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  • Times William Wyant, St. Louis Post Dispatch ' James Gary, Copley News Service TTom Ellison, USIA _______ __. William Gardner, Houston Post ' Mary Brogan, Houston Chronicle ________ ^ Jimmy Banks, Dallas News ' Ernest Stomberger, Ax Dallas Times Herald
  • City. He had the unanimous endorsement of Rusk, Macy, Gordon, and Rostow for Bogota post. Cong. Clark Thompson re a possible "place"(appointment) for him following his retirem Hon. Lincoln Gordon back in (Asst Secy of State) from the Congress
  • o f 196 3 (th e Presiden t had aske d abou t it earlie r afte r readin g th e Josep h Kraf t colum n o n today's editoria l pag e o f the Washington Post ) STAFF MEETING: Douglass Cate r Josep Jake Jacobse n j Jack Valent i Le Horace Busb y Dic Mrs
  • to Johnson City Texas Texa s to deliver Christmas presents -- driving around the Johnson City Ban Bankk and post office are areaa at 3:50 pm McGeorge Bund Bundyy - Washington Washington,, D. C C.. butt continue continuedd driving in the Johnso Johnsonn City
  • Mrs OFF RECOR RECOR D who has been commissioned to do OFF for Sat Eve Post concerning human side of President Jacobsen Johnson mansion ret his call MW Dinner and Ap have Retired H w/ Mrs Johnson Dr James Cain Busby chief come over
  • a very special place. One of our Congresswomen -- Julia Hansen -- teils me how. proud she is that your climbing posts are made from Douglas Fir timber from the woods of the great northwest. There is lots a.nd lots of soft sand -- two feet of it, I believe
  • " in the District of Columbia. It was amazing how rnany of these pictures showed urnbrellas, rainfall and -- yes -- even snow. I almest called Marvin Watson and asked if we couldn 1t borrow that slogan on the Post Office Department: "Neither snow nor rain nor heat
  • -- I can better under­ stand the courage, stamina and drive of the pioneers who pushed back the Western Frontier and the qualities of thos soldiers who guarded their safety from this isolated post. Today it is equally significant that we are meeting
  • at the National Press Club. His speech was described as ver:y strong. Today's Washington Post (see attached editorial) criticized it for taking too strong a pos.ition on the Berlin situation. Adenauer said we must not give an inch in Berlin. He recommended
  • to important federal posts, and hear him tackling his first foreign policy crises-the Panama Crisis, the Cuban Guantanamo Water Crisis­ while warily confronting the growing turmoil in Vietnam, all as he surveys an election-year political scene nationally
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Declaration of Independence to be presented • 2920 R Street, N. W. Buffet supper (stag - informal) Mr. Philip L • . Graham, Publisher The Washington Post for: Mr~ Frank Stanton, Pres. CBS Mr. Jack .VanValkenburg, .Pres CBS television network, and Mr. Adrian
  • Post-Courtship Letters
  • Post-Courtship Letters
  • implemented: there cable on posts strung on the north and south will be a steel side of Pennsylvania Avenue. There will be a snow-fence along the sidewalk on the south side of Lafayette Park: the Metropolitan Police will have a line of uniformed officer
  • , attention is now turning to what can be salvaged in post-ceasefire negotiations. Nasir, after earlier proposing an Arab summit as a means of preserving Arab unity, is now proposing the publication of a ten­ point joint resolution to be signed by all Arab
  • by) ture 10:45a f - 11:11a f 1967 Thomas - Austin, Tex _ Oval Office 11:57a 12:39p Lt. General Swede Larson (has been Commandant of II Corps in VietNam for couple of years -- is here on leave) ~~ he will report to his next post at Fort Monroe
  • Bradlee Managing Editor, Wash. Post Wash. Post Chalmers Robert s , Tom Johnso n 9:00 f Hon. Rober t S . McNamara , Sec y o f Defens e t Mike Manatos George Christia n Tom Johnso n • SEE TRAVE L RECORD FOR TRAVE L ACTIVITY US GOVERNMEN T PRINTING
  • l Powe r wen t int o th e Undergroun d Comma nd Post (photogs . ) Gen, Powe r agai n escorte d t o th e Force Analysis Roo m withi n the Undergroun d Comman d Pos t Departed Undergroun d Comman d Post w / Genera l Powe r an d Secy . Genera l o f NATO
  • with Dorothy. 11:35 Arrived at Dorris Powell's home in Karnack. 11:50 Left with Dorothy and Dorris, and Mrs. Barnes for the Post Office -- visited with personnel and discussed landscaping around post office. 2. 12:25 Returned to the Powell home 3. 1:43 Left
  • is the highest rank to be attained by an enListed man. The President (accordin g to Washington Post, July 23) directed Sgt Major Wooldridge to look into what weaknesses there are in Armytraining and supplies and report back. The President also invited him
  • for the(evening(?) morning This page considered as end of Tuesday, February 8, 1966 -- even though it is part of Wednesday morning. In a circular telegram to all diplomatic posts -- classified as CONFIDENTIAL-i- ____ these points were brought out to be used
  • University , Post Office Box 262 Ka1npala 1 Uganda- t College ~ I f t I I t ~ E_?{:~JI.. /t/:b 1 9/ e,o 3 1 ~ ;:;w:2 -~Is-;k C o 3 oo ~'-,, 'f. V. 3"po ·:t., · ~ :::: n t ~ I RECEIVED SEPl 4 1966 C[1'1TRALf\LES
  • whether you or the Senate has the final word. A dramatic statement at Chicago that the two most respected Americans in world affairs take post one and post two in American affairs for four years is the simplest answer to the needs ahead. These needs
  • there any trades that you recall? C: No. It was just pure heat. I'm sure I talked to the [New York] Times editorial people, the [Washington] Post. It was a full-court press. G: Patriotism and-- LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • was a rather obvious step that was available to us. The Washington Post had advocated home rule over a long period of time and were often editorializing on the subject. We were having difficulty securing the necessary signatures for a discharge petition
  • Efforts to enlist the help of Katharine Graham and the Washington Post staff to get support for D.C. home rule; LBJ's support for House Rules Committee reform that would help the liberal members of the House; the regional medical centers program
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • all pretty much committed. The most difficult agency, again because of its size, was the Post Office. The Post Office had 670,000 employees, I think; the Defense Department had a million. The Post Office spent an enormous amount of special energy
  • employees in the Department of Defense; John Macy's federal executive councils; complications within the Post Office; TVA's lack of compliance with minority hiring; federal scholarships; labor unions; Philadelphia Plans; state employment services; corporate
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • . Emergency Relief Mission and came back and briefly resumed the special assistant post while I broke in a new man when Joe Califano went to the White House. in John Cushman. I broke Then I became principal deputy assistant secre- tary of defense
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Service Institu teo . About 1050 had had a 20-bour famili- zation course at a military base 0 th,e Since arriving at their LIMITED OFFICIAL USE Lll~ITED OFFICIAL USE .- 3 - overs eas post~ where t hey wil l t ypi cally spend 29 months, about
  • the deep depreSSion days), and I had only had that position a short time; about a post office. I I was satisfied and didn't know anything told him that, but he said I'd make a good one and insisted that I accept it, which I did. ?: Have you been
  • ; changes in Post Office in the last 35 years; Equal Opportunity Employment Act; Vietnam War veterans; LBJ Ranch visit; Dr. Frantz's additional notes
  • the advisability of my going out to the field again, to a post in the field, and another man's taking over as Assistant Secretary, because we had a very peculiar personnel problem . A man who was very close to the President and who had been in the White House
  • INTERVIEWEE: MURREY MARDER INTERVIEWER: Ted Gittinger PLACE: Mr. Marder's office, the Washington Post, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1, Side 1 G: Give us a little background on how you came to be the foreign affairs man on the Washington Post. M: I
  • for the Washington Post; North Vietnam's version of events in the Gulf of Tonkin and how it varied from the official U.S. version of events; Marder's coverage of the Multilateral Force (MLF) story and the issue of U.S. sharing access to its nuclear weapons with other
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)