Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

5487 results

  • ) "Tt:'D '" ·· · - -· ~ -- · -- · - ~ .. . 20 FLYING STATUS DYES NO XX! . ... . _.rn 1 .... l 1AFS N 8 .. !". ... .. . ,... "J 1 i;17 ( 11 · PAFSC - 5121 New Sebate Office Bldg Washington 25, DC N/R NAME •••Ar ~ 10 PRESENT ADDRESS
  • to go to the urban centers, and they were not equipped to earn a living in New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Detroit, you name it. And they became recipients of the welfare system. Therefore because of this mobility of the American population
  • . As to Tweed and Segal, they have worked extremely hard without compensation to make this Committee successful. This letter would constitute the only recognition of their efforts. The letter to Seymour and Marshall is important as it might give a new direction
  • :. Quick Copy 1 / Saturday, December 23, 1967 TO AF 1 TO MARVIN WATSON FROM BROMLEY SMITH Deke tells me as of now there ia nothing new here. He believes persons you know who are on the ground Jmi: are far better informed than Washington. v
  • I dated. This was not the first Every time I meet somebody new in the Marine Corps they will come up and say, "Is that true? We heard that story." LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson
  • wriioh our 51' management sho l d stand up as an o perating fee. up his Ce ntral News p pers , f'ormerly w Ill (I fi n d t ' a.t Pulliam !ns kept s b s idia ry of GNI , and is using Central olly to own t he Sub s id.iary s tookn of his radio and e.ll
  • : Well, the Regents' action in July of 1967 was to thank and discharge the committee. Now the question was to create a new committee to do whatever else was necessary. (Interruption) At the July meeting, the Regents accepted the report and accepted
  • The creation of a new committee related to the LBJ School of Public Affairs; how the committee members were appointed; the committee duties of administration, budgeting, architectural planning and searching for a dean; Norman Hackerman; considering
  • any projects out of the air that we will saddle the next Administration with unfairly." Wilbur could smile and could smile and say "Yes, Hr. President," and go back to the Department and issue five more press releases on new projects-and I think
  • should not be impatient. Weshould be willing to sit them out. Andjust because they turn something down, I don't think that meanswe nec­ essarily· have to comeforward with something new. Aboveall, I don't want to get negotiating with ourselves before
  • military activities -- in the Middle East, for examplei in 1958, and in the Congo on ·several occasions -- .without the formal approval of or even meaningful ·consultation _with the Congress.· · New devices have :been invented which .have the ··appearance
  • was bom in Los Angeles in 1900. When he waa 6 his family moved hack to the family home in Illinois 1,,p'! S5-63) .' He, went to Princeton lfn,versity (1922) and Ha,. vard and Northwestern law school8. Io 1933 he helped organize the New Deal farm prqgram
  • was then Attorney General of Minnesota and was named Senator mostly because of his great work on this subcommittee; Price Daniel, who was former Governor of Texas; fell ow by the name of Kohl er from Georgi a; a Negro congressman from Detroit, Charlie Diggs
  • . 3 The Arms Control and Disarmam.ent Agency (ACDA) was quick to respond to the new impetus toward Latin American d e n u c l e a r i ­ zation. In a background paper dated October 25, 1962, the Agency recommended that the United States support
  • : And a guy by the nnme of Dumphy from New York City. There were seven or eight fellows, all pretty knowledgeable and pretty decent. I know who the chairman was--Judge Barrett Prettyman, a retired federal 3 LBJ Presidential Library http
  • we talked about productive discussions and no advantage to be taken of a bombing halt. The new proposal defines productive talks as including GVN representatives and spells out our insistence on a quiet DMZ and no shelling of cities. 2. The Detroit
  • some elements of the campaign, the Labor Day event in Detroit. R: Yes. That was funny. G: How about the Lady Bird Special and the train trip through the South? Any insights on that? R: Not in particular. It was very well handled. They sent along
  • ek tou that will include N York, W shingto , Detroit, Chica o, Omaha. Albuquerqu -S nta F and Los geles a the pr· cipal cities. T prlmary objective ef th vi it . a to provide: th opportunity for the Dal't e to obaer .e and tudy methods and procedure
  • LAID TO 'NON-OFFICIAL' SOURCES 14 6. U, S. PnOTESTS ATTACKON EMBASSYIN C.AMBODIA 16 7. PROMISESVIETN.AMESE MCNJi.MARA .ALLAID NEEDEDFOR 1TICTORY 18 Following iter.1s alse~ved, USIA ains outlined New Ht,.Llplffl.1re voting 3-Nation Satellite
  • . CIA has funded and managed throughout. 3. I told ~OB that we would actively explore alternatives to develop recmnmenda.tions for your FY 69 budget decisions, but believed present arrange:p1.ents should continue in FY 68. ~easons: The new pacification
  • Bien Phu was no great shakes. It was no Mukden or Passchendaele or Stalingrad. The French toll was 16,200 troops killed or captured, a cruel blow by any standards but far short of total military disaster. ~ --.. --~...-- ~ ~- .. and of new heavy
  • while I was there, pey incre~se A hangover from the Billie is~~ went to the .Committee room conference contradicting the news these days. \ ca.me up and we passed him over. to his superiors, We did this because It's still earned. The result
  • and Yariv. There's no major disagreement on numbers. with Israel taking the gloomier We interpret these numbers differently view. However, Mr. Helms sees no new evidence that would change his estimates. Mr. discussed Rostow also said that we had carried out
  • been~ast in each area that he could have been defeated. F: Of course now New Hampshire just has reemphasized it. S: Yes, I should say so. People don't realize how one vote makes the difference, and I think that Lyndon Johnson's election [in 1948
  • are: -----· to to to to to strategy in.stead generate a massive popular uprisinz in the cities; administer a significant defeat to US/GVN/ FW forces in the field; destroy the government2l apparatus o! South Vietnam fron,. top to bottoi.n; create a new popular front, dominated
  • kind of a guy have we got to work with here? They knew McChristian, they knew his good points and his bad points, but here's a new fellow. And I didn't know any of them. Joe and I would have very informal conferences. We lived together in a house
  • . OEO and labor--we never resolved our conflicts with them. But it wasn't just in conflict that this came out. After the Detroit riots, for example, the President created a new cabinet committee on the cities. We never settled a blinking thing
  • a protracted period of tir_,;, but it seemed ltke a lengthy period of tin~e. I also recall that, at the time--i t seems to me that it w as prior to the response from Hanoi about the peace talks--and the Presidcnt got Cy Vance to come down from New York
  • at Burnet Park, Fort Worth, to crowd Motorcade to Dallas , stopping alon g the way at Chance Voight Introduced Sen Kennedy at Dallas auditorium To Carlsbad, New Mexico -- see travel activity Spoke at Elks Auditorium, Carlsbad To Artesia, New Mexico by car
  • SENATOR LYNDON B. JOHNSON Day Tuesday DAILY DIARY The senator began his day at (place) Sheraton-East Entry No. Time Telephone f or t Lo Hotel, New York City Activity Date (include visited by)* October 4, 1960 Expenditure Code LD 1. 10:45a
  • ~ . rr - : ,.. () - .. . FOR RELEASE UPON DELIVERY FRIDAY. MAY 7, 1965 -- 8: 30 P . M. REMARKS BY MRS. LYNDON B. JOHNSON "SALUTE TO SPRING" CEREMONIES NEW YORK, NEW YORK Mr. Mayor• Friends: Thank you so much for the honor you have
  • New York
  • Press release, "Remarks by Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, 'Salute to Spring' Ceremonies, New York, New York, 5/7/1965"
  • , Judge Heath on Allegheny 2. 9:45 Arrived New Haven. Met by Dr. Kingman Brewster and motored to Brewster's home. Walked to various buildings (went inside): 1. SOM Yale IBM Building Bundshaft Rare Books Art and Architecture Yale Art Gallery (looked at from
  • Miss Hasek ccs Honorable Richard J. Hughes Governor of New Jersey d-
  • Letter from the President to Mrs. Lewis S. Thompson, Red Bank, New Jersey, 2/24/66
  • , Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, Realm of New Jersey C 06a report United Klans of America, Incorporated, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan , Realm of New Jersey C 11 14 Restriction 7/13/67 A 7/13/67 A 1/18/66 A 1/18/66 A Collection Title Federal
  • MAR VIN WATSON'S NOTES ON THE MEETING BETWEEN THE PRESIDENT AND GOVERNOR JOHN W. KING OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1967 5:31P.M. p Governor, I read your speech before the State Democratic Executive Committee and it was awfully good. If I
  • Folder, "[December 5, 1967 - 5:31 p.m. Meeting with Governor John W. King of New Hampshire]," Meeting Notes Files, Box 2
  • ; approximately twenty-five white persons were present during this meeting. Howard Spencer, Leader of the Political Action Committee at Tougaloo introduced the principal speaker, one Paul Boutelle from Harlem, New York, who is seeking the office of Vice President
  • in a statement on December 18, 1964, of which an authentic copy is attached. This statement makes it U. S. policy to work toward a new sea level canal and to propose renegotiation with Panama of the existing Panama Canal Treaties. 2. The Secretary of State
  • in Milwaukee. Wednesday, September 22 Mrs. Johnson goes from Milwaukee to Peoria, Illinois to dedicate a new Courthouse and County Building, heart of a downtown beautification development. Wednesday, September 29 6:00 p. m. Ballet by the Harkness Ballet