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Groups in these neighborhoods have expressed the concern that a development of the magnitude of the JFK Library will trigger other speculation for land for supporting uses (motels, etc.) which will cause the price of land to increase so that real estate is beyond the reach of low and middle-income residents. This increase in land values will also have the effect of pushing rents higher...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Library and the City | 1/7/1975 | See Source »

...produce a critical biography of former Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg, who was running against Rocky for Governor at the time. It was written by Political Hatchet Man Victor Lasky, who had previously collected and pasted together every anti-Kennedy rumor he could find in his 1963 book, JFK: The Man and The Myth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: REPUBLICANS: A Little Help for His Friends | 10/21/1974 | See Source »

...editorial-page columnist" and that his syndicate was culpable for condoning the arrangement once it became known. The National News Council,- asked to look into the case by the editors' group, upheld both charges on June 25. But Lasky, 56, a pugnacious conservative and veteran Kennedy baiter (JFK: The Man and the Myth), is not taking the News Council verdict passively. "I get a total of $30 a week from North American for my column," he fumes. "For that I should go on welfare." Lasky explains that Republican friends were looking for a writer to do columns and speeches...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Ghost Story | 7/15/1974 | See Source »

Jack's language was cleaner than Dick's. This insight into the comparative virtues of the Administrations of Presidents Kennedy and Nixon was made last week in the Washington Post by JFK's press secretary Pierre Salinger. If transcripts of Kennedy's Oval Office conversations existed, asserts Pierre, they would have revealed Jack's easy authority over his staff. There would have been no need to have the letter P placed before his utterances, as it is in the Nixon transcripts, because Kennedy aides always called the boss "Sir" or "Mr. President." Pierre burnishes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Jun. 10, 1974 | 6/10/1974 | See Source »

...protection necessitated by thousands of additional visitors to Harvard Square will create a strain on middle-class taxpayers who live in Cambridge. And the poor middle-class guy from Sandusky, Ohio, pretty nearly wiped out after paying his own taxes, will bring his wife and kids to see the JFK Museum exhibits and he will find that because the museum is in Harvard Square he will not only have to pay to get in, he will also have to pay for the gas wasted trying to find a place to park, pay for a parking space, pay to feed...

Author: By Richard J. Shmaruk, | Title: Keep the Library, Move the Museum | 5/7/1974 | See Source »

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