fttlL/ *i*^[f ~dyQ m r < ^-^cl 1 Jatt u "J 5j IS 64 TocUy -t'.a Pope > bl t:w j! * 1-,'c;. '. -.(, I routed fop hi 3 e2*-ct'.on vi:I Hjit|nessed the r?->ctin :.f o, n. .o. --. e . "v.l S "i- vu:;'"lf ae ). ? the Yale *-Mil ?,- >, l; .-'ret te E !"; ;r-' n 1--!-t 'i>! " K- "' j E "'d> n nc tree-? ringing of enrol hd' corr* ui *~~ n ' ' ^as bon of particular inter-ast to ^e. Since reading The Shoes cf * e - jherman" at Garsington I have thought I sew parallels between Pope ~aul and the ficticious hero of th* book. Last night Vera told me of Max Ascoli's (anti-fascist Italian emigre married great wealth here and for years has owned and published THE REPORTER magazine) audience with the Pope, whom he knew well years ago. Ascoli reminded the Pope of a former mutual friend, a priest who became an apostate an wan urged by Ascoli to return to the Church before his death without success, and kfd^^Ut hlS statuf* The Holy Fa"tker replied "I pray for him daily. Who can tell what will happen. (Sorry, my slip he used the napal "we" throughout the conversation to ABColiis indignation at such formality with -*n c!d iVV-d, f) With great oereaction Aunt Annie arrived here on Deeember 5 P if ->f hour before the eno-- nf the Cbv'stmns storm started falling p,n* 1 at > - - ^ f jn v/it - he- Poo* dear, she had t shift for herself a greet de l as six cf the -v* TM * li / were w^rk davs and. t e EPA took not only my time but muc'- ti ay energy. The NBC Jan uary lunch- :uilt busily nd I also h*d to ~tir myself about OTR spey.htre chairmen for Je.iu-ry 1 ^hehe.oh? . Further complic-ticx w * a mess*- that the head " ruary, fA~i,',<* TR buffet was hoiscHal -d u^ulf. rot be able to work before Feb cf thih ~U * i- the re--neibility of the wo--n "tbev" retired " D!Cem^r 1 lunt '*:'9 "d 1 did a lovelv Christmas and the eekend . gather. With the office cluing at noon on the 24+h *re caught a "soeciel" train te Er*oort, and. were with Martha and CI eve wt.er *ren and assorted males' de;4ver^ olls nave. We are nil old enough now to wait until after breakfast on Christmas morning to ooen out gifts 1 : oily was good enough to h^va our roast beef dinner middar Rg Aunt Annie and I had to taJ'3 ths 4;17 train. ,, , >-^rdry ^ornin^re did seme shopping and in th afternoon called on Aunt Mary, f.cnday j. left the of.ice ejrly to receive the ?u.rn:+ure from storage. Jry had x^sctod to br=.ng it but getting an emergency job had Fred do it. He got lest and' arriWtnc and a -alf hours la.er than expected during which time I imagined all sorts cf hti^re, ^ I0! racy ?t^ed for dinner after which Aunt Annie and T pondered the wisdom f ' my charted rearrangement of existing furniture and placing of the things I have not u a nee we arid the Bayport house in 1946. Tuesday night we looked at xh*i I had packe in Jie trunk so many years age and discovered things I 'tad forgotten and many of vhl i vonc.er ^y I ever kept, !%at am T to do with the huge silver te? tray for ear-mpi^ r^ie box of rlass ana cmna ana anotner of books were snoved into a closet ^or muth later examination. I'm not so sure I shall be settled by Easter11 On. New Yeaps -mof 1'tlly **,r broiight Bill to town in snov J sleet to take tne noon tr*in with Aunt January 5, 1964 Today the Pope is in the Hely Land. Ever since I routed for his election . witnessed the reaction of officials and humble felk near the Velez-Malaga market the news with beaming smiles, handshakes arid embraces, ringing of church and conve. bells and aerial bombs, he has been of particular interest to me. Since reading "The Shoes of the Fisherman" at Garsington 1 have thought I saw parallels between iropt haul and the ficticious hero of the book. Last night Vera told me of Lax Ascoli's V (anti-fascist Italian emigre married great wealth here and for years has owned and published THE HEPORTHR magazine) audience with the Pope, whom he knew well years ago. Ascoli reminded the Pope of a former mutual friend, a priest who became an apostate and was urged by Ascoli to return to the Church before his death without success!, and ashed about his status. The holy Father replied "I pray for hira daily, .orry, my slip he used the papal "we" throughout the conversation to Ascoli s indignation at such formality with an eld friend !) Vith freat perception Aunt urnie arrived here on December 2? half and hour before the snow of the Christmas storm started falling and let herself in with her key, Poor dear, are h*d to shift lor herself a great deal a six of the days she was with me were work days and the IT A took not only my time but much of my energy. The NBC Jpn- uary lu .cheonjouilt busily and I also had to stir myself about QTR speakers and chairmen i;;r ^anuary luncheons . Further complication was a message that the head waitress for the OTH bu. fet was in hospital and would not be able to work before Feb- ruary. upenrision of this staff is the responsibility of the woman "they" retired in mid-December i Nevertheless Aunt Annie and I did have a lovely Christmas and the weekend together, vdth the office closing at noon on the 24th we caught a "special" tiain to Ireeport, and were vdth . artha and CIeve when Fran and her assorted males arrived to delivery and collect Christmas gifts. They paused long encurh to have tea vhen tie great puzzlement of the almost six year old Tommy was revealed. He sould not understand how Jesus came be a baby when he is a man. Ixplannticns of the co numera tion oi the birth were again patiently made, but Tommy was still confused or uncon vinced unless he was unwilling to give up this good attention getting device*, As soon rs thev left to visit their paternal grandparents, we drove through the snowy landscape to Story Brook. Martha and Clave stayed for dinner, during which another inch of sno-v fell. Soon aiter they left for Clove to usher at the Transfiguration service, the neighs oors came to sing carols in the snow to us and pick up recruits, a vain hope as we were al. ab-ut to go to^the 234th Christmas celebration at the Caroline Church, He elected nir.o o clock with the new junior choir, wi ich locked adorable in their long scarlet gowns a* C eding electric candles in their left hands against the white wainscotting 0 . * romrauly restored old church. The vhite Eucharist candles contrasted with the re pcintsettas banked on the altar, while red candles in brass triple sconces .^nd great wyesths wit bog red bows decorated white walls on either side. It was a lovely sorvice . ' . 1,1 coa V'r'-L(:3 and sang lustily, though he seemed surprised that it was cornyuro on. fred and a pel of his sat in tho first row of the old slave balcony and probably had an even more dramatic visual impression than we in the nave. We are all old er> )ugh nov to wait until after breakfast on Christmas morning to open out gifts l olly was good en:u$i to have our roast beef dinner midday as Aunt Annie and I hid to take the 4slV train. Saturday morning we did some shopping and in the afternoon called on Aunt Mary, Monde: x le-t tne office early to receive the furniture from storage. Jay had expected to onng it Dut getting an emergency job had Fred do it. He got lost and arrived two and a naif rady stayed for dinner after which Aunt Annie and I pondered the wisdom of my charted rearrangement of existing furniture and placing of the things I have not used a nee we sold the Eaypcrt house in 1946. Tuesday night we looked at tfjat I had packed in the trunk so many years ago and discovered things I had forgotten and many of which v.Oxider why 1 ever kept, Hhat am I to do with the huge silver tea tray for example? The box of glass and china and another of books were shoved into a closet for much' later ixam-nadon, irm not so sure I shall be settled by Easter*! On New Years morning Iffelly & brought Bill to tow* in snow & sleet to take the noon train with Aunt Annie* /ML (fit Tic, ' /' /*eAy. tint fa t> v deaths. Granted the Panama are in fected with the world wide virus of gr.o - n c ww- -ism of small nations but 0x3 cannot help vond-Hng if th^re is more to this than meet* the eve.OPeration "Bi^ Lift" must have demonstrated that the Canal is not the essential element to our national defence it once was. The Security Council was correct in turning this over to the Organization of American States, but our new OAS representative Ulswiirib Bunker has not impressed me especially since he flirted put of his OTR date 13 months ago. He has alwys seemed cold, rigid and pompous, but I am told the Indians likod him as our Ambassador in New Delhi. The problem of Nehru1s successor is interesting, I root for Kamaraj of Madrae, / V L ~fi, /' * t&c. i ' 'Ww, 1 _ a?6is- I' ' Januarv 19, 1964 In 1950 wh*n I wa c^minfe home on the Parthia we answered a freighter* s SOS and made a big figure *8* around it until the weather ship arrived. Last night the Madi son Avenue bus I was going to Vera's on stopped iniiile the driver went to the aid" of a down going bus unable to make a right hand turn at 39th/ because of badly parked ; , ears. For over five minutes these tv/o busses effectively, crosstown and up and down /1\ aJl traffic, Great confusion end wild honkl^^ ensued. After dinner we ^?nt to tfea off Breeds1' production of "Too Much Johnson" -- a revival of William Gillette's 1896 farce.probably more of an adaptation, very amusingly dc* by a fir.it e l s- e s t * The litest t - 'r.g '* if Bro'Srr-. iy vcf --vi'; - m*-.ti '** cv Svfcurr'. 9 * f jit >, - pa,--. ' qt - r.ea at vcf; -.net v -t ten, A* - * " r..i *"# i it' * -tta*fic t i*. - - d I "V'? cue >y Jt?U3t tr '' t > *lev tec- tut of" ?,'k. 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J 19, 1964 *< L!** hm9 ** ** Pmrthim wm miiw4 trol&itor9* JOS a* . big figure 8 around It until th vathr *>ip arrived, Lest sight the M-**. 21. ! .. I ene going to Vera', ,tpj*d vhll. th, driver vent to th. id ef * 5ias b'J* umb-ato oak* a right hand turn at jtn/ because of badly parted 2ffle!e"!*t oonfuaien and did ^ honk*i*n*g*e*n*su"ede. tAivfetelrydinrm nerrt*ommanadt tuop athned odcff*n Srao'^'orobabl lfaoh Jotaaon" -- a revival of tHloa SUlette'e 1896 ftooo...prohabl, acre of an steptfcttton, very esweiagly don. by a first ol,,? ea,t. Ae lnteet thing In iff Broadway la not having a matinee on Saturday, instead a per* fer:nea at awon and another at tan. At va vara having dinner at a.van attended Lrt^M0 *?* !** 12,30 t0 ftrai tt* elevator out of vhaoh. Fortunately it . 22VE* * wnBot *J"tor ^OB 1 last vant to a play In Be* Tort, though ,.fSJ^\ ? T !fp*r1*0** #f **iia* a vaird thing NU,d ?J C **. peyehriatrlat, a LoxdfSine narohant and their savers! light. of love and to -Pirtrtrt- a m.ia aoaady taken froa^rtanST ttalatHr M dcr e In aueh broad aeoant that v both aleaod * lot of the .ords * h. e! *d""*d*3r Slr,Mt " . OTR apeakor. Of the aavesal vary good polnta shirt kinSV""P*SH V "e9rtton ** 11 * *. -all nations . - tn .>! !. J T^U K **" ' Saoratariat by tha Troika 2ZI23J i , f ?m" of 8**vetary Oanertl. Since tha age of 81 feat baa bean a 2d o2TM! w ateinietrator and aft.r balng tfa. lert Governor General of bath Jasudaa or, i^*f ""fc haaaaa nations vaa aaaignad to tha British delegation to *"** *" * h. raaignad . littl. ovar a yaaT!bSama 4 vii Lv" i""'t ' Policy. I thought it a atrenge act for a life time *2li*.f'*otrl {" *" Pl""ing a political career, for hiaaalf, ehioh ha 2LiTl \w . became interneti nal civil servant eorking for the UK 21 - !?"* ***" "*Wo8 * the epeoiel aoaaittee to vort out i^oaand.tlene for the raelal problea of the Union of South Africa. He and hi. fell* ^ 1 1",V*,t4be ir*rt* *rt*" to "o aepsaially a. tha Union r** ^ yrt given um pemiealcn to go into the country* Since they have never had a ,, J *"4 Ud5r r#0t ^"tdd . castle on tha aoa.t of Co^Il f^ 1 14 1* ""''"toed by a great feudal vail and entered through !1+!."^ 1.! T"T ^"* h0tt" U Overgian instead of the drafty, ilby lit old * furBltur** Mr root ia having a fine and 1 auapaet til ^ tL r furDlf"lT,cr tooorating tha place *,ieh they met aalotaia for "book 3 L.1" **1" "0nth* lMT* ot toeaee ftoa the UH he erota J V lrfU uthrune# the publish r gar hia i d th riIigtioA rnv^itat fro. tha SUKDAT Tim. of London ha hope, to wing th. outfitting! * zxrzzz Of thf!I! 'r**'^torature. Friday, Saturday and today contribute to the okas ring a^afc-artari Cu'slslisS Tmk1r^Jr! f y officlali **&0TT9 to I rty lid 0* did had akiddad H!' but #Ur *laT* toivara kept at it until four. A truck '*f T, 4 4 aro.a 47th St., and oroos tovn buaaaa sere deflected through 46 but could not atop on First Avenue. I literally had to atop and turn back to the rtnd a* ; 2!"h^/ ? 4Mfc for * to Lexington f another 2v, e Hal s,,;4 ociowa th bill to 152, To atsr gr*t us^ri I t*ia undonnduring th c"urt'tcrtod!"!f'MCS1 h*B*' MoT* 1 **u<^t "P on tha thins, left Erelininert.f ne , 0 ^unafceon praeeuraa, 1 have bean toaeed into tha sa Popul-^Tr. / l! wb ^ step,*f?il,l?\h4hr* to be genforth-ro"ughto,llaaw. harOe hio1brotll not+*h, o/ l!!ii2 r?thl!'!r fr ".thlrd bl* *r*at la *rlf "y. I begin to aae tha inpo^bility 2a r2!? e0re^J?r,h0lid*' b,for* ^ **** tot a rat race. meeting !n t!! 2m! ^^iTol^Tt^tr^l'S^Sy? * several aamitta. w.1^ Tltt# CP' > W4' hHC --and that is as far as I got yesterday# It was a dreary foggy day with rain #iich is probably only a fraction of a drop in our reservoir bucket# The post snow torrents were a disservice washing both mow and rain away too quickly* Authorities are not satisfied with the million gallon a day conservation recently achieved and threaten a dire future* On Wednesday the women chewed up all the sandwiches and none were left for the workers for whom we always order* This is a mystery which I cannot solve satisfaotox** ily from the actual attendance figures and the food order* A few people always come without warning, but as usual a larger number for whom we ordered failed to show up* In the old days I only had to worry lest the speaker not show and have someone in mind who might fill in* Now thanks to the FPA retiring Henrietta Frederiekson in Deeember9 I have to prejudge not later than noon on the Monday what the weather may do to attendanee and/or sharpen appetites I Friday noon when I place a tentative order so the turkey, ham and other meat can be purchased on Saturday, it looked as if we would have our slimmost audience on tho 29th* At best it is a ehaneey thing* I wish I did not feel that the office generally is going to pot* On the one hand -there is so much ttgold brisking" on -the job and busk passing* On the other Hayes and his three vice presidents cook up ideas and never think to cheek on the availability of humans to execute them or whether the little people may be tied up in other assignments* The old pattern of frequent Administrative Staff meetings where one had an opportunity to learn about future plane before they are jelled has been abandoned with the natural resulting loss of tohesion and teamwork* Winslow*s position as a vice president is threatened the grapevine tells me* I only know that he is moving into my Special Events area and without el earaaee with anyone mairig overtures for a apeaker at a large May luncheon* Should a miracle be per* formed and the Allen Dulles luncheon in Marsh make a lot of money we would not need to have one in May* I know this is wishful thinking, but sines I have not yet had time to complete the wrapping up of January 9, it adds to my aggravations* Thursday I vent across to the UN to get my pass renewed and pick up a $12*50 rebate on my summer flight# The security man said he only needed one picture and after it was taken I started to put on my dark glasses a second one was flashed, somewhat surprised 1 remained in the booth for the next two and was given the three very funny pictures he did not want* He used a very Mrogue*s gallejry " shot, *iieh is better than my old identifieatioa but hardly a happy portrait* Friday I took atj full luncheon hour for the first time in many weeks and went overtown* What fun to see Madison Avenue by daylight and belatedly buy ay 1964 Leathemith purse diary at full prise* No doubt I could have gotten a markdovn by shopping about, but for that there was no time* I planned yesterday (Saturday) to have a look at Altaian*a for the winter dress and hat I have not had time to buy and the fibers glass curtains for the kitchen but it was such a dismal day I finished cleaning and oiling the mahogany dresser and even got a few things in two drawers* The task of preparing the hall book ease did not go so well* Somewhere along the line it has lost its bask and somewhat sprung its shell* It would be hasardeus to put the books in before the whole is braced* Perhaps a stained plywood bask is the answer, and I fear beyond my capabilities# Yesterday morning it seemed pious to offer to go to Aunt Mary on such a dreary day* Four e*clock was agreed upon and half an hour later she called back Would I go for luneh with her today instead as she did not want me out in the rain* So mush chaos reigned here that I agreed and then worked so hard until I stopped for luneh that I lay down to hear the first act of "Magic Flute" on ifae radio* Result --all my writing left until today as I conked out after dinner and ay half hour reading with the good eye patched* Semehow that takes a lot out of me, but Connolly has made it clear that is something I must de* So, now it is time to ready myself to go up to Aunt Mary, happily in brisk sunshine# 1 1 ' r* 7* /n* / February 8, 1It964 Sorry to skip a week but last Saturday I went to Freeport in a heavy drenching drizzle* Martha and Cleve drove me back Sunday afternoon with a piece of plywood for the back of the hall bookcase* He had cut it skillfully to my measurement e, nailed it in and did several other jobs beyond my competence* Now, I have not excuse for leaving books in three or four more eartonsl Today I hung the hall mirror att did a couple of other constructive things before going up to fetch Judith Listowel on 58th Street for dinner at the Club* She leaves Monday for Washington, Pennsylvania, Ohio and then ten days in Florida* A friend had given her a ticket for the new Henry Miller play eo we had two hours together and I have the evening to myself* She has moved into the new house, finished the book on Tanganyika save for the epilogue and is eonvinsed that JFK was murdsrsd by a plot involving both Oswald and Ruby* She is convinced they knew one another and is asking "Who stands to gain by the death? ".not the USSR, probably not American Communists, the American Radical Right or who paid the assassin? The February waether forecast of wetter and colder has held up fatithfully fo far* I was almost washed away coming home from the office on Mondays and again on Thursday* This morning all the Syeamorc tree "buttene" across the street were tapped with snow and looked like inverted cotton balls* Tonight there is a eold wind* Monday Penn Hails took me to lunch and told some of his six month adventures motoring in Europe* He was fassinated by the differing conditions in the several Satellite countirec he visited and loved Hungary* He left me eager to hear more when he returns from several weeks in hie Vermont house* Tuesday Mrs* Kirk telephoned she had a sore throat and could not preside at Wednesday's OTR* When Z telephoned Bill Henderson that Mrs* T oungm&n would introduse him instead, he confessed that he wae convalescing from fly, but promised to be ambulatory Wednesday* His analysis was more courageous than cheery, but the audience liked him* He pointed out the succession of meeees or srisss from the Yemen to Korea and warned there would be more, deplored de6aullets proposal of neutralizing South Vietnam on the grounds that similar action in Laos had given the Communists opportunity to solidify their position there* Last night I had dinner with Vera and her son Bill* Now he has his own apartment he goes home to mother for dinner and TV when he has no othsd date* He assured me he has no "housekeeping problems" and plainly loves being an admiralty lawyer as his father was* He is taking a course in the developement of art from the Renaissanee on this semester at the New Sehool* In the autumn took an NYU eourse in elassieal litera ture* picking things he did not take as an undergraduats at Harvard* Tomorrow Vera is coming here and we will go out for luneh together --ehe is depressed and being very Russian in hsr self criticism and analysis of her boredom with her graduate sehool students at NYU, with the books she is editing, and the articles she writes for the Indian syndicate* It is my suspicion that ehe is doing to^mueh to savour the satis faction of any one undertaking* Fred Nunes and I had an amusing fencing session with Fisher, the new Banquet Mana ger at the Waldorf--a young twirp from Rhode Island and I suspect of French Canuekantecedents* I gently told him I h*d had my firwt Waldorf arranging with Oeear down *t the old Fifth Avenue location* Somewhat later after eelacting their first dae fmit eur fo^ our first eouree asking if it would be served in the "silver euos% he avowed hie eolo^ bv replying "Yes, in the fnew ilve- eure* Oec&r and Fhillippe have called them since they were bought 30 years ago! " He did faeeinate me on the "little potatoes" we shall have with filet of sole with white grapes* In the old days they had a bevy of old women vho spent their days peeling them by hand* Then they got an abrasive lined drum, vhish a couple of boys operated* By centrifigal force the skins are rubbed off and ehunks of larger potatoes rounded* Now the drum method is used by the Long Island potato growers and the result delivered in cellophane bags with a little harmless, colorless and tasteless chemical added to keep them from turning dark* The skins and bits of potato are washed out the bottom of the drum, dried and sold as pig food. So now we have settled the menu, the announcements have begun to go out and we have eold 125 covers* The real returns will start coming in by Monday week for March 20* M&/L, IQU,M**-,- JIviti,k o? c, k*-\H^i,ft.- Mf/; ' / ' ' / ' ' ^Frtruarr 16, 1964 V This has been the week of the Medeterranian influence for me. Greatly enjoying the bocss of Gerald Durrellen wild animal collecting in the Cameroon*, I hare taken a whirl at the Alexandria Quartet of hi# brother Lawrence in my "practise period" of bad eye reading and the standard use of both eye# for the half hour bed time enjoyment* "Justine" *as put asids in the autumn tfian 40 page# confused and irritated me, but in returning to it I managed to tolerate the unusual form, the extraordinary adjective# used in or Alexandriaa.nd"^B+&!l!th0naifaUr" imngor*asmll6ocretloMn orfothtfhr#. raw., religions and .ulturaa X think Durrall Harried something in VS, Justiaa" and it is not merely that I am aonditioned to him. Thuraday night I saw Mda at the Metropolitan in eontradiatinetion to "hearing" it as the nam produetion finanaed by Amariaan Export and Isbrandtsen Lines is slnemasaopa in quality with mora peepis on stage than in either of the other two productions I hare experienced at the sJetropolitan~tha original and that contributed by the children of Otto Kahn. None of m^ff[L^reJa^liar tt*nding~par for Mr, Bing's management. The speevaele was rv ^ ? greatly expanded role of the ballet extradedinary--choreography by Katharine Dunham (a Negro) and dirertsd by Alicia ltarkowa. Belly dancers in brlllijrt ser-ae skirts, tribesmen from pretty far south of the Nile Delta with plumed headgear spears, girls in two shades of blue Ao fell prone on their baeks all too frequently* Area six year olds In loin clothes shimmied and stamped about taking the eye from a double row of archers with French blue knee length skirts and bronscd torsos who marched #w! p J 0 8 i t e o f ** P*" ach other in a diagonal line like a frieze a as relief com# to life* In each set flights of stairs were included, unhelpful^ totl ? m6 tfiuaip5ai J1"*" of Badames* However, put to magniiieent use in the M% I 3ccne2 blessing of Radames campaign against the Ethiopians -- a long flight at ltft ea*b vith * double line of * it# robed, shaved headed priests I' thtir effective chorus against the off stage voices of the priestesses* In the ^ a*d were sealed in the tomb, Amneris instead of clawing groat block of stone on the top bemoaning the defection of the hero, appeared on a pedestal well above looking and behaving like a porcelain figurine in her immobile j l^y had just arrived from Columbus and leaves fan Athens, Rom, London and Perugia in a month was with me* Thursday nsver was as smart a night as Monday, but ~ say men in business suits in the boxes and heard sustained whistles from the audience mingled with the "bravos"* The character and behavior of opera attendees has vastly c anged in the last decade* Just as Kurt Adler was entering the conductors stand for the second act a mighty sneete resounded and was followed by laughter then applause* I am not surs if the latter was for the sneeser or the conductor* To round out my Medi terranean week, the Saturday afternoon opera braodeaet was "Otello" (Terdi again) with its setting on the again strife torn island of Qyprus I Lincoln's birthday was an office holiday but I vent in for a few hours after getting my belated flu booster ehot in the morning, I had planned to do some shopping (the lone Uoired dress and hat plus kitchen fiberglass curtain) but a cold and strong wind deterred me* As it was the shot gave me a general laeeitude and stuffy head which lasted for several days* Yesterday I unpacked a wooden box marked china and glass from storage, The ieswspapes used were September, 1940 so I imagine my grandmothers gold encrusted crystal and Dresden pierced edge take plates were patked away before we first put the Bayport house up for summer rental* To my horror the first little bundle unwrapped was a broken plate, the three major pieces each in a separate fold, then I was mystified that the paper was dated April 1952 % Did someone examine the contents, break a plate and return the pieces? A hasty examination does not seem probable tlmt this dozenth plate can be restored* I am sorry to say that three of the bowls of the stemmed goblets were shattered, but the water tumblers and what we now call fruit juice glasses were all intact* I wonder what my grandmother used them for, Mother had them for eider at winter holiday dinners* So often it is the "beet" things that survive and I would have been more interested in every day wear at thie point, but only for the sake of variety as there is more than enough of everything already on hand for my simple needs* When I shall ever get around to any entertaining here is a very open question f An occasional brilliantly sunny day breaks the general weather pattern. It starts/9 to snow at nine last night, small purposeful flakes which later turned to rain ^v,/ ' V T i C 3aiVv / { 'h o l l o p * Washington's Birthday 1964 Althodgfe a check was sashed for shopping money yesterday another Saturday is passing without the purshass of dressy hat, ete* It is a beautiful brigit and sunny day though well below freexing with a gusty wind, but I had a misadventure last night and need a weekend of recuperation* I'll try to give the picture with broad strokes* First, it has been a tough week and I. was very tired. Determination to write at least one letter after dinner went by the board* By nine o'clock I gave up reading feeling slightly odd and went to bed* At midnight I awoke feeling even odder and thought sitting up awhile in the living room would help* It didn't and I started back to bed only to find myself on the living room floor, having neatly avoided hitting my head on the magazine bench9 but feeling very comfortable spread eagled on the carpet and appre ciating the fresh cool air* Bed again seemed the solution, but a detour to the kitchen to leave an ashtray led to a small upchucking and another fall* This also accomplished without hitting anything though the tail of my spine began resenting contact with the floor* Then the explantion--a gas jet turned on enough to account for it all but iz>* auffiently to let the pilot light work* (I must investigate that burner to be sure nothing is the matter with it and somehow reinforee what X thought was a firm habit of checking the petcocks whenever I leave the kitchen*) Since I was not aceidently as phyxiated last eight the conclusion is I must have been born to be hanged I Monday night Maria gave me a superb coq au vin for dinner, from a recipe she had learned from the French ehef of the friend with whom she stayed at Palm Beach during her highly satisfactory exhibition* Alas, I only looked at a couple of the many e* eellexrt reviews and stories before Hank came in after stage amgj| the arrival by hip of an ancient column from a Jordanian temple* Fair officials, the ambassador of Jordan, etc*, etc* complete with news men and TV equipment greeted the column, which after the Fair will be the gift of Jordan to the City of New York end remain at Flushing Meadows park* One wonders if eventually the name will not become Robert Moses Park \ As usual Maria and Hank had been skiing over the weeJe nd near Manchester and woke Sunday morning to a heavy snow storm just as pmeviously forecast* 18hy they waited sec* eral hours to start back is not elear, but perhaps it was to give the plows a chance to ele&r the roads* At any rate the plowmen seemed all to have overslept or gone to church* Heavy snow was blown by a high wind and they had a dreadful time trying to tee the road,avoid other cars and snow banks until they were well into Westchester* The trip took twice the usual time and according to Hank took a year off the life of the oar* No-one mentioned what it did to them I We did not get much of that storm but on Tuesday about nine in the evening another visit us for about 30 hours* It was good to know that the OTR snadwiehes and goodies had arrived at the office shortly before I did having eoane over 40 miles from Mahopae in Putnam County* Of course, the audience stayed away in droves and at St 30 the chair* man telephoned she had a heavy cold and did so want to fly to Mexico on Saturday that she wanted to stay in bed* Could I get someone to substitute for her? Woman after woman turned me down when 1 could even get through to one --they all seemed to be re making their lives on the telephone* I got four busy tones on Mrs* Hitchcock's line, meanwhile trying other people's, before reaching her and having to promise to write complete script for her use* Now I am chewing my nails waiting for an answer from General Griffith, supposedly in New Delhi, on my invitation to be speaker at the 16th and closing meeting of the season* The March 20th luncheon at the Waldrof for Dulles has picked up on reservations and I feel a little eawier about it, but disturbed at thev insistence of much more money must be made in a May luncheon* Thursday I had to draft an invitation to Willie Brandt, Mayor of Berlin* In examining my records on him, it developes he is a bastard and uses a "pen name" he adopted in Soandixavia during the war, his birth record in the Lubeek Town Hall would chow him as neither a Willie or a Brandt* Meanwhile, too many little people doing clerical details and some of higher rank perform with such a lackadaisal manner as to ereate more snafus and frustrations than I should be subjected to* A week of silence has passed since I made my pitch to Hayes for an increase in alary# I don't expect to get it, but shall soon lave to re mind him, for it is part of my plan for graceful departure from FPA* February 26, 1964 Spasi&l Bulletin Subject* James Christopher Marra Having just finished a fine, informative chat with Sal, I rush to share with you the bits and pieces. Fran and JC* both had a good, night last night and after seeing them both Shree times, Sal expects they will have another good rest tonight and will go home about ten on Saturday morning, liIthtele boys are "eestatio" as thsy all minted a brother, except Johnny, who from time to tiae thought it would be nice to hare a "Boy-sister", They are vi-j Vior-T*v with Martha'a experienced oare and seeing Cleve, iAio S- 3 - , ::^fm^-:^rstay until bedttae. when he goes to his own house. Fran decided on Monday evsting that she would not last until Leap Tear lay and the doctor agree to meet her at South Nassau Coamumites Hospital in Oceanside, where he advised her to have a nice sleep and he would be prepared to action on Tuesday# (First night in a strange bed wasprobably not as restful for her a3 might have been, but it was not until midday Tuesday they telephoned for Sal, I failed to get either hour of delivery or time in delivery room, ) Birth weight ws i&ft'f ^ pounds 14 ot, III Fran has held JVC* several times is content, looks well and is reconciled to another son--the rsconcilsd is my word not SalTa, The Marra grandparents have been to see them, So far CI eve has not taken a pioture cf this new seventh grandchild, Sal went to school today and handed out the tradition* &1 ciagrs* He thinks he got more takers because of the generally held and probably erroneous new theory cigars are not as harmful as oigasettes* As you will recall Fran has always been to Mercy Hospital after Berry, and liked the nursing care of the sisters# Unfortunately the nuns are in a reorganisation now withdrawn from nursing and devoting themselves to administration of "the hospital , which in the transition is reputed not to be well staffed with nurses* Hence I asked partiiularly about South Nassau# Fran is comfortable there, likee the etaff, food and pleased with the abundant care and ateention she has had I apologise for the typographical errors, I went to a reception and film on the American Farm School in Greece, happily in the office building and did not reach home until after eight. Talked to Sal about nine after having gotten no answer at Hilldide# This was interrupted by a very long call from Vera, whose deep depression of the past three months has deeply concerned me. Although she thinks she has turned the corner today, it was a very long conversation* Now I must go to bed, I address the envelopes tomorrow morning and mail early* f\ T , fir T Stony Brook February 29, 1964 Sma.l.l. compact a0rn,di rTaetthheerr.ha rd snow fnloarktehsea b3 et gawnintdo.falBly tasheItilmeeftI the office at 3:45 ye _ it had become a real storm and had already reached stony Brook at . the wood3 and at road edges. It step- opoevderseodmeatlilmeofbetfhoere dawn having ddeeppoossiitteedd oovveerr^fo^u^ r i^ nchesLawrikt,,h maondrehawdhe* ree tfhierrset Pheardfboeremnandcreifltaisntgn.igBhitl, we shaiijo^toon^ igh^ t. Thefaacroesdtutmheesydmiidghntot com from Philadelphia un would have been a pity as Bill's have to a ppear in modern re over breakfast this morning. Fred will is magnificent from his ^^^^^friflfmatch at St. John's this nmoortnicnogmeaunndtialPelrashtieng Kifle'C evening. By the time he drives p tit-ion at Hew here much 01 Loddon thiswi al fl teprrnooboanbloyr sky> Laat night have melted as there is a brillian blazing fire until time to lock ft the week^s newest That Was" a verfamusing aid irreverent treatment It was such a hit" in Engla nd t^w we have^it^cn^t NBC--actors a nd singers in a fast passed program rib every Johnson down# T-P -t-Mc* q aems disjointed I am listening to "Eugen Oneginft in English wniitghhtLetoinctkientes for "Lohengrin. JustIu'ss^ell!! haUvDeU'Sluea^lalyCthiirneedset^hsaltlre- Bv the wal^ I should report that Cleve assures me natural gas ESS";osflhSValli aea th, folgh discomfort. F the heat pad cleared up the pain at the base of my spi.no ' ^^ j AS the hospital could keep over tonight, she will go homewith James iChtribseteonphaergitrolm,osrhreoww.asThteoyhaavreebebeonthna med Chrisattiinnee formal's mother, henoe the Christopher. Wednesday after the office I wf^h^i^e0^^|elkn^rthhRe^S"-^ V.rSlTLSS2;S&&%SS\S FbaearumtiSfcuhlooplrfoomloltoiwoendfbiylmthmeadperebmyieJriem Traino6r. - There wweerree^l.oovveliyysshw oh te sre laying islands. Deliberay g g ^ ^ Qr ten peopie i was glad to * I"'-1' alTO-.lo. ma.. TOT l.t. alm.r tor ... aTM.. m r;;: fgoortosetvheerahlomsopnitthasl haands decided she from htahe t uunnaalltterearbabilee ppoossi^t^ion seems to gtraln have lost tbe P*er f ^c s . on the household and taken too muu ^receAnutnlty.Marsyu,cvcheisosh\maIkehsamvee more at chagrined than ever at not ler_BeBnetta for their Christmas book tlfthe obrming l^ter he wrote about the Kennedy assissna tion. f )5 > - ^ ~ Z J u < L t (a)lAy &$.' March 7, 1964 /V)4T ' Without any/ proten'sion of imitatin/'g That Was The Weok That .7a3in style or pating I cannot resist th# temptation of tailing this the Week of Whoop-de-do X A letter on Monday reported that Cal is inmobilised in bed again with phlebitis* But sinee the doctor did not hospitalise him, I can only assme thatrest and medication is that is necessary* That and time* Wednesday upon arrival at odfioe, I was told that Teodoro Moseoso, former Director of the Alliance for Progress and our OTH speaker that day had found ths Washington air* port fogged in and was proceeding by train* and would surely arrive by It30, when he was to have met me at 12s 20 and been introduced at one o'eleok* Penn RR reported the St 30 out of Was-iingt<>3 ras due at 12s 20 and an hour out of Wahington was proceeding on time* Knowing he was to have spoken at a high school in the Bronx in the morning I did some research on share the sbhool was and best method of getting there for the benefit of the aide travelling with the Ambassador* They did turn up, despite the confusion in the undei*reeonstructionPenn Station and midday traffic at 12s40* He had his lunch and Mrs, Kirk introduced him at one* Such af his speech as I could listen to rather disap- pointed me with its poor coordination and jerky delivery--but he made a helpful analogy to the Marshall Flan and the differences between European and South American countries* cable Some time during the day we got a from Governing Mayor of West Berlin saying he would like to speak for FPA but on Friday, May 15 instead of one of the dates we had suggestedSo I have been writing the letter of confirmation and beginning to plot format of event, operations timetable, working budget, etc* X only pray these prelimin^ aries don't confuse ms in the last two weeks work on the Allen Dulles luncheon of March 20* This by the way goes rather better than I had dared to hope, though the final days are always hectic* I begin to wonder when I shall ever have time to work on the income tax and the long list of things to do here, to say nothing of the OTR Governing Committee meeting and the solicitation of renewals from the 775 memebers for next season I Wednesday morning Aunt Mary telephoned me in a very tired voice to say everything had suddenly changed and Louise was flying alone on the ten o'clock BOAC jet to London * A limousine would take her, the cook and the nurse to Kennedy Airport* No, Aunt Mary did not want me to stay with her during the evening, but would take a sleeping pill* All I could do was call BCAC and put Louise on the list for early embarkation with the YIPs, unaccompanied children etc* and special stewardess attention enroute* Also call Louise later to report this and wish her a comfortable flight*she had never flown anywhere* Friday before flying to Boston for a Radcliff Instute Committee meeting Vera asked me to join her upon he* return for dinner* She is much better, but still does not like to be alone and Bill, who had been expected, suddenly had an out of towner to see* She and I had a delightful evening, but I was not home while Hank Harris was trying to reach me* World's Fair business was suddenly taking him to Conarcky via Lisbon when he called me from Vermont this mronign* Although ho did not know his flight number on PanAm, nor arrival hour in Lisbon, nor how long he would be there Monday morning could I find tut and sail Larry wherever he was and see if he eould get to Lisbon* No, it had not secured to Hank that if stop over were short, a telephons conversation from Lisbon might be more satisfactory* Half an hour's telephoning produced flight number and the fact that there would only be an hour between arrival and departure on another flight* It took two hours to get through to Veles-Mal&ga and track Larry down* and the connection via Madrid was not very good requiring much repetition. He opted for Hank to phone him as it is 800 Km* from -there to Lisbon and hard driving* (I had already confirmed my suspicion of no direct air travel, that Iberian has only three flights a week Madrid to Lisbon with Mon day's leaving at the time he should be in Lisbon, could be done by Sunday afternoon flight from Madrid and it was already 7 P*M* in Malaga Saturday when we talked* ) It was nice to talk with him, ti ough I obviously did not indulge in extra conversation I Sinee Judith Listowel with a fine Florida tan was hex* for lunch and her first im paction of the apartment, which she thoroughly approved of* She is flying back to Londen Monday night* She let me read a fascinating letter from a hard headed Soots in Bar as Salam from which it is clear the Tanganyika mutiny was saussd by their own disgruntled army & Nyere's inability to make a quick decision, being t^o contemplative for that * March 15, 1964 r Lert it get souaezfd out ar*n, th* Lea" Yer D*y ^erfon&anee of Jena Anouilh's"The Lark" wea excellent and deserved a much larger audience , held down perhaps. by enow during the previous night. Bill's interoretation of The Inquisitor was sinieter and impressive, aided bv the sneer with which he delivered his early lines* As the eBfstage flames, which in the and consumed Joan, gave a res* glow to his white over garment the Inquisitor could take it no longer **d with his most human and dramatistline fled from the stage. The stage was a complicated seHes of platforms and atera,,u~en which the east had to dind their wav in the dark ae instead of using 1he curtain the etage limits went on to show -the characters in that scene in rlace* An unnecessary hasard to ray mind and although Bill said people did fail in taking or leaving their * ol*ea, ne one came to great harm. The Joan was sone4b, in fast the whole cast was a credit to themselves and the school. Although this did not appear in the rlay, it did rise in my w*nd--^whatever did the imbecile Dauohin think to accomplish bv annulling Jean's sentence 25 veers after her death? Thie alas is t^ie season when a familv health note is necessary# Gal has returned-> to Lockheed on a restricted work schedule# Thelma has an ulcer en her lower left eye lid, which alee s#m to be responding to medicine. Fran and J.G are doing beautifully out tha day thev got home from the hec^ital Bobby came down with a hard case of German, maasle*. (Any day now we shall see how many of his brothers he infected.) Meanwhile Martha has had a tenacious type of virus, which she seems unable to riiake entirely* Sal had a "short flu" end Johnny has been miserable with an earache, Mondav I had enough manifestation of cold to decline Maria's dinner invitation# Just ae well ae I had two-- degrees of temperature, at night* With consistent subnormal temperature in the morn ing, I have gone to the office but left a It 30 on Friday in the hone that two and a half days of extra rest would null me out of this nuisance. "Hie office is unusually busy with to days of special conferences for people from across the country. Formerly I put an enormous amount of time into this sort of thing, but now I do not even have to attend Just as well as we have gone oyar 900 on the " Allies March 20 Waldorf and I have managed to work out the budget, operational schedule etc for the Brandt, Mav 15 luncheon at the Americana .* Wedneaday we had 200 to hear John Gates in the final session of the OTR Series * He delighted the audience and I can only orav that Penn Haile will do # well for the season closing of Scries B this Wednesday. Then I shall only have to wrork on the Governing Committee meeting and the report#--I managed to push that off until A^ril 8. Then comes the promotion of members for the 196465 season to be fitted in with the Brandt luncheon# Forsythia picked two weeks ago with several inches of snow on the ground has been bloeming on the red lacquer chest with most generous profusion# Bill noticed it yes terday morning when he stopped with two of his friends to discuss w*>at thev ebould do on this unexpected day in town# As my intelligence was comparable to that of a brassmonkey, I am afraid I let -them down. I simply could not co^a *th either luncheon or dinner for them nor have the wit to give Bill money to treat his friends. After scann ing the NEW YORKER I merely telephoned the Rivoll to see if tickets were avail able for the "Cleooatria" matinee. Isn't it nice Oueen Elizabeth had a third eon? If all goes well Fran will have her fifth boy baptized this afternoon* Last Sunday evening while doing my anc--eye^.. practice reading I experienced ten minutes of euphoria. Suddenly I became aware of; seeing the ^faole page unclouded, the gr*at-crreat aunt's framed embroidery on the wall opposite me and the apartment house on the corner both unm&rred# I was about to enter the precise moment in my dia^v when I realized that the oateh had slipped and I hadbeen ueing the good eye# It was a most blissful feeling while it lasted, though*. Forgive me for baing so dull. I'll try to mako up for this next weekend# I plan on going Thursday the 26th for Easter with Aunt Annie, so don't expect a chitchat two wreke hence# I have not quite figured out when the income tax will be done* So far I have onlv roughed out the income, but not deductions. The carving is almost the wo: 'm?T7'^ * * * 7 ' April 1, 1964 Aunt Annie arrived from Albany on Friday and unlatched me from the hospital on Easter morning* As she had already taken an armload of books and three plants, down after Friday end Saturday visitations, vre managed auite easily to get ourselves and the remainder of the "loot" into a taxi and arrive in the cold, windy sunshine*.. Thank heavens for Blue Cross--the total bill was $417, of which I only had to pay about $40, Between x-rays, electric cardiograms, basal metabolism and blood tests galore Dr Scanlan is quite content that I do not have either TB nor canoer and. only require a lot of rest and building ur>. I'll need one more x-ray in her office be fore she is *tisfiad that the patch on my lung has completely cleared UP* Aunt Annie* s one ide- is that I em to "get seme mt on my bones * end in addition to thrts hearty meels a dv gives me "elevenses" and afternoon tea* I'm UD for meals and then back t bed, but this afternoon I really dressed and shall stav UP until after dinner, Seme talk of our going awav for a weekbefore I go back to the office but nothing mav come of it* Convalescence from pneumonia seams to go at a snail's race and I did myself no good bv working through the 18#*, Mv little experience with illness mekes me impatient with the tendency to tire, Although Midtown has only 60 bads, it is a pleasant hospital and its good staff gave me excellent care. Mv favorite was an Irish aide from the Connemarrs country , whose cheery m*nner, brisk efficiency and Pleasing s"*sch enchanted me* She was de lighted that I knew end admired her home. The hospital was lamost too handy to the office as I had ae mnnv as five caller* in a day* The FPA staff overwhelmed me. with flowers, gifties and cords. I got an inferiority complex--as *o mnv oeo^e found eo much more attractive cards than I oyer have, Martha and Cleye. Mollv end Jim come to see me and telcHhonM frequently. Fred* verv handsome ich usually entertain her* On Mondav Dr* Scanlan thought it would be nice for me to take a four week cruise in the Caribbean, but settled for a oart time FPA schedule with consultation and three injections a week in her office. I try to concentrate on my own immediate muttons in the offices the Brandt luncheon of May 15, renwl of OTR membershirts, organisation of its Committee structure end two new projects thev want to inaugurate ndxt season* At the same time I am dragged into initial rlans for the Bif Waldorf luncheons of 1964-65 and having tied UP the NBC new* correspondents for January 12 and am negotiating for Ladv Jackson (Barbara Ward) in November* For the present I em keeping out of the aftermath of the resignation of on* of the FPA vice presidentsDick Winslow# It is not clear that his impending departure is wholly voluntary . Whn I made what I trust were appropriate noises to him there was no intimation of what he would be going on to nor how mnv of"hie oedole" would also be leaving. Wednesday John and Ruth Wheeler-Bennett had me for lunch at the Knickerbocker Club. I was touched that they had me alone as a partv of six or eight would be rather wearying and not nearly as informative and pleasant for me. He looks so much better than at Garsington in July that I asked if his complexion was his own or some sort of Elisabeth Arden foundation cream for men. Wonderful news that they have de cided not to asll the Manor after all. A staunch Conservative John thinks there is still a chance that thev mav win the election, but save frankly that 12 veers is a long time for one Party to stay in power. While it is nice to have one's own opinion confirmed he considers Harold Wilson a dreadful man and is fearful of some of Labour Party proposals in the event of their coming to power. We admit we like the past better than the present, let alone the future S Ruth looks splendidly and is busy in the shoos and the succession of dinner parties laid on for thsm before thev even arrived Tuesday . They sail on Thursday --can I see them again? I hope so, but fear not. The Fair has been so fullv covered bv thi "sonmunications media" that it is suoej> fluous for me to say it wme chill and rainv for the official opening of 85$ of the exhibits. Hank has promised me a personally conducted tour on a day of my choice, but we have not even spoken on the telephone for a week. He must be badgered beyond endur ance by the problems of the countries for ^iose exhibits he arranged. The Lebanese packed badlv and bleat about breakage -- yet stuff has come from ell over the world safelv. The Jews are pretesting the Jordanian mural as offensive to Israel and so on. At least Moses eesms to have won his fight with A & P and at the eleventh hour gotten ouipment from the American Flagpole Company, which will conceal Ann Page's rolls or whatever from feirgoers* Jay and Mr. Johnson, president of Flagpole, went to Flushing Meadows several days early in the week leaving Stony Brook at 5t30 in the morning* No deubt there were scores of crash program during those nasty wet oreooening days * Gene Smith's "When the Cheering Stopped" has held me spell bound--fascinating revelations to me about Woodrow Wilson's life. I em appalled at what seems to me to have been the attitude that we won the war and that Wilson was going to straighten ut the resulting problems of the upheaval singlehanded. When Henry Cabot Lodge a^d the Senate blocked our entry into the League of Nations after WWIIson had signed the Covenant, I should have thought Europe and rest of the world would have made us stick to our own backyard for at least a century . All vsrv confusing. % >r \ w y A\+T f~ ' Mi' May 2, 1964 Hooray--the sun shines today, Ifaough I'm gLad for hBat in the apartmsnt# The last week of April brou^ii humidity (93$ and so much rain that the Croton reservoir is full* May's advmt was almost without drizzle. Both of the two previous Fridays I came apart at the seams* Yesterday I was only plenty tired, wfa Martha phoned this morning asking me to enjoy their sunshine today and tomorrow I had to decline* Have already done a two machine washing and am in the midst of a thorough oleaning with extra writing laid on for tomorrow* Last Sunday Aunt Annie telephoned to see how I was getting on alone* It was good to tell her to unpaek her bag, that while I missed her company and ministra# tions I was and still am making out all right* Soon after she had settled in on Friday she had a phone call-- Voice--"Do you remember me, Joe Brady?" , admitting she did not the voice eontinued " Aunt Annie, New York! "* Then she recalled Fred's friend, tfio had helped bring my furniture here during the Christmas holiday* He was down from Niagara for a college conference and wanted to see her* The result was he, another boy and a girl called on her and they all went out to dinner* Afterward Joe took her home and stayed until 8|45 when ho should have been at a conference session* It was then revealed that in the manner of the young he had only been introduced to her as "Aunt Annie" and did not know her surname, but undaunted at not finding either Pratt or Brett in the Albany telephone book had called Molly in Stony Brook I He was so interested Am her horse brass collection that he is going to keep an eye out for them* I hope he en- Joyed the evening as much as die did* We are all very fond of Joe, even if he did for sake Fred this Easter in their annual opening of the swioming season I On April 29 Hayes came to me in response to my February 13 request for a raise, which I had expected him to deny and give grounds for my resignation on May 1 without putting it on my basic complaints against management or seeming capricious. "They" have decided Yisv of my long service, devotion to duty, etc* to put me on a 10/a increased salary as of May 1st, (By the time tax, hospitalization and other deductions are made I may got $10 a week more "take-home-pay"*) By talking about my successor we each made it clear that I'll be leaving May 1965* I couldn't resist saying that had I not been so overwork ed as to be unable to resign giving decent notice I'd have left a year ago* Incidentally he took three weeks to get around to telling me after the decision was made on the ex cuse I was so little in the office* Nason would have written or telephoned the day after fche decision. So I have outsmarted myself and fallen into the trap I thou^x I had dug for him in February* Although I'll work like a beaver for the next year, I AM happy to fin* ishy with the FPA to a logical conclusion* Wednesday was also the day Martha and Cleve went to the World's Fair on Rotary Day in an almost steady downpour. They did enjoy it and managed two viewing3 of the Pieta, which is much more impreasively shown than kn P.ome Cleve reports, American Roman Catho lics are now protesting the showing of a Madona in the Sudan pavillion on the grounds th*t the Sudanese are currently mistreating missionaries in their country* "Peace Through Understanding" may be the Fair's slogan, yet there seems to be a lot of backbiting at Flushing Meadow*. I hear that there ws so much work for Fair personnel to do in the last days that several rooms were rented in a nearbv motel for staff to catch a few hours rest during the around the clock grind* Last weekend I Just was not ut> to having the Wheeler Bennetts for luncheon or tea even at the Club. * the.r T/r. staying with the Patrick Dat * tl*rhone lines are often busy* Cray, the Embassy butler, is a lamb arH usuallv knew* the hour of the exrooted return of either of "her ladyships". Finally I got Ruth Tuesday after we had each gotten home for our afternoon rest. Alas, thev could not see me Wednesday as that sailing dv, not Thursdav as I had understood and not bothered to verify. John is not currently writing a book, but v/hen he does it is bv long hand. My hat off to his secretaries--there are still words I cannot read in his latter to me about the death of JFK* maybe he wrote it in bed when he could not sleep*.he frequently doesn't* The aoar$i^n+> superintendent, who also is a construction worker fell and broke his back yesterday. 4 series of his friends are coming in to help his wife here. One wonders how long this arrangement can last# The azalea Vera sent ine in the hospital still blooms..definitely a record in my experience. A 6 3 uXi'q t ^v^-iUyVf l&iiQjh t IcVOly A>Y Tt May TO, 1964 Such a treat --last night I went to Vera1s for dinner a deaux--the first time I have been out in the evening since earlv March- Tomorrow I may go to a cocktail rarty at the British Embassy, another first in ages* But come the time I may skip it* All depends on how things go in the office during the day- I have been working longer hours and not being too done in bv The evening is dedicated to the left eve onlv reading a the cloud is still ihere and for about a month I did skip the tract ice. Thelma and Gel re starting for New York today on their hoidav greeting to arrive at Freetort on Tuesday, They mav be here for dinner on Wednesday as Martha nd CI eve have to be at dinnera both that evening and Saturday. (This is a minor earning that I mav not be very good at writing as the Georgia family will be here nyer two weeks-) It is ages since they were in New York and sill also want to see the Fair n well changes in New York. Mollv and Jim were going to the Fair today as the Fort Schuyler Pershing Rifles are competing in a trick dyil^ team competition. Mee, Fred cut hie hnd this week on hie bavonet --not oadly but enough to make it unwise for him to participate. Over. 1,300 people have raid the $20 per cover for the Willv Brandt luncheon on Fri*v nd I rticioate a orettv hectic week and mv own need to collarse for 04 hours- Some of the ramifications of official Germans and cress, radio and TV coverage hold, th- potential of making things difficult- A few days ago I dis covered that no one had invited Mrs- Lucius Clay to be our guest at the luncheon. Prettv shabbv when,he its reducing Brandt, but symtoroatic of manners around the FFS. Fortunately I was able to smooth it out by exolaining that I had been in hospital and she is coming. Obviously the fundraisers -re enchanted at the wrospacts of a fat haul. There were 25 days of rain in *oril, pwobablv a record- So far May has given us some clouds, but I think no rain so far. Two davs it has been over 80 r/a but comparatively low humidity, so not auite all my starch wilted. ^ Yesterday was slated for clothes shopping, but betwsen th* heat and having out in severs! over long days in the office, I did verv little and ataved IN until time to go UP to 96th Street-Vicki *-?. rr1* posthumusiv ished autobiography makes in teresting if confusing reading. She paid no heed to time and space vd+h resulting poor organisation of material. (An agent presented the mms to Funk & yv/agna? " apd then when the editor wanted to check certain points said that Dr. Richard Lert (husband) and neither of the two sons were to be approached at all. )- She - began by saying one can live down any number of flor* but never a *ucceas, that sis could not even order fertilizer for her Holf^ood garden without being askd about "Gpend Hotel" --alwavs the movie and not the book or nlav. Bv the time I em70 I shall have forgotten the remark she attributes to Princess Pauline Metiernick upon be*ng congratulated on hep 70th birthdavi "Mv de ir, seventy 'sn't old for cathedral- But for a woman -h, mon D^eu." At last I have gotten around to reading Richard MsKenna1s 1963 Happer Prize Novel "The Send Pebbles"--story of a weird US New gunboat "shwoing the flaw" in Hunn Province in the mid 20 8 ... nd culminating with the rape of Nankin? as Chiang Kai Shak and the Kuomirrtancr e^enfc down fpom the interior in the Nationalist revolution. Alti ough the s. orv daals with the San pblofs dutv upr*ver from Hankow, I did spend in that citv an'* several more on e river boat from there to Shanghai. S ight con- tramne when I appeared on board caused by the "E" in name name being taken to indicate an4 - cabin being assigned to Bill Wed-kind-~d me- Instead^of baing ehO^n to my cbir upon aprival about ! ven P.M. the ENGLISH CST> ai me to look down n the Chinese deck passengers, ^ile ^ f into tha chert rm leaving his c-bin for v use. A few night- later ter * . veiling O f bridge, h eagain escorted t o "mv" cabint o hewm e T 5 S , ticn for the rifle clipped ov-r the berth w~a s bandit* might attempt / Perhaps with a paragraph at a time last weekend's and next ofaitehat may be written* Although 2 took dress, purse and shoes to the office for the cocktail party at the British Embassy I was too tired to go. The pace In the office for the two weeks proceeding the Brandt luncheon was very strenuous* Result Dr. Scanlan scolded me day before yesterday. Nevertheless both stethoscope and flouroscope showed continued shrinking of the patch and we hope an 20*ray in a month will reveal complete clearance. Meanwhile I am enjoined to strict adherence to the parttime work schedule and continued injections. Now 1 must get along with seeing the dentist and the oculist and what the latter has to say about the still present cloud in my left eye. The Brandt luncheon was a great success after more than usual hoohaws. In March he acknowledged our request for his English text on May 11 ... it was picked from the Waldorf at 6s 30 the afternoon of the 14th* I dread the bill for its multilithing on overtime at the processing shop we use* On Tuesday morning we learned through the oasualness of a German Consulate press release that the Mayor would arrive on Wednesday afternoon instead of Thursday as previously arranged* Great flap to find someone to do the airport greeting as Hayes was tied up* In the absenee of the chairman of the FPA Board, Bill Ly&* gate went as our chairman cf executive committee, supported by Thetis Reavis of our Public Information department as the eager beaver in the Consulate had set up a press conference in the International Arrivals Building* At least I was smart enough to deal myself out of that. At two o* clock Lufthansa reported estimated time of arrived at 5* 20 with good possibility of getting in at five, so I waved our greeters off in the rented Cadillac at four. The plane was two hours late and -that fool at the Consulate strung the press con ference on for an hour. The Germans who had collected some Mercedes, and not enough of them, ## were glad enough to let Brandt and the Acting Consul General go baek to town with Lydgate in our Cadillac. It must have been two in the morning by Mayor Brandt* s watch when he was delivered at the Waldorf Towers. Thelma and Cal arrived from Georgia on Tuesday to stay with Martha and Clave* I could to/ only speak them on the telephone until I went to Freeport on Saturday. It is wonderful to find them both looking so well and very eager to catch up on changes since they were last here 11 years ago. They drove me to Stony Brook through the magnificent lush spring country, very beautiful in the wooded areas with dogwood and azaleas in residential parts. Chestnuts with their gleaming white candles, and at Jones Beaoh patches of beach plum bloom made drifts of soft cotton wool while in open spaces especially at Captree huge seagulls beautifully to its and grey stood ltthargicly in their nesting areas, basking in the warm sun. It was all lovely* Diane and Jay, who now talk of an August wedding, were at dinner with us, though Fred had the duty at the Fort and Bill was on a Thespian Society junket. Thelma and Cal had moonlight for their trip back to Freeport. May 23 though I hoped to be sooner/ Molly and Jim drove me to Freeport for a midafternoon dinner and then Thelma and Cal brought me back to town to see the apartment and look about at changes in the city. We came by way of the World's Fair on the L.I. Expressway which on a viaduct cuts across the buildings, many of which are indeed fantastic flights of fancy, The Elgian Village is not yet CQmolete and I hear almost daily on the radio of new buildings and pavilions being opened. The s"bwav and LIRR vie with one another for transporting fair goers, the city Is filled with special buses going there as well as chartered buses hauling people from Jersey. For $7.50 one can make the round trio by hydrofoil from the foot of East 25th Street. Gradually w desk is being cleared of the Brandt luncheon and I am busy digging up materail for the OTR Sneakers Committee meeting on Wednesday* also prboeedures for a possible experimental pair of late afternoon with cocktails and sneaker for the Young Marrieds. "Togetherness" seems to have been revived ! Last Wednesday I stayed for an FPA Board- Associates dinner after which Paul Hoffman sroke. He is very canny in com bining solid information about the 151 projects his Special United Nations Fund has in underdeveloped countries with flashes of humor, Pat phrases like "Billions for bullets and pennies for peace." Thursday I stopped at the Methodists* reception for Vera unveiling a pamphlet she wrote for them on the U.N. and had a chance to congratulate her on the birth of her granddaughter born that noon. Yesterday 4 today very hot. Tomorrow to Freeport. ^4c P\rA(y f) hdli) 7dli) fWy, ^yv^l,k f-^r June Z) 1964 --* V The -weather burets long term forecast for June promised "cooler then normal " Yesterday for a while I yearned for my 64tli Street fireplace and the proprietor of the shoo where I buy carda end books geniellv suggested we would have snow last night* The rain of the late afternoon confined me to the local errands instead of getting my fur coat over to storage. But things were accomplished--the big suit case was NICKED UP after repairs caused bv Air France last summer*s disengaging the frame* It carried home a drip-dry in ouce and red nurchased at Blomingdale* a and a, Foretman wool suit in a ersy nd white birdsey# weave- The latter came frm a shoo I steered into when no bus was in s* ght for the trir downtown from 59th St* and will serve me well I think. Incidently, the owner told me that the Union had just completed a new contract giving garment worVers a 20% wage increase. He calculates this will add about $10 to the price of each suit beginning with the autumn shiomenta. In the effcet*, noon I brushed, moth-rroofed and stowed in the clastic boes most of my wool ana* Friday it took forever to get up to 165bh Street.to see Dr. Spelter. He is rleased with the eve and suggested an aye "tonic " called Visine, which he use* himself* No promise as to clearing of my vision and renewed satisfaction that August action prevented total loss of vision* With great gentility he continuee to associate me with that very haopv situation* I am to see him again in four months* T^e FPA ha decided that the health of its administrative staff is im portant, so I sr*nd the dev of June 16th at the Life Extension Institute getting their "comprehensive test" and expect to leve in a high state of rdio-activity. * Already I have had so many arrays that I avoid close proximity to Gelger counters t Thursday Vera gave a bye-bye dinner for Gfwsn Craws, her former FPA helper and my travelling companion on UN charter flight a. It was delightful evening, though our common concern about the dreadful tvrhoid epidemic in Scotland started a c-mratgo to get her innoculated before her Saturday departure. I urged her to ait a^d have it done by -fee National Health Service in London on Monday* Last Sunday afternoon I went UP to see Aunt Mary, VHO was in fine form, lent me the new Elizabeth Goudge book with the quaint title "The Scent of Water" and gave me "The Dtv They Shook the Plum Tre8".*the story of the grim massing and the final dispersal of Hetty Green*s fortune* (Thursday nieht w^sn Charles Bushong brought me home I discovered that he too was looking forward to reading it when his hectic job ae assistant Dean of Men at NYU permitted*) Both Aunt Marv and I were impressed with the long lines at IBM headquarters waiting to see the JFK memora bilia, includ ng the rooking chair# Sunday afternoon the line, four abreast stretched a third of the block down Madison and clear back to Fifth Avenue* Kiere were many children and quite a few Negroes, but I thought a really representative cross section of Nsw York. Eisenhower's role in Republican politics seems so muzzy to me that I wonder if he understands the situation* Even the nomination of Gdldwater scares me* But then I an troubled about the developing situations in Vietnam, South Korea, Cyprus and so on* There is relief in the speedy and smooth manner in which India hhas elected its now Prime Minister, though I hope they get over the notion of mainwg Indira Gandhi the Foreign Minister* Seem* nyVrp this i* beine rushed col.sly because she is Nehru's daughter. Granted it is a distinguished, family with her grandfather as well as her father having toiled for independence and then betterment of the new nation* Anyway I should give my final thanks to Nehru both for having received me in Allahabad and arranging for my 20 minute private conversation with Gandhi in Agra back in 1929* June 15, 1964 wtl- *tr, . 7 Thursday night drooping off to sleep I was conscious of the Fire Department hoard ing ut> Third Ave, and after becoing louder of sadden silence This seemed worthy of investigation and so it was* The extension ladder vehicle was directly under my living room window, hose cart, ate* filled in soacc back to Third and herpv day, several more- ... pieces had entered the block against traffic from Lexington and gave us full street of red fire wagons and black oil skinned firemen! The latter were pouring through the open door of $159 with hose, roles, exes. Three or four non-uniformed men wandered about the second floor living room with high balls. Then the oilskins showed UP on the roof . as thev naked about with electric torches looking for the fire* Satisfying themselves L. there was no business thev started to troop back to their several vehicles. Just as the driver of the long truck under my window gave a merry "All aboard" to his crew, I noticed that on of the free standing flambeaux on the roof had been relighted on the roof a*d the briek breeze made a foot long streamer of flame. With great restraint I did not call down to the firemen that their "fire" was again burning brightlv I Friday morning as I began breakfast a very fat workman with an equally fat cigar -in his mouth rang my bell and announced he had come to fix the kitchen floor (a job t>ro>mised in November), A haoov surorisa. I finished breakfast and oacking for Stony Brook and left while the first laver was drying and he was working in another apartment. At the office I found a note from Hank with two tickets for a aoecial perfomrance of the ... Bavanihan Philippine Dance Comarnv followed bv a resection giv en bv the Ambassador to . the UN and the Consul-General in honor of Philippine Independence Dav that nigit. I had enjoved this trooc a vear ago *rd was enormously anxious to see the N,Y, State Theatre designed bv Philia Johnson* Honing that we could see Bill in "Come Back, Little Shaba" Saturday night instead of Friday, I phoned to delav mv arrival at Stony Brook and got Vera Dean to go with me to the Filiooino "do". (Unfortunately Fred#s birthday dinner had been planned for Saturday night and the plav going could not be changed, I was dis appointed , but Bill gently said "I onlv had a small cart"* The special gala cerforaance was not as interesting to me as the sequBnce of dances reeresentlng the culture and hit^ torv of the primitive tribes, the Moslems in the south and the Spanish influence. However the costumes were sumotious and vibrantly colorful with more sequined and trained ball gowns thn peasant garb. The audience was most interesting with many Filipino women Adih . upstanding "butterfly si eavesM. Even American men wore the handsomely embroidered thin lawn white dinner jackets looking not unlike pajama tops. At khe beginning the two nation al anthemns were played exclusively by guitars ard sounded better than I expected. In theirs both Vera and I thought we caught a phrase reminiscent of "Columbia the Gem of the Ocean" --maybe we did as I have since learned they call the Philippines "Pearl of the Orient". June 377 Oh, what a day I had yesterday. Without so much as a sic a water passing my lips after the previous midnight, I went to the Life Extension Institute for a 10:30 appoint ment. In some ways it reminded me of the jury duty of a year ago. The main reception room was pleasnater and less populous than the Court1 s fish pool but during the next four and a half hours I returned there to continue filling out forms and waiting until the next testing team was ready for me. It was exceedingly well organized and included repetions of tests done in August and April such as electrocardiogram, blood test, x-ray of heart and lungs, complete physical examination plus new thing3 such as the x-rays of stomach and uupper intestines filled with strawBerrv tinted barium and a proctosigmoidoscopy examination (description upon reauest by the ignorant like me). I staggered out at three of clock. Next Tuesday I go back for a consultation and the collection of prints and re ports which then must be gone over by Drs. Scanlan and Wilmot. Is it necessary to confess that I did not return to the office 1 In a pleasanter vein the trip to Stony Brook on Saturday began in a drizzle but ras gc nice. In the afternoon I did a bit of rock garden weeding and then went with Jim to the beach to watch ^red water ski frori Jay*^ baot moat ckillfvlly. He loves to bs toiled backward and the change from frontward to backward and reverse is beautiful. He was pleased to ^successfully negotiate backwards on one leg, The late late on water and marsh beautiful. Sunday Jay < Diane took me to see the compact house ihey are buying, I rot scwe snapdragons, pertwlawsu dinwthw* <* petunia? plantef * Ije* *cr frrnt lugast tQelty, ' y, ' June 21, 19.54 Sine I nay not. have the use of a typewriter during Jul*,' tV*3 -is. - ba +hl *hIre'bouts ' UnW1 AUSU3t* m'my maJj#rP096 is to giye"^ plana and Sunday June 28 Lv Kennedy Mr pert 9,25 a.m. yia TransCanada Air Linen flight #621 Ar*# Lontreal at 10>50 and lunch with Evelvn Tudor L^' " " 2>35 "am. Vifl TCA flight $805 (jet) V*nrcuvet at 6,55 p.m. having had dinner between Edmonton 6 Vancouver. Address, care of Mrs. C. F, Harrison, 1872 Fulton Avenue West Vancouver. B.C. Cnd . "% Postage same a,, within the U.S.A. Train mail takes minimum of five davs, air about three. 2rtlLlS2r!#jSvbn v vr'k- da at Kennedy A 7,40 p.m. Vw^A8it5h^0fjdfbrio5nmoncehVrr"ar,,nvcCoarnu8ovdulearnte"t.oolTioarroen'tbouetn1 d *$e5x8c4eet*>t> PPeenn+tiicnt+oZn *a?t*s1 ome coi*ntTtnbabbelvdeterumcind benvetnhdeawfeeawthdearvaandwihthisDhoeuagrlaths .Dewar 4c v -r erenoe WLth **n I She leave- for Mohonk on the 30th! However,I .m going for lunch todav. Madril1eae'bearing^a'"eland oTa^-fr' D f'Wan ^ to both eye end rml.te, The sweet w. !l o!!Sren "m" rff1 caTiar* Wonderful anpeal Z ehorbert. P0or Hank wis SuIEd/JItS "ovel-blue berries coped with oraoge cqming as he wee nutting ice in a glass bV.1?VftlI9d telenho^ ealla-the fitat ask me to pour for mvself ' The Jtto! I dri"k" Suspecting trouble be had to for years, had t^the IntSe TlZ fZZl Kl9Vens (en') *** 1 <* seen ZZlnk>l? the kitchen and I wo njoving the tool L "j9 * " 'Dv tha1: iiMe *** busv in in the green boxes aceelrtM1^1 "tth T Me of white Foreign Minister and Ambassador of Jordsn had W Irtrtad!"" ^ Wenlv the morning end some VIP Nigerians in th* ft*TMTM* ', *?cted to v^it the Fair Saturday arrangements. Mean^lf ZTJlTel ^5 vehicles for a special oartv he w h-JL* u 2, ""f *? ^ * . ftU *Vail*bl* *cort clar to ma. Even if he should turn out tn h +JDbT*v fkould be so important is not ftt the San Francisco Convention ha hTa J* Republican compromise candidate At le-st Hank ^TUtin Ms ^"id ItTT * bin* the **** P^eaidant. thrown from crisis to snfu continuously. Dozensof\hinps^U 2+ f could not even be mentioned X lnS8 1 wanted to ak him about .. . 1t a time ''He poor Joseph Kennedy, a-e h-vins. It i,,+ /i,,. , t at thev are now subjected to the wovrv of Ted^ Il.!a iZV S S9em Mnaibl in a large familv may be taken for granted but +b-il ^ ^ a dul1 momen't L " good -rogno.ia. Our superintendent had be'n w-lkfrg ."little -IT* ZZZZ**" t-1 -nd then this w-k suddenly lost the . .f , d v in th* hosni- "Keer your finger. eroeaed. U" f hla l9ea' ^ dootnr "nlv say V u a great deal even if I 8m a poor correanopdent in the next six weeks. June 24, 1964 BBLLSTIN ON TESTS Yesterday was agin health day. The Life Extension consultation on the basis of test reports was very pleasant. Nothing unpleasant showed up and Dr. Johnson parted from me hoping that he would find me in as good health next year as they did today. He does not mind my being underweight nor with low blood pressure. The choleeteraol is in the normal range, though up from where it was when X got out of Midtown Hospital due to the bacon, eggs, cheese etc.m Johnson says they are now de-emphasizing cholesterol after its period of publicity. I may continue to smoke between 12-20 cigarets a day. He does not recommend playing squash or tennis, but urges me to walk more each day. In the afternoon X saw both Scunlan and Gerry Wllmot, letting them go over the reports of tests. Scanlan chided me for working too hard and thinks I should be sterner and even upon my return to the office avoid all overtime. Gerry who had not gone over me since later Frebruary when she went to Europe found my back and body tone in fine shape. She applauds my taking a rest when X get back to the apartment instead of plunging into some task. 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