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  • of 1966, fostering and promoting the adoption and observance of uniform time within and through­ out the various time zones. The Department works in close cooperation with all the States in an effort to resolve the problems that arise relative to new
  • . B: The fillers. Alsop was the first journalist to report that, and he did it by going around the country and asking questions. This--I think I'm correct--I don't think [William] Westmoreland and company quite realized at that point how pervasive
  • LBJ’s 1968 actions to Nixon’s 1972 actions; LBJ’s 3/31/68 speech and reaction; William Westmoreland and publicity; Creighton Abrams and publicity; Braestrup’s book, Big Story, and reviews of it; TV coverage of Vietnam and Walter Cronkite’s visit
  • Foster Dulles from getting us in a war over Quemoy and Matsu off the China coast. G: I just assumed with Coca-Coca being based there that that would-- LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library
  • of existing and a number of Assistant The functions agency and of and give special agencies. attempts of his people the efforts to foster in devising Ideally and new Because of the special history will circumstances in which it was produced
  • with Yarborough. He said, "I told my staff people, tell him he either rides in the car or he doesn't ride." I said, "Mr. President, it doesn't make any difference." He said, "Well, I just told them to tell him that." The [William] Manchester book [The Death ofa
  • . 11:00 7/23 MNG 42. 11:10 PM. LARTHER DAVIS, 24/N, Fell on broken glass 7/23 ·oGH {CB). (Looter) - lacerated left hand looters in National To Ford Hosp., FAO. WILLIAM MADDEN, MNG, - lacerated PM P.F.C. on broken glass. To Ford Hosp., where
  • the opportunity of the new department. at the ceremonies They include: to introduce Under Secretary Everett Hutchinson The modal Administrators: Federal Aviation Administrator General William F. McKee Coast Guard Commandant Admiral Willard J. Smith Federal
  • of the Suez Crisis. or 1957? It doesn't matter. I'm Was that 1956 But I think it was either in 1957 or 1958 he wrote a letter to [John Foster] Dulles on the whole Middle Eastern question and the Israeli question, which had considerable impact. I'm a bit
  • William Ramsay's laboratory in London. His investi­ gation of the radioactive decomposition of thorium resulted in the discovery of radiothorium as one of the new elements of the thorium series, to which he later (1907) added mesothorium as a predecessor
  • . Senator [Styles] Bridges and Speaker [Joseph William, Jr.] Martin had a luncheon in the Senate for her, and then there was a dinner at the embassy to which I got to go. There were a group of people around Washington in those days who were generally
  • of no effort or no instance in which he used personal position to foster the economic position of the Johnson family. M: Is it true that Mrs. Johnson fairly well ran the radio with help from Mr. Kellam? That she was the main business partner rather than-- B
  • of the members did not ever debate at all with another institution. It so happened that Lyndon paired off with William S-C-H-U-P-P, who later became superintendent of schools at Huldezetta [?] and is now deceased. You'll find Bill Schupp's picture in many
  • of Lyndon Johnson was E. H. Perry, who considered him kind of a foster son and was very enthusiastic about him and thought he was a person who was going to go far. G: Did Perry try to get you to support LBJ, do you remember? N: I was in business
  • program or whatever the hell it was? [Foster Grandparents] But there were a number of them. But I don't remember Wilbur being the author of that. G: Now, Shriver did recommend that year that the Labor Department take over the running of Neighborhood
  • and South Florida. Mrs. Alto Adams is a WILLIAMS from West Florida which will get the Judge some Votes there. ADAMS is not too well known to the Voters since his races (if any) for the Florida State Supreme Court were all easy ones. He is an ELK
  • 21, N. Y., 5/22/64. ZATCKY, Anthony J., 95-48 112th St., RichmondHill 19, B. Y., 5/22/64. William, 716 Kumboldt St., Brooklyn 22, N. Y., 5/22/64. WITKOWSKI, PRICE, Benny, 432 E. 136 St., NewYork, N. Y., 5/21/64. CARSELLO, Anthony, 726Beverly Rd
  • Washington t talked with his Executive Assistant, Mr. Williams, before leaving for Santo Domingo about ~eports the Senator had received regarding a plot to overthrow President Balaguer. I informed Mr. Williams that while rumors were always circu­ lating
  • Rev. Colman J. Barry, O.5.B. Prof. Daniel Bell Dr. John C. Bennett Francis Biddle Jacob Blaustein Rt. Rev. John H. Burt Prof. Hodding Carter Senator Clifford P. Case Dr. William B. Cate John Cogley Rev. John F. Cronin, S.S. Samuel Dalsimer Oscar A. de
  • referred for the fil es of the President's Com:nission on Heart Disease, Cancer, and Stroke. I WILLIAM J. HOPKINS ~cut1ve Clerk 'f... Transmitting a copy of the ORDm designating Michael ~ •• DeBakey as Chairman of the President's Con:vnission
  • taken from Irwin County and named for William Jones Lowndes, a U.S. Congress­ man. ] J J J J J ....... From the beginning, the people of the Valdosta area have acted with resourcefulness and foresight. For example, in 1859, when the first railroad
  • Ignatius and Staff, DOD (2) Charles Schultze, BOB {2) Ramsay Clark, Justice (2) Dave Slawson, Justice (2) Don Hornig, OS& T (2) William Hooper, OS&T (1) (2) Lou Winnick, Ford Foundation (2) Don Schoen, Woods. Hole Panel, Santa Barbara (1) Tom Paine, Woods
  • resolution and the reciprocal trade bill. 3/3 William S. White reports that Acting Majority Leader Clements will delay further action on the income tax bill until LBJ returns to Washington. 3/5 LBJ is released from Mayo’s and returns to Washington. He
  • to counter Nasser's aggressive and illegal seizure of the Suez Canal. It should ever be a cause of regret that it was the United States, under the mistaken policies of John Foster ·D ulles, which moved against these three free nations, took the side
  • by the President-elect. That became the foundation of the program. I don't regard myself as the father of the Alliance for Progress on that ground, simply as one of the foster fathers, because the contents of the ideas had been worked on for years by Latin
  • white leaders in Civil Rights: Hodding Carter III, Bill Reedy, Claude Ramsey, Father Phillips McCloone and Father William Morrissey; SCLC base in Alabama; opinion of Kennedy men; LBJ’s administration involved in voting rights, public accommodation
  • of the Texas Legislature and a later member of the Prison Commission, when Governor [William] Hobby was in office, and then later, became the county judge of Washington County . I was educated in the Brenham public schools, went to the University of Texas
  • letter from William Preston Lane, Jr. is the result of 7our kind and thoughttul suggestion for me to wire him: "Dear Claude: Thank you !or 7our telegram of congratulations. It was a long, hard campaign, but I am happy with the result, and I deeply
  • , about [William] Proxmire, [John Foster] Dulles, and Hawaii. M: I think that is the general chronology, isn't it? J: It is, and there are many things on there that I certainly do not want us to miss. (Interruption) M: If you go down
  • gun control bill; LBJ's relationship with Dorsey Hardeman; John Foster Dulles; Mrs. Johnson's visit to FDR's home in Hyde Park, New York; Mrs. Johnson's interactions with Eleanor Roosevelt; the Johnsons' relationship with Ed Weisl and Warren Woodward
  • into being in the last two decades.· mindful of ~his fact we have to help ~pe another in the.difficult and of the opportunity 1 and exciting· On October 2 1 19641 I-spoke years ahead. to-a group of distinguished ' . ' • fostering
  • to have supported the administration's legislation more than some of the Republicans did, particularly the isolationists, [William] Knowland. B: Well, sure. I was looking at one of the speeches that Johnson had made, I think down in Mississippi
  • and carrying the big stick, but the words should not be bellicose. And if you recall, they had campaigned in part on that theory, that [John Foster] Dulles' words had been too bellicose and that we'd-- F: Nixon's kitchen confrontation-- LBJ Presidential
  • opportunities for employment of residents of the demonstration area in all phases of the program. 3. The demonstration to foster development participation ---in should establish appropriate mechanisms of local leadership and widespread citizen • the planning
  • as an EXDJS pa~r in the Department to: Under S.ecretary Ball Uader Secretary Matin Assistant Secretary Cleveland (action) .Ambaaaador·Thompson Mr. Walt Roatow · M:r. William FOii~ Mr. Lloyd-Hand - ACD.A - ·· Pro~ol M.cG. B. TliE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON
  • , he I guess was dealing initially with Senator [Robert] Taft and that was Senator Taft's last year. He had cancer and died. How did he work with Senator [William] Knowland as opposed to Taft? J: I've already told you that. Didn't I tell you about