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  • to be held in the following cities beginning in June: Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Hartford, Houston, Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, San Francisco, Washington (D,C.), Milwaukee, Atlanta and St. Louis. COUNSELORS RETURN TO SCHOOL. Fifty
  • Knowland authorizing the creation of a select committee to investigate the episode. The committee is approved on 2/7 by a 90-0 roll call. 2/5 Speaking at a California Democratic council convention in Los Angeles, Estes Kefauver endorses equal economic
  • c· c· · • M e·d a1·f I orn1a ,ties ay 1 for National Convention WASHINGTON, Sept. 20 UPISan Francisco and Los Angeles appeared today as prospective bidders for the 1948 Democratic national . conve~b0 ?· . Indications that the cities would submit
  • than some, saw what it already meant to the people of our state ... and what it could mean in the future. The primary had scarcely begun when Downey withdrew from the race. Manchester Boddy, the owner and editor of the Los Angeles Daily News, my friend
  • With Pupils Her s peech climaxed a day in which s he took "a woman 's look" at efforts being marle in Eastern Kentucky lo fight poverty and illiteracy. Mrs. Johnson made her way by mountain roads to the iso­ lated one-room schoolhouse in Lick Branch , where
  • Corp . President and organizer, Bechtel-McCone Corp. . " President and Director, California Shipbuilding Corp . . President and Director, Joshua Hendy Corp. Director, California Bank of Los Angeles Director, Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co. Director
  • '• record In th• United States senate 1s unique. On evtl'Y, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Orie,se r, Clerksv llle. R. F , D .. posed ro,· this roll call on every matt,er of state., forellj'n or domestic, he has stocct News Slnndard photo lo pt'ove to their friends
  • Obligation to Oppose Communism." The fourth page of this issue carries a long list of rightist books, booksellers, periodicals, etc. This fourth page is in the form of an ad by the Durand Door Supply, Inc., Los Angeles, California. We seated ourselves about
  • , Calif., 3/6/65. ANDERSON, Mrs. Hazel M., 430 So. Burnside, #11-B, Los Angelos, Calif., 3/3/65. KR.ATER, Mrs. Ella N., 455ll N. Kingtree, Lancaster, Calif • ., J/",/65. HEALTH,Rev. Linden w., 1620 Sonoma Ave., Santa Rose, Calif., 3/3/65. GREEN,Mrs. L
  • a commitment, so I appreciated it. Later he was to give Jack Anderson this story, who then was writing under Drew Pearson's name, and Jack Anderson made that a basis of a column on the day of the nomination in Los Angeles, and his suggestion
  • .,Alonso s., Cani>ridge, Mass. ISOM, James, Jr., Columbus, Ohio Glenn T. Seaborg JAY, James, Det. Mich. Gerald F. Tape. CARTER,Edward W., Los Angeles, Calif• COTTER,Francis P., Wash., D.C. I· r I WHITlt THI: l) HOU81l r> .., ') Jl WA8HINeTON I
  • "'... the Times and ~ X.~ Herald Tribune, x: -. ;:.t"'f4vely for Septer,, and September 30, 1963. •••; I ,! 'These reports comprise an in rvi'ew· witfi.Mr. _ i~ ~i.:>mc. a powerf'ul figure in Nicaragua. and refer to a joint. '.J.,1.-Nic.a.ra~;-..1ar: plan
  • and uncommitted. He refused to give way to the increasing pressure for a Kennedy endorsement. So that on the first ballot in Los Angeles at that convention--which I didn't attend, I was not in politics nor even fairly interested in politics at that time. I
  • proved tablJ paiompt aDd widespread. What look like r•••ne• •tallatlcally at• rathe~ lafleslble commltineatl lO lo1l•tlcal plpeU..a. Wltll i-eapect to Honb Vietnam. we are d•a.Un.1., of couw••• wlth much lower military expe11dtt11re• of POL ta abtolate
  • was unceremoniously overthrown by Dominican military elements who promptly installed a three-man, "anti-Communist" civilian junta under Dr. Emilio de los Santos. President Bosch, with more sincerity than political sense, had offended many in­ fluential
  • Com­ m.l11lo11, and the l'ederal ATlatJon Admlni1tratfon. 2 ing the eastern part of the United States, and the Western Regional Renegotiation Board in Los Angeles, Calif., serving the western part of the United Stat.es. As of June 30, 1968,the Board's
  • everything it took. So then he said, "Well, I want every one of you to go back home and start working now on the delegation that your county will send to the state convention so we can have a solid delegation in Los Angeles." And Cliff Carter said, "Well, we
  • in his bid to become the presidential nominee; the 1960 Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles and Rayburn's involvement in the decision to choose LBJ as JFK's running mate; Rayburn's death; opposition to LBJ accepting the vice presidential
  • LBJ Connection: Senior examiner, Bureau of the Budget; involved with Peace Corps and War on Poverty, 1960s; Deputy Director, Job Corps, Office of Economic Opportunity
  • in--for announcement of Warren Minor Christopher, a lawyer from Los Angeles, Deputy Attorney General . President to the Cabinet Room to Join Secy Dean Rusk ; ' Earle Wheeler, Chmn of JCS . y Robert McNamar a _____„___ Hon. Richard Helms. Director CIA' .; ~* Hon
  • 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
  • corporations have responded in ~ . . . -.......-0 ' S l(Otv I .i: J.: lt to defer or curtail nonessential capital Fro~?:_':.:0 oh~ '"'])/) /"~ A. .' G) , !uest was made at a White HoUse dinner ~· /1.Lo~ .· "~ !ZS executives of leading corporations
  • Consolidated Gas, and the Budd Company. Pl111s have been developed for similar projects to be held in the following cities begiMing in June: Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Hartford, Houston, Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, San Francisco
  • and resentment of the Negro crowds, the police should make every effort to avoid playing the role of · aqents provocateur. In Los Angeles ·in 1965, for example, the actions of two High\•iay Patro1 of ficcrs in dragging a yot1ng girl whom they ·-114- The most
  • ,....... . ; .. 1tayf Doe~·Tokyo agree with' Washington on Red China? Communist trade? Other issues? :;?/lo _tliist '.interview, iust before his U.S. trip, ,r,Jm ..... e ·.•.·.•·M .. ... · ~".ister Sato. gives his views to Robert ·,< M,a.,rt1n.:.of ~'U~S. News & World
  • Spring Daily Herald (Howard) Comanche Concho Corpus Christi Caller-Times (Nueces) Coryell Crane Dallas Dallas Morning News (Dallas) Dallas Times-Herald (Dallas) Dawson Delta Donley Eastland Ellis Erath Fayette Fannin Floyd Foard Fort Worth Star - Telegram
  • where the murdered man lived found an .agitator haranguing an angry crowd that the police wouldn ' t do wbat they were doing in a white area. I n Los Angeles in 1965, the plaintive appeals of a .Negro ~outh that he was not going to let the police take
  • =:.c:i:-.s ,eve:: to ::om:: ~o::~e-.: fo:: •~.:S aerio:u. :.mt ::-eflective di:.lo:~ ir. t::e :ie·.:io:• a l:.=~, :i:c~ of t:1.! pr::~s c.nt! t~:.eviaior. fo:.-.:3 ,:en.:ied to !.t.cn:!£y :l!~c:: -:'o~:.!: r.s :.n .:sc~el!'!.c covesq,:r. uaoc!ated oQly t1
  • .) This lo cali zed Thi s i s t he democrat ic way t o fi ght t he Hitle r way . ... ·, :y 24. 1941 Senator Claude Pepper. ✓ - or Florida. opens a national two- rough the Southwest. ddl8'1J8st. and FAmt. radio address in Dallas Sunday morning
  • , Exec Secy, Fannie and John Hertz Fndtn, Los Angeles Mrs. Jean McDaniels, Phoenix Associates, Washington Dr. Nicholas Bloembergen, Harvard Univ Mr. and Mrs. JeromeEttleson, D'Ancona, Pflaum, Wyatt & Riskind, Chicago Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kohlenberg, San
  • tell you an interesting little side light to show you the way Jack Kennedy operated and why he was so loveable. At the 1960 Democratic convention in Los Angeles I was there as an observer. I was not a delegate but the Texas delegation had a caucus
  • . C., last evening from New York City. Last~ evening Carmichael attended a student function at Howard University entitled ''Project Awareness" which sponso~~d a speech by Ron Karenga, leader of US, a militant black nationalist group in Los Angeles
  • of Psychiatry Neuropsychiatric Institute Los Angeles Dr. Jerome Bruner Professor of Psychology Center for Cognitive Studies Harvard University Dr. Marie Costello Research Associate Health & Welfare Council, Philadelphia Dr. Halbert Robinson • Director, Child
  • Negotiations, and is now a Washington attorney, will be the LBJ School's Commencement speaker on May 22. 5 At Southwest Texas State University Tom JohnsonReflects on LBJ Tom Johns n, Publisher of the Los Angeles Times and President of the LBJ Foundation
  • Stee l Corp . , Cleveland , Ohi o Gregory Peck, Actor , Lo s Angeles , Calif . Rev. Dr . Dani e A . Polin g Chaplain , Chape l o f the Fou r Chaplains , Templ e Univ . Philadelphi a P a Dr. C . (B . Powell Publi s her N Y Amesterdarn News, NYC
  • . Today's Economist assessment, 11 Were the Americans wrong?" ~d Ouardlan editorial, "Whose Side Are We On?" take to task Labor backbencher• who are protesting the U.S. action. z. Economist commentary does not wholly absolve U.S. but, on examination, finds
  • and citizens in New Haven, the Watts and South Central sections of Los Angeles, Baltimore, Pittsburgh, Boston, El Paso, New York City, Atlanta, and elsewhere. The overcrowding was said to contribute to the feeling of alienation among many residents of the inner