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  • attitude toward this type of development? C: Well, you'll recall in January of 1966 in the State of the Union Message he took a shot at [John] Lindsay and the transit strike in New York, indicating that he would propose some kind of legislation
  • , what registration [he is]. Kerner was a Democrat, John Lindsay a Republican. Abel, probably [is] a Democrat. I have Of course, Otto I suppose Mr. [I. W.] I have no idea how Tex [Charles B.] Thornton is registered, but I know that Thornton
  • Travis County so not to be an embarrassment. I talked to John Connally about it, and I told John, I said, "John, there's only one way we can handle this thing. If--" And we had talked about the Johnson people would go to Los Angeles, and the Shivercrats
  • ; Shivers' interest in running for the U.S. Senate in 1954; Shivers' support for Eisenhower in 1952 and 1956; accusations of wrongdoing by insurance commissioners; John Connally asking for Shivers' campaign advice in 1962; Weldon Hart and Sandlin agreeing
  • some conservation work. I worked for a year at the Wilderness Society on the legislation on which I had done my thesis. In the course of that, I made the acquaintance of Hubert Humphrey, of Clinton Anderson, of John Saylor, of Scoop Jackson--the leading
  • r Lindsay Warren of GAO and 134 1 members of the National Press Club. Acceptances run 95 %, highest ever s :l achieved in Washington for any in­ e vitation opening. r Priorities Kayoes Junket Priorities · k a y o e d Universal's special junket
  • Lindsay, the only way of getting coillllittee, refused but we refused the Republican and more importantly to work with John Lindsay to work with support him because we needed in the House leadership, in the was through Bill McCulloch. M
  • - Executive Office Building GER – George Reedy JBC - John B. Connally LBJ - Lyndon Johnson JFK - John F. Kennedy MF - Marie Fehmer MJDR – Mary Rather? MMV - Mary Margaret Valenti (née Wiley) MMW - Mary Margaret Wiley PCEEO - President’s Committee on Equal
  • programs we put in. We began to think about whether we had adequate everything from maps of cities if we had to move in, if we had riots in cities. I think [John] Lindsay was worried about riots in New York City and I don't think Johnson thought very much
  • the Metropolitan Opera. Tie. The Honorable John Lindsay, Mayor of New York, will give a reception in honor of President Senghor at the Metropolitan Opera. Dress: Black Tie. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5 11:45 a.m. Departure from 12:00 Noon Arrival at City Hall
  • basis they dealt with us on, as long as we were able to get these programs and money. F: In these early War on Poverty days did mayors like you and Richard Daley and John Lindsay pretty much support the administration's efforts? C: Yes. John Lindsay
  • Room with Mrs. Johnson and John O'Leary, head of the Yale College Political Union. He was extending an invitation to Mrs. Johnson to come up and speak on the Yale campus. She was really cute. She looked at him and started off by saying, "I'm afraid
  • , Robert W. KING, Carleton J. LINDSAY, John V. MacGRE())R, Clark MATHIAS, Charles McC 1 Jr. McCULLOCH, William M. McCLORY, Robert MOORE, Arch A., Jr. POFF, Richard H. RCDINO, Peter W., Jr. ROGERS, Byron G., SENNER, George F ., Jr·. st. ONGE, William L
  • contingent, we released the whole guard, leaving the regular army there. The army was there for the whole school year, because I remember going down the following spring with John Doar. The purpose of our trip was to talk to Meredith and talk to the army
  • - l August 5, 1967 NOTES OF MEETING OF PRESIDENT WITH MEL ELFIN, NEWSWEEK: JOHN STEELE OF TIME: JACK SUTHERLAND OF U.S. NEWS, JULY 28, 1967 The President had a general discussion with these three magazine writers on the Detroit riot and civil
  • to the point at which, in effect, our story starts. R: Okay, fine. I was appointed assistant secretary by President John F. Kennedy, and the way that came about, briefly was this. Arthur Goldberg had been named secretary of labor -designate by Mr. Kennedy
  • Baker gets indicted, we're in the middle of a transit strike in New York in which we're worried about John Lindsay blowing the lid off the wage-price guidelines on the wage side, we've got the State of the Union a week away. It is not an environment
  • I remember the time--it wasn't a Community Action Program but it was in the manpower area--John Lindsay got upset about something that was happening and went to the New York Times. Well, it was impossible to answer that. did hurt that program. do
  • was interested in UNICEF. I don't know who first--you know, I just really don't know, except most matters of the tax nature-- F: You were working with then Congressman John Lindsay on this? I: Yes. F: Did you work together with some frequency? Were you
  • of the vice-presidential nomination; Homer Thornberry; Sam Rayburn; 1960-1961 presidential campaign; John Connally; oil industry in the 1960’s.
  • newspapermen all around there and they were saying different things. The fact is, and one of the saddest facts, that when our people arrived--Cy Vance and John Doar, Warren Christopher and others, Governor Romney and Mayor Cavanagh and the General and the Chief
  • of two in the House of Representatives. And then it was a ques- tion of the Senate. But while he didn't promise us, he made his contribution. sympathetic. He was And the reason why he didn't want to give a promise was because at that time (John P
  • . ARCH A. MOORE, JR., W. VA. GEORGE MEADER, MICH. JOHN V. LINDSAY, N.Y. WILLIAM T. CAHILL, N.J. GARNER E. SHRIVER, KANS. CLARK MACGREGOR, MINN, CHARLES MCC. MATHIAS, JR., MD JAMES E. BROMWELL, IOWA CARLETON J. KING, N.Y. PATRICK MINOR MARTIN, CALI
  • . But I'm not certain of that. G: Let me ask you about disposal of the Brooklyn Navy Yard. K: Yes. G: Here you had a political issue in that Mayor [John] Lindsay was blasting the White House and saying that they weren't. K: Well, of course one
  • · from some of bills I had drawn from the the best ·!lames .(TriciaNixon, .1 bank and said that was ·what . Mr. and Mrs; ·Stavros Niar1 was going to spend, and chos, ~or ilnd Mrs, John they said, 'All right, we V. Lindsay, Senator and Mrs. . haven't been
  • · from some of bills I had drawn from the the best ·!lames .(TriciaNixon, .1 bank and said that was ·what . Mr. and Mrs; ·Stavros Niar1 was going to spend, and chos, ~or ilnd Mrs, John they said, 'All right, we V. Lindsay, Senator and Mrs. . haven't been
  • . We had this emergency labor dispute problem which Johnson had stuck in the January 1966 State of the Union Message because he was annoyed with John Lindsay. We struggled all year with that and I think we gave birth to a mouse here. I don't know
  • of newsmen wonder if r.c. will be open to questions following/before his speech to the '8,sne. dave l ~ . ' ... I ( t . I • ·t :ClarkAttacked BrRep.·Ga~dner By Unlled Press International 1 Rep. John Gardne~, R-N.C., to­ day accused Atty. Gen
  • in the territorial helped to stimulate scientific occupied with his official planned farming. horticulture duties, and irrigation., he gave his active In 1880, when John Taylor [q.v.J MormonChurch, Woodruff replaced him as president "Twelve Apostles
  • ; phones George Brown, Lon Hill of Corpus Christi and John Connally about fundraising. JFK announces his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination, joining Hubert Humphrey as the only announced candidates. 1/3 The Johnsons fly to Washington
  • /exhibits/show/loh/oh SYMINGTON -- II -- 8 concern, to put it mildly, in HEW, from Wilbur Cohen down, or you might say from [Abraham] Ribicoff, [Anthony] Celebreeze, and [John] Gardner, [who] were the three fellows who had it. Kennedy left before Gardner
  • Height, Roy Wilkins, Clarence Mitchell, Most Rev. Patrick 0' Boyle, Andy Biemiller, Barbara Jordan, Rev. Walter E. Fauntroy, Whitney Young -The Vice President, Ramsey Clark, Steve Pollack, Louis Martin, Secy Gardner, Secy Weaver, Stephen Shulman, John
  • together an organization for Los Angeles in which every state delegation was assigned to a Kennedy person, and that Kennedy person, whether it was Abe Ribicoff or John Bailey or whoever--and there were a large number of them then--would literally live
  • John F. Kennedy's (JFK) plan regarding primaries going into the 1960 Democratic National Convention; assigning JFK staffers to specific state delegations; JFK's decision to address the Texas delegation; JFK's decision to ask Lyndon Johnson (LBJ
  • that, the officers of the exchange met with me in a formal setting. John Loeb was one of the key people on Wall Street and he and I had become friendly in the Humphrey campaign. There were a couple of other prominent Wall Street people who joined with John Loeb
  • CEL.LIElt, N,Y., CHAIRMAN MICHAEL A, P'EIGHAN, OHIO -- - - EDWIN £. WILLIS, LA. PltTIE:,. W. RODINO, JR., N. J. BYRON G. ROGERS, COLO. HAROLD D. DONOHUE, MASS. JACK llllOOKS, TEX. WILLIAM M. TUCK, VA. ROBERT T. ASllMORE, S.C. JOHN DOWOY, TEX. BASIL L
  • categories. The selection would be made by five members appointed by Mrs • Johns on. April 28, 1965: Women Doe,i-!$; E.uxtttiemn Mrs. Johnson hostessed a White House ·women d.Qtt 1 s luncheon on the subject of neighborhood beautification: Mrs. James Bush­
  • could count on about a dozen House members who, because of their constituency, would be supportive. But when you get to a farm bill, that constituency has eroded. For example, I think of a liberal Republican, John Lindsay, in those days, and there were
  • conservation, the Highway Trust Fund, and the National Wilderness Preservation System; 1962 amendments to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act affecting government supervision of drug industries and drug labeling; John F. Kennedy's (JFK) reaction
  • that the conversations of the task force and the bill drafting were not including any domestic peace corps. I was also aware that my friend, Norbert Schlei, the legal counsel, and his staff--Sol Lindenbaum, who later became Ramsey Clark's executive assistant, and John
  • the South was Henry--in terms of the House; in the Senate it was only Mike. G: Why was Sprague selected for the western states? 0: He's a California native. He had been with [Congressman John] McFall, [was] his AA for years, and we knew him. what stage
  • Desautels, Claude J. (Claude John), 1921-1982
  • is for your information. / Louis Martin ~ 28 [1 of 5] DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL COMMITTEE 1730 K STREET, N.W. WASHINGTON, 20006 August 23, 1965 LOUIS MARTIN O&~UTV D. C. Tlt:l... IE~HONIE ... IEOIEAAL.. :S-e790 CH.-1,.MAN MEMORANDUM To: Mr. John