Search Results
25 records found for Jacob Javits
#13033: NBC NEWS WITH HENRY CASSIDY
Order1956-10-31, WNBC, 8 min.
Highlights include, the Middle East crisis continues, British and French demands rejected by Egypt, Nasser says he will fight to the end and claims Sinai campaign almost over, the question of strained feelings between Anglo-French and USA.
1961-04-13, CBS, min.
- Jacob Javits
- Dwight Eisenhower
- Adam Clayton Powell
- Edwin Walker
- Prescott Robinson
- Yuri Gagarin
- Adolf Eichmann
- John Welch
Highlights: More news on US space lag, Eichmann trial off for one day, a hotel is damaged by a bomb in Havana, General Edwin Walker reported to be indoctrinating his troops on extremist John Birch Society ideas. John Welsch in a row with a newsman on the question of calling Eisenhower a communist, New York Senator Jacob Javits comments on the society, suggests an investigation, Adam Clayton Powell freed on an income tax charge.
#13543: NBC NEWS, THE
Order1961-04-17, NBC, min.
Highlights: Cuba is invaded by anti-Castro rebels, sea-borne invasion force to be coordinated with uprising within the island, Senator Jacob Javits says the US will not invade Cuba, Castro accuses the US of an air attack in Cuba, Eichmann pleads not guilty to charges against him for crimes against the Jews, Laotian prince Souvanna Phouma in Moscow for talks on the Laotian crisis.
1962-09-18, CBS, min.
President Kennedy's brother (Ted Kennedy) wins the Democratic primary in Massachusetts for Senator, comment by Ted Kennedy, Robert Morganthau is nominated for Governor of New York, Senator Jacob Javits is renominated, the UN opens fall session, integration news.
#13862: SEARCHLIGHT
Order1962-10-28, , min.
A one hour live weekly Sunday morning interview series broadcast on NBC from 11:00am to Noon. New York Senator Jacob Javits and James Donovan debate on current issues for the New York State Senatorial campaign. Also on hand are Republican Horace Seely-Brown Jr. and Democratic Abraham Ribicoff s Sentatorial candidates in Connecticut.
1962-11-06, NBC, 65 min.
- Walter Cronkite
- Chet Huntley
- John Chancellor
- Nelson Rockefeller
- Jacob Javits
- Robert Trout
- Edward Kennedy
- William Scranton
- Richard M. Nixon
- Howard K. Smith
- John Wingate
- George Romney
- Pat Brown
- Lisa Howard
- Edward Newman
- David Brinkley
Election day returns with coverage by ABC, NBC, CBS, WOR TV...William Scranton, George Romney, Pat Brown, Nelson Rockefeller, and Jacob Javits all win elections in their respective states. Richard Nixon, Nelson Rockefeller, George Romney, and William Scranton run for Governor in their respective states of California, New York, Michigan, and Pennsylvania. Many television stations (WCBS, WNBC, WABC, Wor) coverage as channel flipping occurs during returns and live victory speeches and analysis of late returns. Highlights: Walter Cronkite talks to Governor-Elect Pat Brown, Harry Reasoner, CBS News, local NYC returns with Robert Trout (WCBS-TV), Howard K. Smith, and Lisa Howard reporting for ABC News. The RCA 50 Computer predicting the race. Edwin Newman, Chet Huntley, David Brinkley, and John Chancellor reporting for NBC News. Heard are victory speeches to the press from Nelson Rockefeller, Ted Kennedy. Pat Brown interviewed and we hear from Richard Nixon who is losing his race. Governor William Scranton of Pennsylvania gives a victory speech.
#13892: WORLD TODAY
Order1962-11-20, WOR, min.
World Today is a radio news program broadcast over the Mutual Broadcasting System and hosted by Tony Marvin. President Kennedy lifts the naval blockade off of Cuba, the Us will continue surveillance of Cuba, the Chinese Reds propose a ceasefire and will withdraw its troops ten miles in Himalayan war, James Donavan still trying to free 1200 Cuban invasion prisoners, Sino-Soviet quarrel continues, German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer in trouble, Adenauer accused of lack of leadership, New York State Senator Jacob Javits comments on the future of the GOP, Josef Strauss says he will resign. Host: Tony Marvin.
#14108: DIRECT LINE
Order1963-05-19, , min.
Senator Jacob Javits of New York answers various questions such as the space race to the moon, the debt limit, civil rights, and politics.
1963-10-20, WPIX, 31 min.
October 14, 1958 - August 13, 1961 OPEN END with David Susskind: (WNTA Channel 13 Television) September 10, 1961-May 5, 1963 OPEN END with David Susskind (WNEW Channel 5 Television) June 9, 1963 last show of the season broadcast on WPIX TV. October 13, 1963-September 18, 1966 OPEN END with David Susskind (WPIX Channel 11 Television) October 2, 1966-September, 1986 DAVID SUSSKIND SHOW (SYNDICATED, PBS, and COMMERCIAL STATIONS, including WNEW, New York). Open End with David Susskind was a break through talk show which literally had no time limit. The show ended when host, moderator David Susskind, felt all conversation points were discussed. Some of these marathon telecasts lasted over four hours! Jean Kennedy was the producer during the 28 year run of the series. The series premiered and aired on WNTA Channel 13 in New York for three years, an independent broadcast station, before it would become a Public Broadcast Station in 1962. A myriad of talk show guests, famous, infamous and unknown, found a forum on OPEN END. Subjects varied focusing on usually one topic...show business, politics, the economy, sex, education, crime, etc. Typically, many guests would discuss a subject sitting around a large table with David Susskind moderating, leading his guests with baited questions. On occasion a solo guest would highlight the show. For the first three years, of its 28 year existence as a regular series, WNTA TV was home to OPEN END which originally began its broadcasts on Tuesday nights, switching on January 18, 1959 to Sunday nights...a future Sunday evening time slot of the week where it would remain until 1986, for the rest of its run. After broadcasting with a two hour truncated format on WNEW form September 10, 1961 to May 5, 1963 a falling out and rift occurred between Susskind and WNEW management centered on WNEW's reluctance to air discussions regarding race relations in America. WPIX reacted with interest in bringing OPEN END to their flagship New York channel. For the last OPEN END show of the 1962-1963 season WPIX TOOK LAST MINUTE EMERGENCY MEASURES TO CLEAR TWO HOURS ON SUNDAY NIGHT June 9, 1963, featuring solo guest Dr. Martin Luther KIng, pre-empting regular scheduled programming (6:30-8:30 pm). Open End was later cut by WPIX to one hour time slot. David Susskind not satisfied with the shortened format reconnected with WNEW where he returned to a two hour format with a changed program name. THE DAVID SUSSKIND SHOW had its return premiere on WNEW TV October 2, 1966. The David Susskind Show also found syndication across the country and each market would run the program at different times at their own discretion. Most all of the telecasts were recorded on video tape, 2" quadruplex. Most shows were kept for a year or two like THE MOVIE MAKERS broadcast which was re-run on August 6, 1961 almost a year after it was first telecast on October 2, 1960. By this time the show was no longer without a time limit. It ran for a finite three hours long. Thus the re-run of the MOVIE MAKERS had some footage deleted from its original run which aired for over three and half hours, including commercials. The re-run of "THE MOVIE MAKERS" was the next to last broadcast telecast on WNTA channel 13. On September 10, 1961 the show moved to WNEW Channel 5 METROMEDIA in New York. Sadly, most all of OPEN END broadcasts (1958-1966), later re titled THE DAVID SUSSKIND SHOW (1966-1986), were wiped erased, destroyed, discarded...whereabouts unknown, representing most shows produced and telecast during the late 1950's, 1960's and early 1970's. Only a handful of OPEN END / DAVID SUSSKIND shows are known to survive from 1958 thru 1969. Hundreds of programs survive representing the middle 1970's thru 1986. Open End with David Susskind was a unique break through talk with no time limit, rare during any time in television broadcast history, and never to be replicated in the future of television broadcasting after 1960. On occasion only one guest would be profiled. Mostly shows were comprised of many individuals discussing one topic which included race relations, the draft, organized crime, the Hollywood scene, the politics of the times, sex-change operations, divorce, clairvoyants, psychoanalysis, and prostitutes. The oldest surviving archived remnant is a December 23,1958 kinescope 20 minute segment of a broadcast titled "Method or Madness?" The topic, "method acting" with guests Michael Benthal, Ben Gazarra, Adolph Green, Betty Comden, Lawrence Harvey, Jule Styne , and Patricia Neal. Tonight's Topic: "Goldwater For President:" A triumph or disaster for the Republican Party? The effects of Goldwater conservatism on the outlook for the Republican Party are discussed by Senators Jacob Javits of New York, John G. Tower of Texas, and Norris Cotton of New Hampshire, Rep.Stanley Tupper of Maine and political scientist James McGregor Burns. Host: David Susskind. This is the second broadcast of "Open End" on WPIX-TV Channel 11 in New York City.
1964-06-19, WMCA, 9 min.
Barry Gray was an American radio personality, often referred to as "the father of talk radio." His late-night New York City radio talk show was carried by WOR radio and then later by WMCA. Barry Gray returned to WMCA in 1950, and stayed there for 39 years, refining the talk show format still utilized today. During the 1960s, he was in the odd position of having an 11 p.m.-1 a.m. late-night talk show on a station otherwise dominated by Top 40 music and the youth-targeted "Good Guys" disc jockey campaign. But for teenagers who kept their radios on into the night, Gray's show was a window into the high-brow New York culture of the 1940s and 1950s. Barry's guest is comedian Mort Sahl who is interrupted by a news bulletin about a plane crash in South Hampton Massachusetts involving Senator Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts. There is a second bulletin. We hear Kevin Powers announcement of the crash in more detail. Senator Edward Kennedy is reported in serious condition. There are two others in the plane which crashed at 11:35pm EST. We learn from Barry Gray who returns to the studio after hearing about the crash on the radio in his car heading home, after his live broadcast, which ended at !1:30pm on which he talked with Senator Jacob Javits at 11:25pm. Following the conclusion of this live broadcast, a pre-recorded Barry Gray show followed with Mort Sahl which is interrupted with the bulletins. Barry Gray hearing this on his car radio, driving home, returns to the studio. WMCA transmits live on which Barry Gray calls Senator Jacob Javits on the phone, telling him of the news, and getting his reaction. NOTE: This radio program was broadcast with, at times, severe original transmission static. Phil Gries (Archival Television Audio, Inc.) has reduced a lot of the static, as much as possible, making this rare broadcast quite discernable and extant.
1965-06-27, ABC, min.
- Jacob Javits
- Everett Dirksen
- Frank Church
- Adlai Stevenson
- Lyndon Johnson
- Fred Foy
- Robert Kennedy
- Ahmed Ben Bella
- James Farmer
- Bernard Baruch
Voices in The Headlines was an American news program broadcast on ABC radio featuring the top news stories of the day. It was hosted by long-time radio and television announcer Fred Foy. A review of the week's top news stories: Vietnam crisis, President Johnson talks at UN, a Bomb explosion in Vietnam kills 40, Russian criticism of Vietnam presence by the US, Senators Frank Church, and Everett Dirksen support Vietnam war effort, Robert Kennedy gives a talk about nuclear weapons, Medicare legislation, domestic turmoil in Algeria, in wake of the coup which ousted Ahmed Ben Bella, 15th anniversary of the start of the Korean war, the first anniversary of the murder of three civil rights workers in Mississippi, comment by James Farmer of Core, Adlai Stevenson comments on 20th anniversary of UN charter, comments by New York State Senator Jacob Javits on the death of Bernard Baruch. Narrator: Fred Foy. NOTE: Fred Foy, best known for his voicing the opening of THE LONE RANGER on radio joined the ABC TV announcing staff in New York in 1961. For ABC RADIO he narrated the award-winning news documentary, VOICES IN THE HEADLINES a 25-minute weekly wrap up of salient news events of the week with sound bites representing the news as it was recorded.
1965-07-22, WABC, 54 min.
- Gordon MacRae
- John F. Kennedy
- Joseph Cotten
- Bill Beutel
- The Kingston Trio
- The Mormon Tabernacle Choir
- Jacob Javits
- Allan Jay Friedman
- Paul Francis Webster
Joseph Cotten narrates and the Kingston Trio, Mormon Tabernacle Choir and Gordon MacRae perform a musical profile of John F. Kennedy and the Kennedy family. The emphasis is on the lesser known aspects of the JFK youth. Introduced by ABC's Bill Beutel with a prologue by N.Y. State Senator Jacob Javits. Music and lyrics by Allan Jay Friedman and Paul Francis Webster.#14564: VIETNAM REPORT, THE
Order1966-06-05, NBC, 27 min.
"Vietnam Weekly Review." Includes A commercial for NBC News in color. Guest Jacob Javits. Host: Garrick Utley.
#19574: VIETNAM REPORT, THE
Order1966-06-05, NBC, 27 min.
"Vietnam Weekly Review." Includes A commercial for NBC News in color. Guest Jacob Javits. Host: Garrick Utley. Duplicate of #14564.
#15532: CBS NEWS, THE
Order1968-02-05, CBS, 8 min.
"Pueblo" news, a report on the TET offensive, Comment by New York Senator Jacob Javits regarding the Vietnam" stalemate," an interview with Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton. Host: Fred Darwin.
#15668: ABC NEWS WITH BOB YOUNG
Order1968-03-22, ABC, 21 min.
Robert Kennedy answers questions from college students, he declares this is their war and they will have to win it for themselves, Bob Clark reports, Abe Chapman reports from Eugene McCarthy headquarters, Wisconsin primary, commercial. Betty Mull, secretary to Senator Jacob Javits works in a Saigon orphanage four times a year.
1968-03-31, CBS, 42 min.
- Harry Reasoner
- Lyndon Johnson
- Richard Nixon
- Dan Rather
- Roger Mudd
- Edwin Newman
- Herb Kaplow
- Adam Clayton powell
- John Chancellor
- Eugene McCarthy
- Jacob Javits
- Ray Scherer
- Elie Abel
- Stan Brooks
- Brad Sherman
- Joseph Resnick
- Eugene Nickerson
A report on President Johnson's refusal to run for reelection. Dan Rather and Roger Mudd report. From WABC Radio "Perspective in New York." "Sell Out To Militants." A report on Adam Clayton Powell. From 1010 Wins, Brad Sherman interviews Richard Nixon. His comments about Johnson's refusal to run, the President at the lowest point of the year. comment by WINS Newsman Stan Brooks. Joe Resnick with comments on the Viet Cong. A report on WCBS Radio concerning Nassau County Executive Eugene Nickerson and his run for Jacob Javits New York Senate seat. He comments on President Johnson. NBC News with Edwin Newman: Elie Abel reports on LBJ, John Chancellor with commentary, Herb Kaplow reports on Nixon's next move, Ray Scherer reports from the White House on LBJ, Elie Abel interviews Eugene McCarthy,
1968-04-01, WCBS, 8 min.
For many years Lou Adler teamed up with veteran radio newsman Jim Donnelly (formerly of WNEW Radio) to form one of the most successful radio news teams in New York City history. They could be heard on WCBS 880 AM from 6 AM to 10 AM, Monday-Friday. Adler later became news director at WCBS Radio from 1973-1981 when the duo ended their long run. On December 22nd, 2017, Lou Adler passed away at age 88, ironically the same position WCBS has on the New York AM radio dial, 88. New York City Councilman Ed Koch is joined by New York State Senator Jacob Javits commenting on the decision of President Lyndon Baines Johnson not to run for a second term as President. Also "man in the street" interviews with WCBS newsman Dick Harris asking the questions. Other stories include Macy's contract negotiations, Losing Medicaid for some, Local Senate race.
1968-08-05, , min.
- John Lindsay
- Barry Goldwater
- Richard Nixon
- Spiro Agnew
- Julie Nixon
- David Eisenhower
- Jacob Javits
- Patricia Nixon
- Daniel Evans
The GOP Convention. Spiro Agnew supports Richard Nixon, Nixon press conference. Keynote speaker is Washington Governor Daniel Evans. Also in attendance are Julie Nixon, Mrs. Patricia Nixon, Barry Goldwater, Senator Jacob Javits, New York City Mayor John Lindsay, and David Eisenhower.
#19652: GOP NATIONAL CONVENTION
Order1968-08-05, CBS, min.
- John Lindsay
- Richard Nixon
- Spiro Agnew
- Nelson Rockefeller
- Dwight Eisenhower
- Julie Nixon
- David Eisenhower
- Jacob Javits
- Daniel J. Evans
- Pat Nixon
The GOP National Convention. Spiro Agnew announcing support of Richard Nixon. Former President Dwight Eisenhower speaks. Interviews with Mrs. Nixon, Julie and David Eisenhower, and Nelson Rockefeller. Speech by Barry Goldwater. Jacob Javits interview. John Lindsay introduction of keynote speaker Govenor Daniel J. Evans of Washington and his speech.
1969-10-15, , min.
Moratorium Day protests in Washington Square Park in New York City to end Vietnam war. Mayor John Lindsay and New York Senator Jacob Javits attend.
1972-04-17, CBS, 26 min.
CBS NEWS SPECIAL REPORT WITH CHARLES COLLINGWOOD. A summary of today's appearance of Secretary of State William P. Rogers before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee earlier in the day. Excerpts of that hearing are broadcast.
#17299: 7 O'CLOCK NEWS,THE
Order1973-04-29, WCBS, 25 min.
Watergate Whitehouse cleaning recommendations by President Richard M. Nixon. Senator Jacob Javits speaks of need to have White House reorganization of current staff.
#17469: JACOB JAVITS INTERVIEW
Order1973-10-16, , min.
An interview with New York State Senator Jacob Javits.
1974-10-03, PBS, 30 min.
1971-1975 Half-hour interview show, presented five nights a week, hosted by newsman Martin Agronsky.