of attorneys and jurists. probably headed by Governor Dewey. President Johnson rejected this idea
  • . , I c. W~aver nistrator t l\ :.. M~H!lZe ~ Mc::-:c December 1964 • EDITORIAL Thomas Jefferson said,f'The care of human Jife and happiness is the t and only legitimate object of good govcmment.'jJcfferson's precept is especially important today
  • of Defense Thomas Gates, Secretary of Treasury Robert Anderson, and General Wilton B. Persons. With President-elect Kennedy were the new Secretary of ~tate Dean -Rusk, the new Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, the new Secretary of Treasury Doug las Dillon