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  • in the capital for civil rights legislation, generally under the leadership of Clarence Mitchell, who is the Washington representative of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Of course they had their direct contacts, so it wasn't
  • surplus of beef in this country, with drastic price breaks, was simultaneously associated with rising prices and short supply in Europe. So that he, on a matter of about thirty-six hours notice, required us to get a half-dozen major people from the meat
  • and people of that kind. G: D: Did the CIO play a role? It played a role, but it wasn't a very popular associate to have around in those times. G: It seems to me that there was in that group a component of traditional liberals like J. R. Parten, Byron
  • for the 1964 campaign. And so Wilson had offered six people full-time jobs at the Democratic National Committee as full-time advance men. That was the first time, really, that there had been full-time advance men; in the past it had been a part-time deal
  • How Pachios got involved with Peace Corps; JFK’s assassination; LBJ comparing himself to JFK; Eric Goldman; Pachios’ work as an advance man in the 1964 Presidential campaign; Maine governor John Reed; Eugene Pulliam; campaign stops in California
  • Nations and the people you were dealing with? Do they notice this much about U.S. domestic affairs? Did it make it easier for you to work? H: I think two of the most significant contributions that President Johnson made were in the field of civil
  • data you have and the coloration of events is so impressive that you know what is happening, beyond just having the evidence in your hand. You go back to Washington and, God, the paper mill's still turning on, and people are still fighting over
  • and Reserve Affairs? F: That's hard to do briefly. The Assistant Secretary at this desk has the function of worrying about the standards for entrance into the Armed Forces, how we procure the people to meet those standards, and then how we treat them
  • Biographical information; duties in Manpower & Reserve Affairs; civil works program; overcrowding at Arlington National Cemetery; McNamara; Project 100,000; Adam Yarmolinsky; Steve Ailes; Senator Richard Russell; Mr. Vinson; Operation Transition
  • . January31 The President met with Representatives of the National Association of Attorneys General in the Cabinet Room at the White House. • • • Herschel Newsom, Master of the Grange, presented a special award to the President for service to rural America
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  • Folder, "March 31st Speech, Vol. 8, Excerpts and Taylor's Memo," National Security Council Histories, NSF, Box 49
  • National Security Council Histories Files
  • National Security Files
  • the "bottoms" to conduct trade and project naval power. Red China is using the ob­ vious economic disparity be­ tween the colored and white peoples and between rural and urban nations to enlist international support against the industrialized, largely white
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  • National Security Files
  • . There was a good deal of interchange because they had groups--private groups with all the civil rights people in the government that met privately over a six-month's period. We were not ever in very close liaison--let me put it this way--with the White House
  • House Conference on Civil Rights; Cliff Alexander; National Science Foundation Board; Jim Webb's acceptance of Administrator of NASA; campus unrest; Vietnam; Perkins Commission; Walt Rostow's Policy Planning Commission; Wise Men; role as Vatican
  • . the Is there anything you'd like to add to this? N: Do you have the American Bar Association? G: The American Bar Association. N: I think this is enough of those. I'm on the board of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company and the First National Bank
  • , which certainly transformed the economic, and cultural, and social life of a nation as occupation needs shifted from the unskilled to the skilled. And of course people continued to move from the rural areas into the urban areas. So that we were faced
  • a fellow was subject to an injunction, he really thought before he did anything because that judge could commit him for contempt. And this was something that people didn't want to have happen to them so they followed the law. The Restaurant Association
  • Biographical information; Hobart Taylor, Sr. and LBJ; civil rights cases in Michigan; NAACP; Export-Import Bank; Cliff Carter; early association with LBJ in 1960; 1960 and 1964 campaigns; JFK; Plans for PROGRESS; Jerry Holleman; RFK and LBJ
  • thing for your people, especially with what they give you to operate here, and whether or not you're wasting any of your government's funds. However, to get back to my association with the President. As our lives became more and more intertwined, as he
  • on the part of some of my associates as to whether or not this was a good idea, and what sort of a return we would get, we put this out as a contest to the ninety-odd thousand people through � LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • of the Department of Transportation; Urban Mass Transit; Maritime Administration; National Transportation Safety Board; appointment as Secretary and confirmation; reflections on LBJ; domestic legislative achievements; international relations; effects of Vietnam War
  • to national security information. IB) Closed by statute or by the agency which originated the document. (C) Closed in accordance with restrictions contained in the donor's deed of gift. NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION NA FORM 1429 (6-85) LBJ
  • we're doing, of course, is just trying to fill in pieces here and there in the affair. We have your book on Alaska and its coming to statehood, and so I thought we'd just emphasize your association with Johnson in this. When did you first meet him? G
  • •' ( • 3 If ·the people are to accept the war, the government 1. Prove that it is in our national 2. Prove . . that we have a plan to win it. 3. . Tell the people must: interest. what resources are required to carry out that plan. In our
  • A (National Security)-SANITIZED
  • Folder, "March 31st Speech, Vol 7, Meeting with the President and Draft Memo," National Security Council Histories, NSF, Box 49
  • National Security Council Histories Files
  • National Security Files
  • talking to his command. He's talking to the South Vietnamese people. He's talking to Hanoi, to Communist nations, to Allies, to neutrals. Finally, he's talking to the U.S. There are conflicting interests, certainly, and what is appropriate for one audience
  • Message to the Congress: "Advancing the Nation's Health": ::'.:.:>:· .:./ .-· "· .. I. .. strongly urge the Congress to enact a hospital insurance 1:f. ., -~• . -~ .. program for the aged. 11 ' I 11..,( r • ' ;·:7·. ;;i(./..•.•. ~ :i'. -~.
  • , aild would you tell how you would rate him? F: He was a fairly effective member dealing with those subjects in which he specialized, particularly matters of national defense. He was a very close associate of the chairman of the committee, Nr. Vinson
  • , got there a little ahead of the presidential p~ane, as did Vice President Johnson. So we saw Kennedy and Jackie get off of Air Force One; Johnson and Connally and, I guess, Yarborough were there in line--the people who greeted them as they LBJ
  • had to LBJ; 1964 campaign; LBJ’s inability to announce travel plans in advance; LBJ choosing a running mate; LBJ lying to the press; comparison of LBJ’s press secretaries; the Walter Jenkins incident; off-the-record interviews; naming Nicholas
  • NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS SERVICE I WITHDRAWALSHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORMOF DOCUMENT DATE CORRESPONDENTSOR TITLE Agency: Justice RESTRICTION Department ' 0 f.e.V'\ FI LE LOCATION NSF Country File Vietnam, The Bertrand Russell
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  • National Security Files
  • to get the votes, they also would tell him. There was no double talk. There was no rather crude partisan politics between the three men. I think I could also say in the associations that I had both with the Speaker and Mr. Johnson it was exactly
  • will sound very simple, but people thirty or forty years from now might not consider then quite as simple as they now are. Don't let them limit you. If you want to ramble around and talk about something else, by all means do so. You were with United Press
  • in the team. J: Well, I was on the National Security Council at the time, as you know, on the staff in charge of Far East affairs, so I had been working on Vietnam for quite a few years, [for] three steadily and before that for a couple of years, in and out
  • NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS SERVICE WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORM OF DOCUMENT CORRESPONDENTSOR TITLE Ill report SIGMAI-66, Secret ~ lmf)Qrall DATE RESTRICTION Final Report ~p ,_~3-g, I /VI..J 8S-ll/(p 09/66 A H3W
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  • National Security Files
  • - national Affairs at Princeton on the expropriation of American property in Cuba in 1959. After the election and the inaugural in 1961, Bill and Sarge were very helpful getting me interviews with certain people I needed in the State Department for my
  • that because we had some colored troops at Camp Swift, and Bastrop was not used to colored soldiers and we were all on edge about that, being fearful the rapist might be black. Frankly, I was quite relieved when I found out he was a white soldier out of my
  • with having been a participant in the war itself, or having bombed the Arab countries, killed their people and been a factor in their defeat certainly did not increase the affection that the American public had for Nasser and his regime, and I think added very
  • , with every change in the investment tax credit there are many people for whom really hundreds of millions of dollars ride on the question of whether an investment decision was or was not made in advance of (or after) a particular date. The room
  • up of people who knew what they were doing and knew how to work with each other . And that was just a black cloud hanging over everything in the latter months of 1964 . I guess we sent some of the most strongly worded telegrams--"Tell them to get
  • and the National Security Council staff shared some of the more pessimistic estimates that we had as distinct from some of the more optimistic views that were expressed by people like General [Victor] Krulak. M: Was one of the first objects of business
  • . RLG, Lao King and Lao people humiliated-by having to ask Sihanouk to re~onsider his refusal to attend 14-nation conference. 4. Each time RLG has tried undertake positive action it has been-deterred from doing so by u; Ambassador wbo bas sided
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  • Gulf people in -- sum -~ntaa a week when of a "second Cuba", i~ small-scale the of not American a Com.rnunist doorstep. Undoubtedly, the basic elements of the President's position . - ! -had 1/sr.vr ,..,,.! --~ ( 1 (ti:..5 .1
  • by Executive Order 12358'governing access to national security information. (B) Closed by statute or by the agency which originated the document. IC) Closed in accordance with restrictions contained in the donor's deed of gift. NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS
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  • Saigon. There was just one mass of temporary camps, and I could see the kinds of people and get some idea of what the future problem would be in absorbing vast numbers of refugees. G: So there was a tremendous refugee problem, obviously. T
  • , and somehowor the other we don t want to 1 see all of this lost. People have often said to me, The career that you've 11 had, you ought to write a book or you ought to write your memoirs.11 I've never had any intention or desire to do this, whatsoever about
  • , USA, 1929-advanced through grades to Brigadier General in 1945, reverted to permanent rank of Colonel in 1947 to become Professor ot Social Sciences, USMA. Member: Various learned societies having to do with Social Sciences; National Security Research
  • A (National Security)
  • National Security Files
  • NATIONAL ARCHIVESAND RECORDSSERVICE { WITHDRAWALSHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORMOF DOCUMENT f{-;,)-7 • CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE DATE at/~ -(I"- ~ 7-S-?K.J'"nsc.. ~-~,WHTO STATEDEPT. FOR CONSULTATION ?f 1 FILE RESTRICTION :U:-~ 02 08
  • A (National Security)-SANITIZED
  • Folder, "March 31st Speech, Vol. 6, Bunker Reports," National Security Council Histories, NSF, Box 48
  • National Security Council Histories Files
  • National Security Files