Skip to main content
-
Tag >
Digital item
(remove)
-
Specific Item Type >
Folder
(remove)
-
Type >
Text
(remove)
-
Collection >
White House Central Files
(remove)
Limit your search
Tag
Contributor
Date
Subject
Type
Collection
Series
Specific Item Type
Time Period
73 results
-
be caused by the appointment of a Federal Judge some time ago, which he
opposed. Also, he has proved difficult recently over a merger situation
involving several tobacco unions in and around Durham, North Carolina,
which he is opposing for a reason
- -"Johnson
is a. Butcher!'.
Terribly serious
for the Presid~nt.,possibly
catastrophic
:f'or the role of'
The Uni~ed States as world leader and its economy.
Oan•t something be done,and immediately,to
head t~is
off? The role of the Tes.mster•s Union
-
v'ITH
THE APPOI 1TME T Tl-{AT YOU JADE OF JA 1ES COLEr'A
LOUIE
HOL~ES ,JR SECTY TREASURER LABORERS UNION LOCAL $334.
..
..
0
•· f
l:L
July 22. 19 5
D ar D • and
r the
re i
rs. S chs:
n: , I
CO C
nt
o c
the
inc rely,
rs. D
r
JBC:hrn.
ci
- worry about Mankiewicz'•
to , . , hall' hi• aalary ahu:e be
will be working lor me part-time.
~ill
Moyore
Spe.:ial Aa•l•taal
to the Preeldeat
Honorable Bobert F. .Renaedy
Hickory Hill
McLean, Virginia
~'
~.
- ;., ·.: !
·'
·)
El(ECUTIVE
- · ·
/
'r . .'
I
I
\
t
'
1· . ·
You asked me to check on the status of
Ezra~eiss as a result of your call from
Congressma~mannel>
-
e term of office of
nal Labor Relations Board
64. During the time that
\ will expire in Decembe
Mr. Leedom has been·a Board member, the Board has re
pudiated its earlier
acceptance of "separate but equal"
segregat~d unions.
The Board has now made
- aet up a
convenient time.
•
•
i
~though the name of A. Phillip ~ndolph
doe• not appear on the letter,
&y ~illdna advi•e• me that Randolph ia now a member of the Council. and
'Thur ■dar -•tma•
.,
Mr. ~olph
~- ~r,iady qreed' to atte~
t·
,
~m
•
l
- be operated more economically in the
future, but, at the present time it must be adequately financed as it
provides many other benefits. The present program affords greater
protection to the northern and southeastern portions of the United
States which
- publication.
Publication will not go unnoticed.
There will be a few stories
in the New York Times, the Daily Labor Report, and some construc
Uon publications concerning this action.
However, aside from the
Plumbers Union and the Sheet Metal Union
-
Accra, Ghana -. January 3
Kinshasa, Congo - January 4
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia - January 5-6
Mogadiscio, Somalia - January 7
Nairobi, Kenya - January 8-9
Tunis, Tunisia - January 10
Since time is short in which to proceed with arrangements,
I would
- is marching
3
abreast at thiS time.
I
•
'Marcli 17. 1965
,
Beat regards.
Sincerely.
Bill Moyera
Special Aasistant
to the Preaident
r . Duncan Howlett
'1- :All Soub cJ?urch
Sixteenth and Harvard Street.
Waahinaton, D. c.
f
J
[1 of 4]
,.
All
- between the time the program was started in May, 1961, and
January, 1963.
The study combines the initial self-analysis report of these companies, filed at the
time they joined,· and the latest progress report received from them -'
December, 1963
- them
selves with the ball.
The history of the times probably is illuminated best by
the experience of the American students and their national
organization.
The International Is Founded
The founding congress of the International Union of Students,
held
- issued by Federal
nbly to pnss District Judge Frank ~t. .John·
lcmnlng the son, who has consistently up·
Solrnn,
held desegre~ation Jaws.
y, president Despite the colll't orac1•,
Union oC the1·c was anoU1er march In
rs AFL·CIO, Selma yesterday, thi~ time
- . c. 20420
LBJ:JCM:BM:gt
rG II-:<
•January 22~ 1969 :
Dear Red:
Thank you for your kind remarks about
my State 0£ the Union Message, and for :
your generous evaluation of my Presi• :··.
dcncy. I am so grateful for your l!-ble ·
eervlce in j:entral
- Intelligence Agency personnel. Some materials in this file unit relate to substantive foreign affairs and national security concerns of the time, including developments in Vietnam, a memorandum regarding the presence of Communist flag vessels on the Mekong
- .
Company to pay double the differincal
between the two contracts
during the intrim
agreement.
Union members to forfit
all
of the
ablve if no seattlement
ifs re~ched within alloted
time.
2.
The union and company to submit there propasials
in an opem mass
- assumption
of its responsibilities
effect.
on July 2, 1965, when Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 goes into
Title VII prohibits discrimination
or national origin, among employers,
in employment based on race, color,
religion,
sex,
labor unions
-
&ad tlae oezt time I
••• .Qa,rlie. -.:ac....... , l 11dll pre·•••· ,ldm for
lai• l'•e·Jobuler.
Slac•rely,
Joaepla A. C&Ufaao, Jr.
Special Aaa.lataat to t,l:le Pre,aideat
J
,I'
• )
TheBrookingsInstitution
1.775
MASSACHUSETTS
AVENUE.N.W
- American exporters _show their
wares, arrangements will exist for export credit at the time an order
is plac i d·
2. There was again discussion of the Korean steel mill project involving
~oppers Co. This'is the project which Secretary Smith disucussed
-
these
of the
unit
and
are now
Calhoun,
Nueces,
from the Hawes
with the minerals
for the duration
of the war.
an Air Force Base on this
and covers
ranch-
condemned and took
Island
families
and has continued
large
surface
and gas and mainland
time
- ,
only one
involved
he hopes
vote for
he made it very plain he is running
race and does not want to be directly
in any other.
He said several
times
to have the votes of Texans who also
the President.
Best regards.
¼cerely,
~
Leslie
Carpenter
>(
LC:bb
- , D. C.
Dear Juanita:
If you would pass the enclosed letter to the President
at a convenient time, I would be so grateful.
With best wishes and warmest personal regards, I am
Sincerely yours,
MES/em
Enclosure
[8 of 8
-
co 259
co 123
co 312
DEAN,Patrick, The Ambassador of Great Britain and Lady
TCHERNIA:t{OJ',
Yuri N., Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics
RANA, Jai P., Emba.osy of Nepal
AZHARI, Yu.euf emar,Ambassador of Somalia
HELGASON,
Hordur, Embassy of Iceland
- the states of the Common
wealth a.r •: : -.'
- :
The Transition
from Concern
to Action.
Your deep and continuing concern for problems of population,
clearly
set forth in your State of the Union Message in 1965 and repeated many
times in the intervening years, has made the Nation aware of the great
importance
-
pleased
that
you
were able to find time to t.ravel in our country and meet· a truly
representative
I
. l
.J·
'
~·
Our talks
sample of our peoplec.
together
demonstrated
once again the basic har
0
I
j
~
•1110ny
o-f val es and interests
- found ounelv• playing gr~
Mr. CANNON. Mr. President, a report . ran
, The truth la that cb- la tar from a a,d•
llama, no trump, doubled and redoubled
entarJ pme e:i:cept to the oblener. Purther.
of proereu II In order at thll time for
with all
- on a variety of problems which
plague our urban life.
The Boards have directed
their urban problem efforts
to issues which you
highlighted
in your State of the Union Message and various Presidential
Messages.
With continuing strong support from agency
- voting records
of any member of Congress,
non-Constructive
all his
life,
through his ability
to
glibly express himself is a
Presidential
possibility.
_ -DALLA$.TIMES
HERALD'
Mo~tViciousEnemy
:'of tneChurch
·Th~~-
;.;;;_tvicious enemy or
the ·ch\m:h
-
.
,
l/
Some time ago when I had requested an interview with the
President for our SIPA News Syndicate I had enclosed
some stories done during my recent interview with Mr.
Eisenhower in Gettysburg.
/
I had as~ed that those stories be returned since
- President Johnson,
I write to express my appreciation of your p~licy towards the
_.;:!!,
important issue or peace and future relations with the Soviet Union.
I am particularly hopeful that your Administ~tion
111 find a way of
involving China in the essential
-
military
situation
is clear.
Nass~r will
never
be able to. defeat
the Royalists.
They have received
no
outside
arms since
May, 1963, as attested
to by ihe UN observers.
Yet,
in all that
time,
they have never
lost
an inch to Nasser,
but
have gained
- :15 PM
...
Mr.
I.
n
President:
y...
.........;.,. ., ............
-11 ....... ~-
.....
_.,
___
...,..i.
.........
-.-
It occurred
to ~oe that, since you have· ifrged 'him:·:severc.c.: J
times to get out to Africa, •you might b_e
- the staffing
of the~1odel
Cities
Administration
was
a priority
concern in the Department at this time, it shared
precedence
with pressing
personnel
problems in other areas
of the Department.
Simultaneously
with the search for the
Model Cities
management team
- to the "Douglas Commission" after Commission Chairperson, former senator Paul H. Douglas), including correspondence regarding appointments to the Commission, material related to administrative matters such as Commission staffing, meeting times, meeting locations
- /21/£:A.
DeROOA,
Jerald T., 18-29 25th Rd., Astoria 2 1 N. Y., PM5/23/64.
GOODING,
Calvin, 2025 Union St., Bklyn. 12, N. Y., 5/22/fA.
CASE5SA,John F., 87 4th Pl., Bklyn. 31, I. Y., 5/~/~.
VARGAS,
Antonio, 181 NewYork Ave., N. Bayahore, N. Y., 5/22/64
- of the some 6 million
Mexican-Americans in the Southwest.
There are now about
2. 5 million in California alone, with a million in Los Angeles
County.
Their rate of population increase is some 8. 9 per cent -
about three times the total rate for California
- OF THE NATIO AL MARITIME UNION SHARE WITH ALL
IGHT THI lKING A ERICANS A SENSE OF SHA E A JD ANGER OVER THE
BRUTAL ASSAULTS ON CITIZENS OF ALABAMA SEEKING PEACEFULLY TO
DEMONSTRATE THEIR DESIRE TO VOTE . THE SHA MEFUL ACTIONS OF AUTHORITIES
IN ALABAMA
- .
BARRETT,Ashton c., Federal Maritime
Conmission.
BARTO~, Frank., Law Southern Railway
System, Wash. 3 D.C.
BEA.RD,Charles H• ., Union Carbide Corp.
New York City
BEATTIE, Donald, Railway Labor Executives
Assn.,
Wash., D .c.
BERGER,David, Phila.,
D .C
- ,
...
(
.
. ,...
.
.
...., .
·concerned only in passing w1~h the·~h1~osoph~r's
\
..
•)
'l will
be
I
\
One reason
I
•
\ I
I
:
.,•
•,•
.. ~\ •.
~-J.
• Stringfellow
.. .
.... .
curved time,
.
.
.: ..
. -:. .
. .I .
. .
'I
.
•
'
for this,
as·I
shall
amply demonstrate
- unsuccess
fully sought employment time after time at employment offices,
union halls, and private businesses around the city.
They do
not tell of the humiliation felt by men who stay at home with
their children while their wives support them because