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  • -Fulbright natural gas bill through the Senate immediately, but he is going to encounter opposition from Senator Paul Douglas of Chicago. Chicago’s Negro population “has been seething” since the recent murder of Emmett Till, from Chicago, in Mississippi
  • of urbanization that (Nov. 6, 1965 is accurately of the areas leaves are Tribune to reflect the urbanizing problems problems, appointing Cabinet fail and unfortunately, and city is and Urban as the New York Herald inaccurately does
  • ;uat 30., 1966. At tb1s time he was fin.ed t ,b e. amount of . · !;~J .00 for holding a public rally at Marquette Park, Chicago, Ul1.n~1s on August 21, 1966, without obtaining a permit. Colonel FRANK BATTAGLIA, Chie,f of Patrol, Baltimore., :·~-. r
  • that on November 26, 1967, a meeting of the Chicago Branch of the NSRP was held at 2237 North Wes t e rn Avenue i n Chicago which \J;as a tt~L.tl 6:..°l L i approximately 50 indiv.iduals. SV T-2 po.inted out that JESSE STONER was introduced by RAY SOWA after which
  • • teen per cent. These people are bou&ht and sold on special pri­ vile&e trade-outs. This means that you do a Job on .Arnall of Georgia and Hill ot Alabama and Mayor Kelly of Chicago. and the bum Hague. But tbe .tact is that you are enterin&..the .vale ot
  • Boulevard, L012g Ialand Cit7, !few. York. Be OD $500.00 bail. Thia waa taken to Night Court and released intar.m.ation waa obtained tr
  • met with--the correspondents were very angry and we met with Bill--what's his name? He is over in Beirut now, head of the Tribune bureau over there, Chicago Tribune. M: Could you tell me what you found about Vietnam then? H: Well, you know, people
  • , president and editor, Min­ neapolis Star and Tribune. Arthur H. Dean, Sull1van & Cromwell. Dr. Elmer Ellis, president, University o! Missouri. John Fischer, editor, Harper & Row. Marion B. Folsom, Eastman Kodak Co. James M. Gavin, U.S. Army, retired
  • in the Chi­ cago Committee of the Northern Friends of the South, which assembled in Chicago under Joe McWilliams in August, and in a National States Rights Conference in 1956. (Facts, Sept. 1956) The Memphis in Sept., Iowa America -Constitutional Party polled
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh congressman from the El Paso district; probably Frank Ikard and Homer Thornberry; John Holton was there, I think--I'm sure he was there; Nick Kotz of the Des Moines Register Tribune was there; probably others--I just paid
  • WITHALLOTHERPEACE-LOVING PEOPLEAND COUNTRIES OP' TKE WORLD,FOR THE NOBLEAIMOF COMPLETELY PROHIBITING DESTROYING NUCLEAR WEAPONS. ANDTHOROUGHLY 28 OEC l830Z CF/CP 90, ATOI SMASHER VASHINGTON AP>•MATOR RICHARD J. DALEY PLEDGED CHICAGO•s COOPERATIONWITH ATOMIC
  • , and Chicago and Detroit. He is a publishers• representative who meets the sellers of advertising ror large corporations and the operating executives or the same. He is an Irish Catholic, has not become anti-Catholic, but has been broadened b.r !our years
  • and I got together late (!_o ;i. 7 p Friday night which was sent you by Mr. Macy, there were listed (!.o 3 g the Executive Editor of the Chicago Daily News (Lawrence S. (!_ o // ~arming); a foreign correspondent, now city editor of the '. N ew e_oo1.oO
  • : The New York Daily News, the New York Tribune, the New York Evening Post, the Chicago Times, the Detroit Free Press, the Cincinnati Inquirer, the Cin­ cinnati Gazette, the Columbus Crisis, and the Indianapolis Sentinel. On August 23, 1864, Lincoln recorded
  • inspiration for that letter. worth checking out. I'm not sure of that, but it's If you find the letter, I think the letter first appeared in the New York Herald Tribune. G: Was Johnson upset about the leak of it? R: Not really. He said that he
  • . G: Let's see. I think that there's a Chicago Tribune article on August 10. O: Oh, it's that early. G: Then the Washington Post September 2 has a piece saying that O'Brien had hinted two days ago that he might quit unless the campaign direction
  • , actress; Billy Taylor, musician, composer; and Thomas Willis, Music Critic, Chicago Tribune. Summarizer: Peter Garvie, Dean, College of Fine Arts, University of Texas at Austin 5 Afternoon Panel Focuses On "Art And The Participant" "What is it like
  • , in the fall before the convention, and moved up to Chicago. Then we got tangled up in the long primary fight with Estes Kefauver, which we tried to avoid and couldn't. That meant an endless campaign, beginning in Minnesota and running all the way through
  • the Big Ten and the University of Chicago, who go into these kinds of things collectively. My basic scheme was to have this consortium of universities and in effect a consortium of Polish universities under the Ministry of Education jointly administer
  • bit about how you came to be what you are in life. W: Well, I was lucky enough to get a scholarship at the University of Chicago. F: I've taught there. W: And by working my way through there, I was able to get a degree in law and practice law. F
  • in Philadelphia. That had been something I had been wanting to do since I was an eight-year-old in 1932 and listened to the convention in Chicago. Paul Bolton had also given me assurance that if Johnson didn't run, if he went out of Congress at the end of the year
  • !'notiona miloting -with the Prollidont. t\10 nooks ngo by Toma Dot10orate lly ooncem is that Europe h&ar through America that this country is behind the Preoident to the sneximum. Thnt Jll8e.ns1 l. Chicago ehould be une.nimouu with _no other name
  • stood in all of those doors that read Look Magazine and New York Herald Tribune and a lot of publications that I was too intimidated to even go in. bureau for twenty-six dailies in Michigan. She had a news For twenty-five dollars a week I could
  • that no reporter, when I got down here, really qualified, with very few exceptions--such as Marshall Peck of the Herald-Tribune in New York City, Paul Weeks in Los Angeles--both of whom by the way later joined the War on Poverty--there were no qualified poverty
  • INTERVIE~~EE : HARRY PROVENCE INTERVIEWER: DAVID PLACE: His office at the Waco Tribune Herald r4ccor~B Tape 1 of 1 M: First of all, we'll get some background information. I'd like to know where you were born and when and where you got your
  • was then with the New York Herald Tribune. Since then they've both become commentators on NBC. Kiker was always the nemesis of the President. It was my feeling that if LBJ had run for re-election that eventually Doug Kiker would become his press secretary
  • like that? LBJ Put that on interview and played it to the New York Times, the Herald Tribune, Chicago Tribune, had 27 damn lie charges . Now, that's the type of stuff they resort to. It's the lowest down thing you have and that ' s what you got
  • e At th e poo l Newspaper part y - gues t lis t t o b e attached : Housto n Hart e an d E d Hart e (Sa n Angelo Standard-Times) ; Alber t Jackso n (Dalla s Time s Herald) ; Harr y Provenc e (Waco New s Tribune) ; Georg e Brown ; Amo n Carter , Jr
  • Farley, Federal Fall Guy. By John Boettiger. Chicago SUnday Tribune J-ane 10, 1934. Washington, D.C.A new temple in the forum ot the New Deal rises Pennsylvania quarters Avenue, and within its which set.to Washington's expensively stone
  • their 1952 convention-convened in the same vast, air-conditioned Chicago audi­ torium where the Republicans nominated Dwight D. Eisenhower for the presidency 10 d4ys earlier. They said sessions would start on time, speeches would be brief. Everybody
  • criticized the practices in the Senate. L: I don't remember that, but I do remember that very soon after the election in 1958, he gave an interview to the Chicago Tribune in which he took a relatively conservative position on everything. And we had a kind
  • are going to organize in the newspaper. we will tell you where we will be, how we will be, and what methods we are going to use to stop these cops. That should be our slogan - - "•stop the Cops'"· The."Herald Tribune", a New York daily news­ p~per, Late City
  • York; Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio; Long Island; Chicago; Indiana University; Pittsburgh; Wilmington, Ohio. D·CLAS 11-lf:.D 11526.. . 3.5 E NU__:filA-l,._'-l~-1'.4,\ NARA. t J·3f5·'.dt:Ql) Marvin ~-14 lo (~-2-65) o·r'FICE OF TH& DIRECTOR ITED
  • and some of these other leaders in Florida. So when they put the Kennedy campaign together they really centered it into this element of leadership, and they alienated the Tampa Tribune, the Miami papers--not the Orlando paper, because "Lyndon LBJ
  • to Kansas City, Mo. to attend 78th birthday luncheon party for Truman. Later flies to Chicago to attend fundraising dinner. 5/9 Flies from Chicago to Walla Walla, Washington for ceremonies at Walla Walla and Pasco re: Ice Harbor Dam. Spends night
  • . It was the kind of proposal that sat very well with the Washington Post but not very well with the Chicago Tribune. It was just sort of talked about. I realized at the time that while it was probably a rather good idea, that there was simply no prospect
  • . Appleton, Wisc. Post-Crescent G. Wausau, Wisc. Record-Herald H. Lacrosse, Wisc. Tribune I. Washington, D.C. Post-Times-Herald K. Washington, D.C. Star L. Washington, D.C. News M. New York Times N. Long Island City, Ne~ York Star Journal O. Jamaica, New York
  • every day in private business by people who do not have pre­ cedents when they want things done. he Orlando Star 'has a car of paper purcha•ed from a pa.per company and the T Tribune is out of paper, the paper manufacturer merely phones llartin Ande en