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  • Meeting in Washington Jan. 1965. Elect Officers, Propose Election Law Reform Democratic National Committee, 1965: Post 1964 Election Democratic National Committee: Suits Convention Delegates Democratic National Convention 1964 Democratic National
  • could think of, from the day laborers that were involved in maintaining the posts up to professionals in science and engineering, in research and development, and everything in between. So, as there comes at some point in any program
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • an agreement between business, labor and government for wage-price guide­ posts of the kinds we had in the '60s, accompanied by an attempt by the President and others to convince this nation of what Switzerland, Japan and Germany have by and large learned
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • 8 9 9 9 10 10 11 11 11 11 11 12 12 13 13 13 14 14 14 15 15 16 16 16 16 17 17 17 18 18 19 19 20 20 20 21 21 21 09/28/17 PARTIAL FOLDER TITLE LIST National Archives Catalog https://catalog.archives.gov Folder Title U.S. Post Office, Philadelphia
  • Housing Administra­ tion officies in Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, Pa., New Orleans, La., St. Louis, Mo., Richmond, Va., Denver, Colo., and San Francisco, Calif., for their cooperation in making available the data which provided the basis
  • Case as administrative assistant for years and a very brilliant man, a Jewish boy from--lives over across the border in Maryland. Sam Zagoria. Z-A-G-O-R-I-A. Zagoria. He is with the Washington Post. He is ombudsman on the Washington Post and a hell
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Democratic National Committee, 1965: Post 1964 Election Democratic National Committee: Suits Convention Delegates Democratic National Convention 1964 09/14/17 Papers of the DNC, Series 1 11 National Archives and Records Administration http://archives.gov
  • , S.D., May 27, 1911; student Denver Coll. Pharmacy, 1932-33; A.B., U. Minn., 1939; A.M., La State U., 1940; postgrad, U. Minn., 1940-41. Pharmacist with Humphrey Drug Co.; asst. instr. polit. sci. La. State U., 1939-40; U. Minn, 1940-41; mem. adminstrv
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • us to gird up the resources and to try to help and to get involved in it. And it paid off. But again, those problems were relatively more straightforward and easier to address in the Deep South than they were in Boston or Denver or Los Angeles
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • -- 4 of LBJ's for a long, long time . So Sherman got up there on the train from Fort Worth and Denver and got in about nine-thirty or ten o'clock that night . tie knew our office was in the radio building in Wichita Falls, up on the sixth floor
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • of reporters, if any Ambassador from any country had asked if this was any departure from our policy, and Bundy replied no. The President asked about the Ambassadorial post in the Philippines. wondered whether Eugene Locke could fill this. He The President
  • to the President Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Day, Washington, DC Mr. and Mrs. PriceDay, Editor, the Baltimore Sun Miss Pamela Dolese, Oklahoma City, Okla Mrs. Roger Dolese, Okla City, Okla Gen and Mrs. Graves B. Erskine Mr. Robert Estabrook, Washington Post M Hon and Mrs
  • believe the chairman of the committee was the editor of the Kenedy paper [Denver Chestnutt], but other than that--and the names, if you would like, that we remembered were Sidney Robinson [?J, Dan Storm [?J, Marvin Pierce [?J and Prince [?J, I can't
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Horth and Denver and got in about nine-thirty or ten o'clock that night. He knew our office was in the radio building in Wichita Falls, up on the sixth floor. So he said when he got off the train and went over two blocks to the hotel he thought he
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Federation of Miners, which later became the Industrial Workers of the World. They got tu San Francisco; they took over Denver. they took over Seattle. they took over Kansas City. Now in some instances, sheer numbers had a lot to do with it. In a city like
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Issue Number Lil April 15, 1992 SHARlNGTlfE DREAM Oil, 1984 Lent from the collection of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Stewart. Denver, Colorado BlackHistoryMonth at the LBJLibrary(see page2) Black History Two major American artists dis­ played their works
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • of your rn=nT!eto anyone who might fall far short of your ovm efforts in that import2nt field. I am also writing Sens. Ku:chel and Murohy, urging v1eigh cBrefulj_y the appointment of Mr. Coleman to this high responsible post. them to and Yours very
  • Hobart Taylor and Post Office Personnel chief re: Post Office EEO matters. Lunch w/Baker, Smathers, Russell. Attends WH meeting w/JFK this afternoon re: Finance Committee. 2/14 Attends meeting at WH in preparation for JFK press conference. 2/15
  • Bio: (1887-1974) Physician; Field Artillery Corps, 1918; Editor, The Nation, 1920-1923, New York Post, 1932-1933; Director, Division of Territories and Island Possessions, Department of the Interior, 1934-1939; Governor of Alaska, 1939-1953; U.S
  • LBJ Connection: Drew Pearson’s stepson. Husband to Bess Abell (Social Secretary to Mrs. Johnson), Associate General Counsel to Post Office Department, 1963; Assistant Postmaster General 1964-1967; Partner in law firm Ginsburg and Feldman, 1967
  • Bio: Stewart Alsop (1914-1974) was the brother of Joseph Alsop; an author; and a columnist for the New York Herald Tribune, 1945-1954, the Saturday Evening Post, 1954-1968, and Newsweek, 1968-1974.
  • Bio: Marie Schwartz (b. March 19, 1920, Atlanta, Georgia) was a journalist, author, philanthropist, and a personal friend to the Lyndon Johnson family. She was a staff writer for the Washington Post, covering the White House during the Eisenhower
  • Bio: Edmunds Travis (1890-1971) was a newspaper editor from Texas. He worked as an editor for the following newspapers, beginning in 1908: the Austin Tribune, the Austin Statesman, the Austin Dispatch, and the Houston Post.
  • Bio: Richard C. Darling (b. December 1, 1933, Jackson, Michigan-d. August 22, 1992, Charlottesville, Virginia), served as Deputy Executive Assistant to the Postmaster General and in other United States Post Office roles. He was also a lobbyist
  • Bio: John Gavin was an actor who appeared in films such as “Spartacus” (1960) and “Psycho” (1960). He was appointed by Ronald Reagan as Ambassador to Mexico and served in this post from June 1981 to June 1986.
  • Bio: Raymond Gustav Otting (b. December 19, 1909, Oklahoma-d. October 20, 1965, Austin, Texas), U.S. Post Office employee in Austin, Texas.
  • didn't do all that well, either. G: The bank was apparently borrowing from the Federal Reserve Bank in Denver and this is the way it came to Martin's attention. Is that-- B: That's correct. Bank had serious liquidity problems--couldn't meet its
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • was happening in the country and I hope we can find some of this when you go through the files. The kind of hope we were giving some people. A priest came to see me. I think he was from Denver. He fought for days to get in to see me. G: Really? C: And finally
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • in December 1833, a year after in Richland, revivals, he and Oswego County, N. Y. Then he was converted to MorJOOnism. On hearing of the new gospel of Joseph Smith [q.v.], so the account runs, he "immediately received of the message 11 (Jenson, post, 11
  • , Texas Dr. Hector P. Garcia, Founder Corpus Christi, Texas May Washington D. C. Offic~ 7, 1965 Jack Valenti A.ssiet t to the Pre ident White Hous uh ton, D.C. AUXILIARY Fran Flores, Chairman Riverside, Calif. Delfina Martinez, Vice-Chairman Denver
  • : [Inaudible] (Laughter) K: When I got there, it was a 106 [degrees] or something in the shade, and I decided I didn't want to stay there anyhow. So I moved up to Denver, and I looked at Denver and I liked Denver too, but I couldn't see any job
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • those with Mr. Johnson. This was the heart attack in Denver. So far as you know did Senator Johnson call on him or do anything just beyond common courtesy at this period? E: Let me say that while the President was in the hospital in Denver courtesy
  • , specifically, I think, the Denver boycotts, that these boycotts were originated by Republicans to embarrass the administration--local Republicans. P: I think that's probably true. I do remember the boycotts. I was trying to remember the circumstances. But I
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , Manchester, New Hampshire, (Brookings) May 1-13, 1966 ASCE-Denver, Colorado May 13-15, 1966 Technology Transfer and Innovation May 15-17, 1966 [unitled folder] Hilton, Washington, D. C. “A Glimpse of Soviet Science Policy” Moscow May 30-June 7, 1966 WENK
  • Ellender. LBJ goes to the Speaker’s office at the close of the day. Russell Baker notes in New York Times column that JFK has not answered any post-midnight quorum calls during the filibuster, Humphrey answered 3, Symington 2, LBJ all. 3/11 John Connally
  • Moyers: Many times he didn't mean what he told ou to do. On vening he had a particularly fu1ious s rap with McG orge Bundy, who he thought was I aking to th Washington Post. I was in the bed­ room late in the ev njng, and h, said, '·Would you mind hanging
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • that. C: We saw him a lot. Ed Weisl came out; we saw him a lot. The publisher of the Denver Post was Palmer Hoyt. We saw him, and I think he was also--I've forgotten who was publisher of the Portland Oregonian. It seems to me it was owned by the Denver
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • went in the Army. Army until after World l~ar I was in various posts in the II, and came home in December of '45. I went back in the Attorney General's Office for a brief spell when Grover Sellers was attorney general of Texas; then resigned to run
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , and the second month seventy-five. And the third month I went on patronage in the House post office. G: Did LBJ run the Kleberg office? L: Well, for all practical purposes he was the congressman. Mr. Dick did attend most of the Agriculture Committee's
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
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