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  • that are significant in how the new president handled the grief that came in the wake of Kennedy's assassination? C: I remember the assassination well, and the body lying in state in the rotunda. I think if I had to comment as you're asking here, the transition
  • that Lyndon Johnson was more satisfied with what the commission was doing. If Lyndon Johnson hadn't been satisfied with the commission, he would have moved fast to get a new staff director. The fact that he would allow it to move ahead for two years
  • -€6dF !DEN l lft.T, Background of Pri~e Hugh Shearer the death leadership. heads Shearer's an intention Shearer will be attending arrive Embassy in Kingston way or another I am new at this President that here, in Washington in London, he
  • , THROUGH AUGUST31, 1964, AND YOUTHDISTURBANCES SEPTEMBER 4, 1964 1 THROUGH SEPTEUBER7, 1964 STA'£E OF NEW YORK New York City July 17 2 1964, through July 31, 1964 • Following the shooting of fifteen-year-old James :>owell, a Negro, in New York City
  • in 1968, and Joe Namath, the quarterback of the unlikely New York Jets in their Super Bowl victory over the Baltimore Colts. 7 Remains Not Viewable: An Evening With John Sacret Young By Robert Hicks, Communications Officer Award-winning writer, director
  • Entrepreneurship (2) Minority Entrepreneurship (3) Minority Entrepreneurship (4) Minority Entrepreneurship Report Model Cities - General (2 folders) Model Cities Assessment 1968 Model Cities Review Monday Holiday Bill Mortgages NAB Biographies & News Releases NAB
  • provision for continuity. M: Is it weaker because of the varying attitudes of the individuals who hold the job, or because simply as new men, they--? F: Well, as new men it takes a while for them to appreciate the problems. The export expansion program
  • and days after the news came, it must be pierced or hurt. Envy reaches out to have made countless people feel that pull them down. So there are causes, a there is nothing to count on, nothing pattern of explanation, that can be of­ secure enough to make
  • in the future might be in the northern cities? M: Only the Southerners in Congress, but that was taken to be a self-serving on their part. When they would say the real problem is going to come in New York and so on, everybody would say, "Well, you're just
  • Clinical Conv. Philadelphia, 1965 American Medical Association Convention in New York, 6-20-65 American Medical Association, 1964. Doctors in Defence of Tobacco. AMA Calls for further Studies to Establish Smoking/Cancer Link American Medical Association
  • and fertilizer program; requests to speak; proposal for a bi-national foundation for educational development in India using excess rupees; support by the Birmingham News of the Big Red 1 Division in Vietnam; resume of the Congressional contacts made by Sec. John
  • assassination -- to reassure a nervous world that "the gove nment in Washington lives", and to acquaint millions abroad with the new leader of America and the free world. Minutes after the bullets struck John Kennedy, USIA threw all its resources into this task
  • INTERVIEW V DATE: December 5, 1985 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: Okay, I want to start with some miscellaneous topics to finish up 1962. O: All
  • have, and then I didn't see anything of the Johnsons for a long time thereafter, didn't meet him until much later. F: ~Jhen you were with the Raleigh News and Observer, did you ever get any feeling about how the Daniels felt about Johnson, or had he
  • on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Johnson -- V -- 9 perhaps, or Birmingham? I don't remember which one, because from time to time she would find some new doctor or some new source of help. I think perhaps this may
  • and ;.;.entilled "The New Fight foT ? Freedom:" : .,.. Mr. Chairman and Ladies and : .:Gentlemen: You are officially conferring ~::,.i_pon · me tonight the greatest ~onor ot my life. The office of ~ice President under the Consti• :;:li.i~on serves in a unique way
  • to the· total transportation picture in North America and to the role of air transport. - 3 What I will --That ask of you you be aware of --that you be aware.of new technology; of --and that your actions today is quite the desires
  • of this was interspersed with big news from the outside world, like an atomic bomb exploding underwater in Bikini and the Atomic Energy Commission being formed or being whittled into shape. Oh, finally and gloriously the money that we were going to get for the extension
  • . - Centra l Ban k & Trust Compan y - Birmingham , Alabam a prior t o reachin g the ag e l Mr . an d Mrs . Richar d Brow n - Brow n Dru g Co . , Siou x Falls , Sout h Dakot a ^ of 40 ) I I Mr . an d Mrs . C . Henr y Buhl, II I - WX IT T Managemen t Co. , S
  • for ABC News from 1979 to 1987, Senior Editor for ABC News in Europe from 1988 to 1990, and Senior Editor for ABC News form 1988 to 1993.
  • Bio: Samuel J. LeFrak (b. February 12, 1918, Brooklyn, New York-d. April 6, 2003, New York City), real estate executive, grew up in Brooklyn, New York, and attended Erasmus Hall High School. He graduated from the University of Maryland, College Park
  • from Jeffersonville, Indiana, to Post Office Box 783, Birmingham, Alabama. · · Issue No. 69, dated July, 1965-, of "The Thunder-b olt" announced the address of the new headquarters ot the NSRP as Post Office Box 184, Augusta, · Georgia. Issue No. 88
  • on June 30, 1.Wli WESTERN UNION ~~ PRE~§..M~~~AGE ~~~ WESTERN UNION PRE~~-.M~§~AGE ~- ~ i.--1 ~---- ~·.t "\is, ~. -----1. ~- @) ~ .:t- ...t..,w:JL. ~ ..~.J~- I HOWARD WATSON P, 0, BOX 277 WESTFIELD, AMBRUSTER NEW Tltl.lORAM ■~ JERSEY
  • ://www.discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/prepres/lbja Box No. Folder Title Dewey, Thomas E., New York, 1953 Dillon, Douglas, Under Secretary Of State, 1956-61 Douglas, William O., Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, ca. 1939-61 Dulles, Allen, 1959-60 Dulles, John
  • ••• &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
  • Commercial radio broadcast of KEYH 85 news program, with typewriters or teletypes audible in background. Topics: Howard Hughes; new rabies vaccine; nuclear power; human interest stories; traffic and weather; public service announcements; national
  • LBJ Connection: Reporter, Chattanooga Times, 1936-1963; Washington correspondent and editor, News Focus, 1958-1963; Nationally Syndicated columnist, Chicago Sun-Times; Pulitzer Prize winner
  • LBJ Connection: U.S. Congressman, 1947-1954, and Senator, 1957-1981, New York
  • LBJ Connection: Journalist; Editor, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 1946-1947; Staff member, 1947-1960, Washington Bureau Chief, Dallas Morning News, 1960-1972; Political analyst
  • LBJ Connection: Educator; Attorney; Member, Texas State Senate, 1936-1938; U.S. Congressman, Texas, 1939-1953, 1957-1967; Judge, U.S. Customs Court, New York, 1967-1968
  • LBJ Connection: U.S. Congressman, 1945-1953, and Senator, 1955-1979, New Jersey
  • LBJ Connection: Editor, Long News Service, Austin, Texas; member, President's Water Pollution Control Advisory Board, 1968-1971
  • LBJ Connection: Attorney, Department of Health, Education and Welfare; Executive Director, Urban League in Washington, National Urban League in New York City
  • LBJ Connection: Assistant Editor, The Nation, 1940-1943; Editor, Common Sense, 1943-1944; Staff writer, The New Yorker, 1944-1979
  • Bio: (1919-1984) Under Secretary of Commerce; Democratic candidate for Lieutenant Governor of New York, 1966; Delegate to the Democratic National convention 1972
  • Bio: Steven Scher, journalist, was a resident of the Bronx, New York in 1970.
  • Bio: Helen Fuller was an author, columnist, and editor for the New Republic magazine
  • LBJ Connection: Author and journalist; Staff, Washington Bureau, 1960-1964; Bureau Chief, 1964-1968; Associate Editor, 1968-1985, New York Times
  • Bio: Theodore Chaikin Sorensen, also known as Ted (b. May 8, 1928, Lincoln, Nebraska-d. October 31, 2010, New York, New York), lawyer, writer, presidential advisor. He attended the University of Nebraska, where he received a B.S. degree in Law
  • , and a new life beginning. It was roughly divided between business school, which took up about five or six hours of the day [and the office]. I went to a very ordinary sort of a loft place and took typing and shorthand for about three hours and then studied
  • in the Washington, D.C., area; the news that Austin had been approved for a military installation; a petition campaign for LBJ to run for congressman again and support for a possible Senate race; LBJ's frustration with his work in the navy; LBJ's relationship