Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

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

4469 results

  • pressing so heavily on millions of our citizens. The basic philosophy of the OEO is constructive and much good has been accomplished for the poor and the uneducated, but in some areas there has been an injection of politics beyond reasonable measure
  • Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Bolton -- I -- 3 with the Associated Press over the matter of wrongly identifying a picture, was also a special correspondent for the San Antonio Light and other newspapers. To do most
  • Texas press in 1930s; State Observer; first contact with LBJ; Alvin Wirtz; war years; KTBC radio station; 1944 Democratic state convention; 1944 and 1946 congressional campaigns; speech writing; KTBC and aggressive new policy; UN conference; San
  • -- I -- 2 B: Yes. Let me interject, I don't want to get off onto my first meetings with him and some of those things, but this one is interesting as to how [I was hired], not all the details that were involved with it. I was working in the press
  • visited by) Jones - pi OFF: RECORD: _ J Lloyd E. Clarke- President, of the National Association of Home Builders Eugene Gulledge, First Vice President, " Lewis Barbu , Treasurer, " John Stastny , Secy, LI Dr. Nathaniel Rogg , Exec VP, L' Appt requested
  • s (firs t Amb . o f Barbados t o U.S. ) PRESS present - - th e President receive d th e credential s an d starte d ou t of the Fish m when he hear d on e member o f the press mak e a remar k t o him. H e re-entere d the roo m an d tol d the m a stor
  • for this mtg. There was a press release prepared on this mtg which gave the verbatim texts of the President's remarks and th e response by the leaders of the Committee. 11:35a REMARKS by the President Then there were remarks by Secy Weaver, Mr. Hawley and Mr
  • . Lazar e Massibe , Ambassado r o f th e Republi c o f Cha d interpreter, Mrs . Sylvia Porson PRESS ^ REMARK S --the Presiden t receive d th e credential s o f the Ambassador 12:03p Presiden 12:06p t t t o Ova l Offic Hon . Ab e Fortas , Associat e
  • h e didno t se e how i t coul d b e an d by the tim e th e press go t through with it, i t wa s all twisted . The secon d instance th e President cite d a s the speedin g i n Texa s wher e "a n AP photographe r clocked th e President a s goin g ove r
  • Activity (inc!ude visited by) E. C. Hallbeck, President, United Federation of Postal Clerks Jerome Keating, President, National Association of Letter Carriers Mark F. Richman, Office of General Counsel, Dept of Justice Congressman Jack Brooks Congressman
  • the Shrine. August 11 , 196 6 MEMORANDUM T O MARIE FEHMER FROM: To m Johnson On Friday, Augus t 5 , th e President spen t approximately three hour s in discussion with Merriman Smit h o f United Pres s International and Doug Cornell of Associated Press. BU
  • --he kidded Dr . Cai n abou t hi s revelation of the left ureter kidne y ston e t o the press - - an d asked Dr . Cai n if he' d foun d an y more i n hi s absence . Followin g th e doctor' s examination , the President told the m he just had to have som
  • White Mrs. Arthur Walter Stoessel Joe Califano Mrs. Johnson April White House 27, 1966 Wednesday Organizers of the Edward R. Murrow Memorial Fund (The President greeted his visitors, posed for press photographers, and then handed to Edward R
  • ground floor (se e pag e "7" ^ National Newspaper Publishers Associations CIVIL RIGHTS John Bogle Joh n Sengstacke Asst Pub Philadelphia Tribune Publisher Chicago Defender Mildred Brown Whittier Sengstacke • Publisher Omaha Star Gen Mgr Tri State
  • • returning Senator Mansfiel d (b . 2) f Secy Senator Senator his call Vance John Carl Stennis Hayden George Reed y -.(pl) "brin g th e Pres s in " PRESS in th e offic e - - t o hear a n announcement from th e Presiden t Secretary Vance Exec The Vic
  • for research at the Library. (The figure does not include students who come into the research room on tour or school groups for whom research packets are prepared.) Mr. Leeman 's project, for a jour­ nahsm class, was "LBJ and the Press." 8 Library in May
  • remember more about that. (Long pause) We then got some settlements, but again, the problem turned out to be the IAM [International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers], the electrical workers, the firemen and oilers, the sheet metal workers
  • own itinerary and arrange interviews as he saw fit. I talked to some Vietnamese newspaper editors who opposed the Thieu-Ky ticket. I also talked to Associated Press and United Press Interna­ tional bureau chiefs and to experienced reporters
  • arrival in Saigon, we were assured that each observer could map his own itinerary and arrange interviews as he saw fit. I talked to some Vietnamese newspaper editors who opposed the Thieu-Ky ticket. I also talked to Associated Press and United Press
  • That was after he was in Congress. Wait a minute, when did he go to Congress? He had returned here-I was very much involved in the marriage. Youth Association. Did you know anything regarding that appointment to the National Youth Association? H: I had
  • !~,------ Bill 6/8/61 Lucas (who used to be with Dave Charnay and is now Wm. B. Lucas Associates-real tel: OL 6-8868) furnished this estate-Bethesda info which - l1! says is very reliable& A stock corp. named BELCO{gas co.) has got into back
  • of the Motion Picture Association. I believe the retiring president was Eric Johnson. I was practicing law here in this firm and quite happy in New York, but as Arthur portrayed the job it had a lot of interesting aspects to it. Some of them I didn't like
  • Jack Valenti becoming President of the Motion Picture Association instead of Abram; MPA issues that concerned LBJ; integrationist vs. separationist civil rights movements; Berl Bernhard; A. Philip Randolph; problems at the White House Civil Rights
  • and press assistant to then-Representative Jacob K. Javits from what was then the Twenty-first Congressional District of New York, which is the upper west side of Manhattan ranging at that time from West 114th Street north to the end of the island
  • immediately after the authorizing legislation was passed; the role of the minority party and lobbyists; the increase in lobbying and associations in Washington D.C.; political debates based on politicians' home state rather than political party; Millenson's
  • , stating,_ "there are enough Negroeswho know enough Red history, and He said • this ~ a phase in the development of revolution." the "reactionary press" has been pictun;tng Ne~roesas "barbarians" all through the Harlem rioting. 'We have had enough
  • ' meeting in Chicago. He checked the time element [?]. The Secret Service wasn't prepared; the press hadn't been informed, and he didn't know he was going to do it till just that morning. So LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL
  • deliveries some time into the future but when word of the deal gets arowid, it may increase Jordanian and Lebanese pressure and give the Israelis an added talking point {though these planes will not be a serious threat to them)/ Lebanon is pressing for a PL
  • with U.S. p rticipation. We had a small mission that was rather taken for granted, I P: To continue this chronologically, did you have any association with Mr. Johnson during his Vice Presidency? campaign of 1960? G: think. Let me back us up. What
  • of this fact of his selection of Lyndon Johnson, I was deluged immediately by press and radio. And I was able to say then, and did say, very strongly that Lyndon Johnson had an excellent, liberal record, and that basically he was a populist in his political
  • of his close associates. To begin with, he had an all-consuming commitment to his job as President. He had become President through the great tragedy of the assassination of John F. Kennedy, and it was as though he felt that since he had not been
  • 1. 2/20/64 Msg to Bustamante/birthday 2. 3/2/64 Msg fm Bustamante wishes re Anniversary of Pan American Association 3. 3/13/ 64 Msg to Bustamante 4. 4/ 13/ 64 Msg fm Bustamante re appointment of Hugh Shearer. as personal representative
  • , a junior at Southwest Texas State University. Horace Busby, long-time aide to and associate of Lyndon Johnson and now a consultant in Wash­ ington, D.C., reminisced about the man he knew at a breakfast meeting of Washington alumni of the LBJ School
  • WASHINGTON, D.C. 20550 July 17, 1967 MEMORANDUM Subject: Status of ANTON BRUUN As previously reported in the National Science Foundation press release, NSF 67-30, dated July 6, 1967, the floating drydock in which ANTON BRUUN was situated sunk on July 1st
  • Senator Jackson and the Senate Committee on Internal and Insular Affairs. I didn't try to press the Bureau of the Budget, other than to give my forthright observations, knowing that the financial 3 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org
  • a statement to the press and radio regarding the protests over his seating: “This seems to be a purely political fight. I regret very much the embarrassment that has been caused the people of Texas by the effort of my defeated opponent to find some aid
  • . Michael A. Feighan Press Pool : Cong. Frank Chelf Fran k Cormier Merriman Smith Cong. Peter W. Rodino Douglas Kiker Bill Lawrence t^ March White House Dav 23, 1966 Wednesday ActivMy(inc!ude visited bv) ture ExpendiCode Joined in the stAteroom by Cong
  • the situation that he was in, that he had to have some kind of bill. G: There was a good deal of criticism from the southern press that Johnson had tricked the South in this way. M: Yes, with his announcing that this bill that had been blocked would
  • histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 3 B: No, I'd met him . I had been invited to the White House in my capacity as an officer of the National Association of Home Builders . And he appointed me, in 1962 or '63 to the advisory
  • with the Associated Press and The ew York Times for many years in the Far East, especially in Japan and Korea. He was chief of The Times' bureau in Moscow in the mid-1950's and then was that paper's diplomatic correspondent in Washington. When he entered Governments
  • A. Baker, Historian of the U.S. Senate; Raymond W. Smock, Historian of the U.S. House of Representatives; Roger Dav,idson, a University of Maryland political scientist who also is associated with the Library of Congress; Donald C. Bacon, Senior Editor
  • --it was Xavier's registration that I went to. Many of us were involved in the organization of National Students Association, which was in its time what the SDS is today, you know, radical type students groups in the nation. 1 LBJ Presidential Library http
  • the inside story he wo:n.1 t be credibl • So l'v• tos ed in the press l ak and Boka.ro angles,, ,). .• --~- RWK -SECRET \ ~.­ ..i_;--·· .·\ ( ' )-t.._:t ! 1'" .,--;;' , ~• \ / .} '1S ,_.,, .__-I'/ ~. --=-~~ .. A D E.O 1 S ~1/ By ' Z3, 9