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  • recall, was out of town, in New York I think, making a speech. I ran him down. I pulled him off the dais. He hadn't made the speech, sitting on the dais somewhere. I got him on the phone and I told him that we were contemplating a reorganization
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • of the electorate in Texas and point out to me that in substance, Texas, because of the way in which it was settled was as big a melting pot as New York, and that particularly he had always been able to have the support of the Negro and the Mexicans. His problem
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • at the Kennedy Round). -CONFIDENTIM.. countries countries. to review its rum (withdrawn TEE PROORAM October 131 1967 Prime Minister Shearer's party will be flown by US Air Force plane from La Guardia Airport, New York, to Andrews Air Force Base, arriving
  • , Germany, l)ublished [Ai>nl 6, when, I ,ns again•amoils writer. I -then indicated on the pubh~her had previously iwritten ~):n the New York Times· un.der ,those ,present, hut the ellairman · record ~e emphatic contempt in me .th at a ·lar&'enumber of unsold
  • and Telegraph 195 Broadway New York 7, New York Noboru Sasamoto Chief of New York Liaison Company Office KDD 680 Fifth Avenue New York 19, New York Mr. Ludwig R. Engler Vice President RCA Communications, 66 Broad Street New York, New York Inc. ~ 1'-1.N
  • ? F: No. The only difference was one in degree, not in kind. There was just as much discrimination in New York City as there was in Birmingham, Alabama, except Birmingham was more blatant and more widespread. It didn't matter. When you look
  • employees in the Department of Defense; John Macy's federal executive councils; complications within the Post Office; TVA's lack of compliance with minority hiring; federal scholarships; labor unions; Philadelphia Plans; state employment services; corporate
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • time with them after the termination of my first season with the Metropolitan. Before I left New York to go to Virginia and to enjoy the country and the beautiful estate, I filed an application with the Immigration (Bureau) which was at that time, I
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • INTERVIEWEE: LAWRENCE E. LEVINSON INTERVIEWER: Paige E. Mulhollan PLACE: Mr. Levinson's office, New York City Tape 1 of 1 L: Let me take the auto safety first. The auto safety legislation was part of a larger comprehensive package dealing
  • National Transportation Safety Day; Nader's influence on the development of auto safety legislation; Vehicle Equipment Safety Council; the effect on Congress of creating a new cabinet department; the Maritime Administration.
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • of urban type problems, even if the urban type problems seemed suburban or semirural. Because I think increasingly this country is beginning to recognize that the problems of Chicago and New York are not going to be solved in Chicago and New York alone
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , then after the war I went up to New York and CBS and was choppin’ along in tall cotton, doing very well. For years I voted down here in Texas and then I changed my voting to New York. But I'd talk about Lyndon being my congressman from down
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • -- I -- 3 about, were there at a small family dinner. I was very taken by the whole thing. I went back to Washington [New York?], and then he called me a week later, and I came back down. He said that they had done a background investigation on me
  • from diplomacy in current politics; the riots in Washington, D.C., following the assassination of Martin Luther King; LBJ's confusion over the riots, their purpose and leadership; being in New York City for the ordination of Cardinal Terence Cooke
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , 61. Mr. Hannes B~t1ler 62, Mr. Hana Hubmnn wttbaya Geran AirUn,•: 63. Mr. -Huhn Lufthansa Agent THOSE GOING ON THE 5:45 AM PRESS PLANE 1. William Jorden, New York Times z. George 3. Henry Burroughs, 4. Dorsey, British film man AP
  • Control of Riots and Mobs" by Inspector George P. McManus, New York City Police Department--copy attached, Exhibit G.) 13. IJcmify our policy decisions a11
  • bathing trunks to the JetStar and he dressed on the plane. At the same time, Lee White was sent to New York, and, as I recall, he and Collins, or Collins, after being briefed by Lee White, met with Brown at Kennedy Airport in New York. The purpose
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • 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
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • --- .:- - - -___.; ~ - - - -· - · ·-·- -.-~ _ ···----i-------1 - ENGELHARD, . Charles Cragwood, Far Hills, N. ]. BE 8-0073 · Private ------. . ...residence . --- - -- . ·-------- . Newark Office · - ·----- -- -- - -- . .· Waldorf, New York ·· .. .. CODI: "'"·"'· x 4521 LI 6..:5379 Res: 434
  • fair play, fair play for all, not because it is political l"'lr expedient, but becaur-e it is morally right." Tribute at Eleanor Roosevelt Memorial Foundation First Hilton Hotel, New York, ~pril 9, 1964: Anniversary Lunchenn, Al.l of us are familiar
  • to New York, I seem to recollect it had something to do with NATO. But the President called me in the afternoon, about two or three in the afternoon, and he said, would it be possible to do this." My attitude in working with President Johnson was always
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • it. F: Didn't have anything to move with. H: Didn't have anything to move with. Purely on a political side I think that the majority of people supported him in my own state. F: New York? H: We were concerned politically. We had every indication
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • DELIVERY April 25,1950 Mr . Charles Marsh 6 East 92 Street New ·York , N.Y. Dear Charles, Here 's the column. Regards, Drew Pearson DP/od 2'.he WaeJaington Merry-Go-Roand on tJae Air-ABC NetworJr., 5 P. M. Sanday E, S. T. THURSDAY, APRIL !7, 19~0
  • some historical evidence. She was, You might find it, too, in the Library. G: I'll check. Well, yould mentioned earlier that you would tell her stories of New York and whatnot. P: There was such a difference in our ages that fairy tales were
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , I was the advance man in Rome when LBJ, on that round-theworld trip, went to the funeral, as I recall it, in Australia of the prime minister who was drowned, and decided to come by Rome. Then, preceding that, when the Pope came to New York, I did
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , understand the extent to which the job in New York is and must be limited in its authority and, ultimately, subordinated to the Secretary of State. He has come to understand the inherent limitations of the post. 3. On the other hand, he is intensely loyal
  • halfway." Caro's first book, The Power Broker, appeared in 1974. It was the story of Robert Mo­ ses, the man who virtually created New York City as it appears today. Caro necessary to tell the story of New York City. The resultant book won both
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • 24, 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 me just go back to yesterday. You discussed [Hubert] Humphrey's pre-inauguration visit to you
  • the state of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) when O'Brien became chairman; O'Brien's immediate reorganization of the DNC and new priorities; efforts to build the relationship between the DNC and Congress; DNC help with 1970 off-year
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , and he asked us not to say anything. We respected that, and about three weeks later I read it in the New York Times. Audience was a little bigger, I think. On another occasion three couples of us went over. They were showing us through their quarters
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • of other letters, in It was picked up because it was so appropriate-­ "efficient and beguiling." I think there was tremendous appreciation of Stevenson by Mrs. John­ son, and she went to New York several times where he escorted her to various things. Yet
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • neither our c nva s s or the Whip check r eflecta any difficulty in such key states s California, New York, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Massachus Jersey and Illinois. We believe we will have of e Texas de ation supporting the Administration and ----~ out four
  • ••• &D4peace. Aa wo move now In the battle• apln•t poverty &114dl1c.-\m 1oattma. we aaJute bl• memo17 bf advancln1 bla propam. to buU4 a Great Soclet,. Slllcue11, le Mr. WIJJtem PoUock Prosldont >'\ ~ TextUo Workaa UnloD of Amorlca "Hilton Hotel, New York
  • rose to the occasion. I had Massachusetts and Rhode Island and Vermont and New York. F: You didn't have any easy task, did you? M: And when we would report almost on a daily basis our success, he would say to me, IIWhy can't you get delegates
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • --the consumers also continued to rise--120 million more mouths every year. vidual in the developing in 1957-58. countries number new humans every minute; The result was little better indi­ off in 1966 than he was conditions of per over the period
  • a half an hour . Fred Friendly was giving a lecture in New York and somehow the word "love" came into the conversation--I don't know whether he was referring to it in terms of its current meaning today or what--regardless, at some point a girl
  • an event would make news and therefore try to let me announce it in a way that was orderly. Example: Luci had studied to be a Catholic. There kept being rumors about it, but we stalled questions. Actually though, on the day Luci was going over
  • Luci and Lynda; Luci’s wedding; trips to Marshall to be with her father; Lady Bird’s encouragement for Lynda to leave U.T.; Warrie Lyn Smith; categories of news; commercialization of the White House; Luci’s job with optometrist; Lynda’s motive
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • INTERVIEHER: David G. McComb DATE: M: April 21, 1969 This is an City. intervie~v ~'lith Mr. 'Francis Keppel in his office in New York The date is April 21, 1969, and my name is David McComb. Can you briefly give me a sketch of your background, how you
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • -shocked. and stare. We talked or we'd just sit there There 'rlas a picture in the New York Times on the follow'ing Sunday, and I have a copy of it at the house, of the shadows of sevPl',"11 C" us \'ialkina past the 0val Office to meet the helicoot'2
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Washington, D. C. Dear Joe: Many thank• for your letter. / ~uJ E 7 a/ I I/" '1 I have studied the President's various propoeals over the last weekend and liked them very much. I am going to deliver a lecture at the New School in New York on Monday in which
  • in Plain­ field purchased 13 .22-caliber revolvers and one .25-caliber automatic. Subsequent investigation revealed that this man is actually a resident of New York City and has a lengthy police record there and a record with the FBI. •• vVecould go
  • : Q• Yes. United Nations Institute for Training and Research. Where is tba t? MR. M:>YERS: That is in New York. Q. I'm a little confused. asked Secretary Rusk -- MR. M:>YERS: of the b\ld8et. Q. Yes. Going back to the lunch, the President
  • .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
  • Aberdeen ? Sout h Dakota 57401 Tulsa, Oklahoma 74102 £ I / I Arthur / Stan Lowell E. Krieg,Boyce President SS/LJM «* / 4165% 1 Griffit h Avenue I LePr Standard Packaging Corporation 3^ Bellingham , Washington 98225 I 200 East 42nd Street