Daniel P. Moynihan Papers [Finding Aid]. Library of Congress
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Honorable Bob Dole David Mack REPUBLICAN LEADER of the U.S
This document is from the collections at the Dole Archives, University of Kansas http://dolearchives.ku.edu % § ~ Y~ef~ ~ f/~Y~§~ September 27, 1993 Sheraton New York Hotel Page 1 of 44 This document is from the collections at the Dole Archives, University of Kansas http://dolearchives.ku.edu f/~9~ g;~ ~5~.· y~ ~ J~ c;/P.Jaa Senator Bob Dole Honorable Charles A. Gargano Hon. Rudy Giuliani Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison 9~o/~ Senator Lauch Faircloth David Mack RNC Chairman Haley Barbour J~ ?Jaa.· Rabbi Milton Balkany Congressman Rick Lazio Mrs. Donna Giuliani Hon. Rudy Giuliani Senator Ralph Marino ~ Hon. Joe Mondello Honorable Rudy Giuliani RNC Chairman Haley Barbour CANDIDATE FOR MAYOR OF NEW YORK CITY Hon. Bill Powers Haley Barbour Senator Bob Dole REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN Hon. Charles Gargano Honorable Kay Bailey Hutchison Senator Al D'Amato UNITED STATES SENATOR-TEXAS Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison Honorable Bob Dole David Mack REPUBLICAN LEADER OF THE U.S. SENATE Honorable Alfonse M. D'Amato Senator Lauch Faircloth UNITED STATES SENATOR-NEW YORK Hon. Mike Long Assemblyman Clarence Rappleyea Congressman Amo Houghton ~~~ The Honorable Charles A. Gargano Page 2 of 44 This document is from the collections at the Dole Archives, University of Kansas http://dolearchives.ku.edu 1 ] Robert Abplanalp John Catsimatides Robert Entenmann Richard Gidron Daniel Abraham James Cayne Joseph Famighetti James Gill Joseph Allen Mickey Chasanoff Joseph Farber Tony Gioia Joseph Asaro Ned Cloonan Carl Figliola Tony Gleidman Harry Bjarkjtari Pat -
Daniel Patrick Moynihan
Obituaries 247 gifts to the American Antiquarian Society. Booth was also ex- tremely generous in the fields of biomédical research and to his church. First Unitarian Church, Second Parish, of Worcester. He received his education at Bancroft School, Deerfield Acad- emy, and Wilhams College, where he was a member ofthe class of 1937 and president of his college fraternity. Phi Gamma Delta. After Williams, Booth studied Fnglish literature for one year at Cambridge University in Fngland. He returned to the United States to be employed in Worcester at the radio station WTAG (PForcester Telegram ^nd Gazette), the AM and FM stations then part of the Worcester newspapers owned and run by his father. Starting out as traffic manager, a position that scheduled on-air advertising, in 1951 he became vice president ofthe radio station and later its president and general manager, and eventually vice president for radio and a director of the parent company. He was active in regional and national broadcasting organizations at a time when radio was a relatively new and a fast-growing medium. In service to his country. Booth enlisted in 1941 as a private in the United States Army. After training, he was commissioned a sec- ond lieutenant and assigned to land duty in the Pacific Theater. At the end of the war, he mustered out as a captain. Predeceasing Booth were his older sister, Doris Booth Butler, and his older brother, Howard M. Booth. A bachelor. Booth leaves his niece, Penelope Booth Rockwell, and nephew, George F. Booth II, who are members of AAS, and his sister-in-law, Bar- bara Allen Booth. -
Hearings Joint Economic Committee Congress of The
I3 533 S. HRG. 99-434 THE IMPACT OF REPEAL OF THE DEDUCTIONS FOR STATE AND LOCAL TAXES HEARINGS BEFORE THE SUBCOMIITTEE ON MONETARY AND FISCAL POLICY OF THE JOINT ECONOMIC COMMITTEE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES NINETY-NINTH CONGRESS FIRST SESSION JUNE 10, JUNE 24, AND JULY 15, 1985 Printed for the use of the Joint Economic Committee U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 54-102 0 WASHINGTON: 1986 AA_lfn'9 n - A; - 1 * JOINT ECONOMIC COMMITTEE r [Created pursuant to sec. 5(a) of Public Law 304, 79th Congress] HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES SENATE DAVID R. OBEY, Wisconsin, Chairman JAMES ABDNOR, South Dakota, LEE H. HAMILTON, Indiana Vice Chairman PARREN J. MITCHELL, Maryland WILLIAM V. ROTH, JR., Delaware AUGUSTUS F. HAWKINS, California STEVEN D. SYMMS, Idaho JAMES H. SCHEUER, New York MACK MATTINGLY, Georgia FORTNEY H. (PETE) STARK, California ALFONSE M. D'AMATO, New York CHALMERS P. WYLIE, Ohio PETE WILSON, California DANIEL E. LUNGREN, California LLOYD BENTSEN, Texas OLYMPIA J. SNOWE, Maine WILLIAM PROXMIRE, Wisconsin BOBBI FIEDLER, California EDWARD M. KENNEDY, Massachusetts PAUL S. SARBANES, Maryland Scorr LILLY, Executive Director ROBERT J. ToSTERUD, Deputy Director SUBCOMMITTEE ON MONETARY AND FISCAL POLICY SENATE HOUSE STEVEN D. SYMMS, Idaho, Chairman CHALMERS P. WYLIE, Ohio ALFONSE M. D'AMATO, New York Vice Chairman EDWARD M. KENNEDY, Massachusetts BOBBI FIEDLER, California PAUL S. SARBANES, Maryland LEE H. HAMILTON, Indiana DAVID R. OBEY, Wisconsin (II) CONTENTS WITNESSES AND STATEMENTS MONDAY, JUNE 10, 1985 Page D'Amato, Hon. Alfonse M., member of the Subcommittee on Monetary and Fiscal Policy, presiding: Opening statement ........................................................... 1 Moynihan, Hon. -
Commission on Protecting and Reducing Government Secrecy
S. Doc. 105-2 REPORT of the COMMISSION ON PROTECTING AND REDUCING GOVERNMENT SECRECY PURSUANT TO PUBLIC LAW 236 103RD CONGRESS This report can be found on the Internet at the Government Printing Office’s (GPO) World Wide Web address: http://www.access.gpo.gov/int For further information about GPO’s Internet service, call (202) 512-1530. For sale by the U.S. Government Printing Office Superintendent of Documents, Mail Stop: SSOP, Washington, DC 20402-9328 ISBN 0-16-054119-0 The Commission on Protecting and Reducing Government Secrecy Daniel Patrick Moynihan, New York, Chairman Larry Combest, Texas, Vice Chairman John M. Deutch, Massachusetts Jesse Helms, North Carolina Martin C. Faga, Virginia Ellen Hume, District of Columbia Alison B. Fortier, Maryland Samuel P. Huntington, Massachusetts Richard K. Fox, District of Columbia John D. Podesta, District of Columbia Lee H. Hamilton, Indiana Maurice Sonnenberg, New York Staff Eric R. Biel, Staff Director Jacques A. Rondeau, Deputy Staff Director Sheryl L. Walter, General Counsel Michael D. Smith, Senior Professional Staff Joan Vail Grimson, Counsel for Security Policy Sally H. Wallace, Senior Professional Staff Thomas L. Becherer, Research and Policy Director Michael J. White, Senior Professional Staff Carole J. Faulk, Administrative Officer Paul A. Stratton, Administrative Officer (1995) Cathy A. Bowers, Senior Professional Staff Maureen Lenihan, Research Associate Gary H. Gower, Senior Professional Staff Terence P. Szuplat, Research Associate John R. Hancock, Senior Professional Staff Pauline M. Treviso, Research Associate Appointments to the Commission By the President of the United States The Honorable John M. Deutch, Belmont, MA Mr. John D. Podesta, Washington, DC Ambassador Richard K. -
The Negro Family: the Case for National Action” (1965)
Daniel Patrick Moynihan “The Negro Family: The Case for National Action” (1965) Introduction Two hundred years ago, in 1765, nine assembled colonies first joined together to demand freedom from arbitrary power. For the first century we struggled to hold together the first continental union of democracy in the history of man. One hundred years ago, in 1865, following a terrible test of blood and fire, the compact of union was finally sealed. For a second century we labored to establish a unity of purpose and interest among the many groups which make up the American community. That struggle has often brought pain and violence. It is not yet over. State of the Union Message of President Lyndon B. Johnson, January 4, 1965. The United States is approaching a new crisis in race relations. In the decade that began with the school desegregation decision of the Supreme Court, and ended with the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the demand of Negro Americans for full recognition of their civil rights was finally met. The effort, no matter how savage and brutal, of some State and local governments to thwart the exercise of those rights is doomed. The nation will not put up with it — least of all the Negroes. The present moment will pass. In the meantime, a new period is beginning. In this new period the expectations of the Negro Americans will go beyond civil rights. Being Americans, they will now expect that in the near future equal opportunities for them as a group will produce roughly equal results, as compared with other groups. -
Daniel Patrick Moynihan's America
........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................ POLITICS SYMPOSIUM ........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................ Daniel Patrick Moynihan’s America: The Legacies of a Professor–Politician ........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................ As well as this Gump-like habit of finding himself in the Introduction thick of the action, Moynihan was one of the few figures in American history to whom the label “polymath” can justly Patrick Andelic, Queen Mary University be applied. He was, at various times, a shoeshine boy, long- Louisa Hotson, University of Oxford shoreman, bartender, sociologist, political scientist, ethnog- Daniel Rowe, University of Oxford rapher, ambassador, Harvard professor, city planner, and politician. Michael Barone described him as “the nation’s .............................................................................................................................................. -
BOOKS" to 9840398093
PRICE OF THIS BOOK is Rs.350 PDF COPY IS Rs.200 For Details, Whatsapp "BOOKS" to 9840398093 RADIAN IAS ACADEMY (CHENNAI - 9840400825 MADURAI - 9840398093) www.radianiasacademy.org -3- PART-C 9. Match the following Folk Arts with the Indian AUTHORS AND THEIR LITERARY WORKS State / Country 10. Match the Author with the Relevant 1.Match the Poems with the Poets Title/Character A Psalm of Life - Be the Best - The cry of the children - 11. Match the Characters with Relevant Story Title The Piano – Manliness Going for water – Earth -The Apology - Be Glad your Nose is on your face - The The Selfish Giant - How the camel got its hump - The Lottery ticket - The Last Leaf - Two friends – Refugee - Flying Wonder -Is Life But a Dream - Be the Best - O Open window – Reflowering - The Necklace Holiday captain My Captain - Snake - Punishment in Kindergarten -Where the Mind is Without fear - The Man 12. About the Poets Rabindranath Tagore - Henry Wordsworth Longfellow - He Killed - Nine Gold Medals Anne Louisa Walker -V K Gokak - Walt Whitman - 2.Which Nationality the story belongs to? Douglas Malloch The selfish Giant - The Lottery Ticket - The Last Leaf - How the Camel got its Hump - Two Friends – Refugee - 13. About the Dramatists William Shakespeare - Thomas Hardy The Open Window 14. Mention the Poem in which these lines occur 3.Identify the Author with the short story The selfish Giant - The Lottery Ticket - The Last Leaf - Granny, Granny, please comb My Hair - With a friend - To cook and Eat - To India – My Native Land - A tiger in How the Camel got its Hump - Two Friends – Refugee - the Zoo - No men are foreign – Laugh and be Merry – The Open Window - A Man who Had no Eyes - The The Apology - The Flying Wonder Tears of the Desert – Sam The Piano - The face of 15. -
Daniel Patrick Moynihan and the Defense of Academic Medicine
10 The Pharos/Spring 2017 Primum non nocere: Daniel Patrick Moynihan and the defense of academic medicine Joseph J. Fins, MD, MACP; Joan M. Leiman, PhD; and Herbert Pardes, MD Dr. Fins (AΩA, Weill Cornell Medical College, 2011, ...[M]edical education was one of the issues that Pat was Faculty) is the E. William Davis, Jr., MD, Professor of most interested in. He was deeply concerned with poverty Medical Ethics; Chief of the Division of Medical Ethics; in America & always worked on issues connected to that. Professor of Medicine; Professor of Medicine in Psychiatry; He also felt that the most important duty of a Senator was Professor of Medical Ethics in Neurology; and Professor to choose the best men/women as Federal judges. These of Health Care Policy and Research at Weill Medical were the 3 issues he cared most about…1 College of Cornell University. He is also the Director of Medical Ethics at New York-Presbyterian Weill Cornell Although Moynihan was not alone in his advocacy for Medical Center; Solomon Center Distinguished Scholar in academic medicine, it became one of his key legislative pri- Medicine, Bioethics and the Law at Yale Law School; and orities. While other leaders, like Senator Ted Kennedy (D- a member of The Pharos Editorial Board. MA) focused more on universal access to care, Moynihan’s Dr. Leiman is a Fellow at the New York-Presbyterian focus increasingly became the fate of academic medicine. Health Policy Center. Adam Clymer of The New York Times observed that Dr. Pardes (AΩA, State University of New York, Downstate Moynihan, “… carped on television about their [Clintons’] Medical Center, 1960) is Executive Vice Chairman, and health plan, quickly fixing on the role of teaching hospitals former President and CEO of New York-Presbyterian as the biggest issue in health care.” 2 Hospital. -
Like No Business I Know the Longest-Running Non-Campaign on Broadway
Lee M. Miringoff and Barbara L. Carvalho Like No Business I Know The longest-running non-campaign on Broadway t’s the biggest non-campaign in New York US Senate dacy. The Marist Poll in January 1999 had Hillary Clinton history. A battle is being waged between two formally with a 10% lead over Rudy Giuliani. New York voting Iunannounced candidates who are repeatedly jabbing at patterns were scrambled in this early measure, with Hillary each other even though Election Day is a year away. Their leading Rudy upstate, the Republican stronghold, 50% to every pronouncement, big or small, attracts network atten- 42%. She was further encouraged by a gender gap which had tion and, at times, overshadows the presidential campaign. her winning women overall by 24%. They have each cleared out their respective party fields and avoided primaries. Money is being raised, strategies mapped The New York electorate in these early polls expressed doubts out. Public opinion surveys abound, and most voters have about Giuliani’s people skills. Hillary Clinton was viewed as chosen sides. The air wars have commenced. Even by New better able to work with others in the US Senate. Put another York standards, the Big Apple hasn’t seen anything quite like way, New York voters believed that Hillary, not Rudy, would Hillary vs. Rudy. work better with those senators who had just tried to remove her husband from office. No sooner had the dust settled in New York from Election Day ’98, following a bruising Senate contest between Alfonse The poll numbers also revealed something the Clinton camp D’Amato and Charles Schumer, when four-term incumbent had to find disturbing, if not unexpected. -
PAT MOYNIHAN Octaber 28, 1982 I'm Writing This at the St. Maritz After
PAT MOYNIHAN Octaber 28, 1982 I'm writing this at the St. Maritz after abaut 4 haurs af drinks and lunch with Pat Maynihan and Carl Lebedaff--a literary agent who. is listening to. Pat's thaughts abaut writing a baak. I did nat get a whale lat aut af Pat. But it: is clear that he taak me alang with ane af his aldest friends. (They were in the White Hause tagether, caa warked far Samuels, had dinner with him the night after he beat Buckley, was in an his strategy decisian in '76 to. spend his awn last 50,000 an the campaign.) "When the campaign was aver, I did nat have enough maney to. buy break- fast. I put my last 50,000 into. the race. It taak us a year to. get aut all af debt. We cavered/~inds af bills that had been rung up and nat paid. 'Did yau really print thase brachures in Tanawanda?' Of caurse we did.' This year we have no. debt. We've managed it better." In his labby "I have to. warry abaut the Klenetski peaple, nat because they can hurt me, nar my wife--she can take care af herself--but because af my daughter. They are after her- naw. It's the warst side af palitics." He walked 5th Avenue fram the CentuJ:1Y Club (W43rd) to. the Oyster Bar at the Plaza (W59th). Peaple stapped him all alang the way--ta wish him luck, to. tell him his picture hung an their daughter's wall, to. -
DANIEL PATRICK MOYNIHAN and the UNITED NATIONS in TRANSITION by DAVID LEE (Under the Direction of William Stueck)
DANIEL PATRICK MOYNIHAN AND THE UNITED NATIONS IN TRANSITION by DAVID LEE (Under the Direction of William Stueck) ABSTRACT This thesis will examine how the relationship between the United States and the United Nations began to change in the 1970s. At that time, the new members of the United Nations began to attack the United States and attempted to restructure the international order in their favor. In 1975 Daniel Patrick Moynihan became US Ambassador to the United Nations and attempted to deal with the changed circumstances there based on his experience in American domestic politics. He attempted to make the United Nations, especially the General Assembly, an important part of US foreign policy by applying the ideology of Woodrow Wilson and democratic liberalism that he felt was in retreat after the Vietnam War. Moynihan was succeeded by Andrew Young and Jeane Kirkpatrick, who continued Moynihan’s overall strategy while veering away from his centrist course. INDEX WORDS: United Nations; Daniel Patrick Moynihan; Jeane Kirkpatrick; Andrew Young; Third World; Civil Rights; Vietnam; New International Economic Order DANIEL PATRICK MOYNIHAN AND THE UNITED NATIONS IN TRANSITION by DAVID JOHNSON LEE B.A., Georgia State University, 2001 A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the University of Georgia in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree MASTER OF ARTS ATHENS, GEORGIA 2004 ©2004 David Johnson Lee All Rights Reserved DANIEL PATRICK MOYNIHAN AND THE UNITED NATIONS IN TRANSITION by DAVID J. LEE Major Professor: William -
Indian Spotted Eagle Pallid Harrier Mallards | Vol
VOL. 8 NO. 2 Indian Spotted Eagle Pallid Harrier | Vol. 8 No. 2 | Vol. Mallards RDS I B Indian Indian BIRDS CONTENTS www.indianbirds.in VOL. 8 NO. 2 DATE OF PUBLICATION: 18 MARCH 2013 29 On the breeding biology of the Indian Spotted Eagle Aquila hastata ISSN 0973-1407 Niranjan Sant, Vidhyadhar Shelke & Shridhar Shelke EDITOR EMERITUS: Zafar Futehally Some observations of the Pallid Harrier Circus macrourus EDITOR: Aasheesh Pittie 33 from Keoladeo National Park, Rajasthan, India [email protected] Ashok Verma & Deepali Sharma ASSOCIATE EDITORS: V. Santharam, Praveen J. EDITORIAL BOARD 37 Recovery of breeding Mallards Anas platyrhynchos Maan Barua, Anwaruddin Choudhury in Kashmir, India Bill Harvey, Farah Ishtiaq, Rajah Jayapal Fayaz Ahmad Ahanger, G. Mustafa Shah & Ulfat Jan Madhusudan Katti, R. Suresh Kumar Taej Mundkur, Rishad Naoroji, Suhel Quader 39 Population status of Painted Stork Mycteria leucocephala and Harkirat Singh Sangha, C. Sashikumar Black-headed Ibis Threskiornis melanocephalus in southern S. Subramanya, K. S. Gopi Sundar Rajasthan, India CONTRIBUTING EDITORS Vijay Kumar Koli, Mohammed Yaseen & Chhaya Bhatnagar Ragupathy Kannan, Lavkumar Khachar Status of Rufous-necked Laughingthrush Dryonastes ruficollis CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS 42 in Nepal Clement Francis, Ramki Sreenivasan Hem Sagar Baral, Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary & Hem Subedi EDITORIAL ASSISTANT: Sharada Annamaraju LAYOUT & COVER DESIGN: K. Jayaram 44 Streaked Shearwater Calonectris leucomelas from Kannur coast, Kerala OffICE: P. Rambabu Dipu Karuthedathu, Muhamed Jafer Palot, Praveen J., NEW ORNIS FOUNDATION P. P. Sreenivasan & K. V. Uthaman Registration No. 314/2004 46 First record of Bean Goose Anser fabalis from TRUSTEES Uttarakhand, India Zafar Futehally, Aasheesh Pittie Anushree Bhattacharjee V. Santharam, Rishad Naoroji Taej Mundkur, S.