A baby-faced young Nelson Rockefeller autographing the spade used to break ground at Rockefeller Center two years before, July 12, 1933.
Photo: Charles Hoff for the NY Daily News via Getty Images
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A baby-faced young Nelson Rockefeller autographing the spade used to break ground at Rockefeller Center two years before, July 12, 1933.
Photo: Charles Hoff for the NY Daily News via Getty Images
Nelson Rockefeller doing push-ups in New Hampshire, 1963.
Nelson Rockefeller
"WASHINGTON, June 20, 1959 Lunch at Joe Alsop's. Others present included Stew Alsop and Mrs. [Alice Roosevelt] Longworth. Both Joe and Stew consider Lyndon Johnson a great man and the best candidate the Democrats could nominate in 1960. Joe compares him with Churchill. They both say he is really larger than life-size. Stew thinks that among all the candidates, those with by far the highest IQs are Johnson and [Richard] Nixon. Next he would rate [Hubert H.] Humphrey. He put [Adlai E.] Stevenson and [Nelson] Rockefeller well down on the list.
Stew says the doctors have ordered Johnson not to drink any liquor except between 5 P.M. and 7 P.M. As a result, wherever he is at 5 P.M., he starts pouring it in in enormous quantity and with great rapidity. Stew was once riding in a jeep with him on his Texas ranch, together with Mrs. Johnson in the back seat. Five o'clock came and the Senator hollered to his wife, 'Lady Bird, it's time.'
'I know it's time,' came a voice from the back seat, handing him a ready-made scotch and soda which he downed in one gulp. After three destroyed this way, he drove on fixing his fourth drink in a special holder he has rigged up in the driver's seat. He took about nine [drinks] before 7 P.M. came, but it had little effect on him."
-- New York Times columnist C.L. Sulzberger, writing in his diary about a lunch he had with longtime Washington journalists/insiders Joseph Alsop, Stewart Alsop, and Theodore Roosevelt's daughter, Alice Roosevelt Longworth, where the discussion focused on then-Senate Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson and other potential candidates in the upcoming 1960 Presidential candidate.
This entry was published in 1970 in the second volume of Sulzberger's absolutely riveting collection of diaries, The Last of the Giants: Memoirs and Diaries, 1954-1963 (BOOK)
divine destiny 57
Ike meet the VPs--"I heard about what you did to Spiro Agnew, Mr. Rockefeller..."
Stronger
When fear and doubt gently depart from your heart, it is then that your true power begins to awaken, unfurling like a magnificent blossom in the dawn of realization. In this profound state of liberation, nothing can stand in your way; the world becomes a canvas for your highest potential, and the light within you shines brighter than any obstacle that dares to approach.
Understand that the only genuine darkness lies in ignorance—a shroud that conceals the brilliance of your innate gifts. It is through knowledge, awareness, and self-reflection that you illuminate your path, dispelling the shadows that limit your growth. Embrace wisdom as your guiding star, for it will empower you to traverse beyond the confines of fear and doubt.
Step boldly into your strength, with a heart unburdened, and let your light be a beacon of hope and transformation for yourself and others. The true essence of your power is waiting—unleash it, and watch the world respond wondrously to your awakened spirit.
#spiritual #spirituality #fear #doubt
1964.
The Rockefeller Conspiracy Theory spread by the "many sizable pockets of right-wing extremism" in California.