Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

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

4469 results

  • associated [with] at some time or other during his life that were not able to carry out his instructions. P: I was recalling, at the time of his heart attack, that preceding it he had had some sort of press conference in which he apparently spoke pretty
  • that the basic thread of friendship between John Connally and the President was ever truly broken. squabble. It is as if a couple of brothers might fight and But the bond was there then and always has been. I have often been amused at press accounts which
  • ...~ .. :_•. ,... . .•.. • :.>-.:i_~;!-.,...t ..•• ...... _r·.:.: ,;:.::·:.· ••.. December 7: •• · :,..•. • ,· ; :. ~~"?'~-'i • ••• '',1··1 •..••'.• . .i! 1rst Press Conlerence.;· As 0£ !-', •1968, ~: . ::_Press· conferences · ~ < ;,_:;.-.. had been held
  • Press relations
  • . Martin //. Demo, Nat'l Committee, Wash., D. C. l/\....Mr. End re Marton Associated Press, Chevy Chase, Md. £./lThe Very Rev. Leo McLaughlin, S. J . /) . Pres., Fordham Univ,, Bronx, N . Y. Vl_Dr. Thomas Patrick Melady Pres., Africa Service Inst. of N. Y
  • LBJ has a whack at whole problem. McG B CT15 ,. . To ; Through: From : Subject: The Secretary ~- Thomas L, Hughes -ft..atu.. tyt..' Summary of Chinese Communist Activities Rel.ate Listed belov are selected press statements
  • the President reach his conclusions. M: I think perhaps one of the reasons that this has been brought up in some of the articles and publications on the presidency was that in uncovering associations or making a judgment on a personal problem, that you were
  • , who came ou t of the preach er realm to become Presiden tial Press Secreta ry, an d move on f rom there. I know that pa rt of this wi ll be a f te r th e fact, but you d id overlap, and I'd be i nteres te d in his r elati ons hi p wi th th e Pr e
  • Bill Moyers as press secretary; LBJ’s techniques; overseas trips.
  • Assietants(with the understanding President's approval) and/or to the press office we are, in effect, going against the President's 3. My office is receiving an increasing 200 in October for example.) to Mrs. Johnson or to aey that they will secure
  • Press relations
  • /exhibits/show/loh/oh Califano -- I -- 3 When Kennedy was nominated, I did some work, as I said, at the lowest level, just organizing and door-to-door campaigns and things in our neighborhood. F: Before we leave that, you were associated
  • . foreign policy. The greatest immediate favor the S 0.:;:1;::;.te could do for African progress would .be to instl"~t its conferees not to press to keep this limitation in the final Act. 4 . Ed Hamilton THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON Tuesday, Aug. 22, 1967
  • O'Brien -- Interview XXI -- 2 G: LBJ issued some uncharacteristically harsh public statements on this matter. Do you recall those and the reasons? O: He took the opportunity at a nationally televised press conference to somewhat berate the Congress
  • to LBJ; O'Brien's suggestion that RFK and LBJ meet to discuss their differences; LBJ's accusation that O'Brien told the press LBJ would not enter any primaries; accusations and suspicions that O'Brien would return to work for the Kennedys; O'Brien's
  • , was reliability reported to be a member of RAMand an associate of MAXSTANFORD,its leader. STANFORDvisited AZALEEat her home in Monroe, North Carolina, during the week of October 5 and 6, 1963, for the purpose of helping her organize a group of Black Nationalist
  • in American politics. Introd. by Harry Golden. Washington, Public Affairs Press, 1962. 150 p. HS2330.K63R5 II. Periodical articles Extremism in American politics, by Arthur M• . Schlesinger. Saturday Review ., 11/27/65, p. 21-25. Historical survey
  • and our national affairs, illustrations and that sort of thing will be in my sermons. On occasions, when I have referred to Viet Nam or to some other problem and the President happened to be in church, I was accused by the press that I had inserted
  • Saturday, February 18, 1967 12:35 p. m. Mr. President: Herewith Kaiser reports that the British press la holding up pretty well. The Guardian I s shift is quite remarkable. W. W. Rostow LIMITED OFFICIAL USE London 6692, February 17, 1967
  • TOODEFENSIVEANDSENSITIVE ABOUTHIS LEADERSEIP. t'iRSo XING IS ~.'ORP.IED /'.BOUT\•:HERE THE NONVIOLENT THEMEHAS GCNE. THEYFEAR ABERNATHY MAY BE RIDICULEDBY THE PRESS BECAUSEOF INEFFICIENCYANDFEEL H[ SHOULDBE GIVEN HELP ON THE CAMPAIGN DErONSTRATION . SCHEDULED FOR MAY T
  • the President's policy on the promotion of a!ltronauts, neither Colonel Borman nor Captain Lovell is eligible for another promotion as a result of Apollo 8. Attached are biographies of the three astronauts and a proposed press release. Also attached for your
  • on this. Can't we just talk?" he knew Johnson a lot better than I did. But he knew his man, Whether it was for fear that he would be further put out to pasture or whether he just felt that it was not his prerogative to do it, he did not press the issue
  • Madame Binh'S: claim of four-sided talks at Paris but in the same breath registered his anger at Secretary Clifford's press conference. _6. Referring to Secretary Clifford's press conference, Thieu said he found it difficult to believe that Mr. Clifford
  • Among Issue Number LXX, January 2003 George Christian,Former Press Secretaryand LBJ Foundation George Eastland Christian died of lung cancer on November 27. His illness had been diagnosed as termi­ nal a year earlier. After a brief try
  • that the result will be bad for their party. But it revived in my mind all these earlier associations, direct and indirect, that I had had with President Johnson. B: You often hear that relationship between Rayburn and Johnson described as a father-son
  • a long-time association with Bobby. I had now several years of association with Johnson. Johnson trusted me and supported my efforts with the Congress. How do you account for going into November talking or starting to nit-pick a white paper which
  • for the signing ceremony, trying to bring in everybody we could think of in the various transportation interests including all of the modes, some of the suppliers, and such organizations as the Transportation Association of America and the National Freight Traffic
  • , l987 INTERVIEWEE: FRANK STANTON INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Dr. Stanton's office, New York City Tape 1 of 1, Side 1 G: Dr. Stanton, let's begin by asking you to recount your earliest association with the Johnson family and, if you
  • (A. I. D. or P. L. 480), association and mobilization "Economic Planning the other two- ~oreign assistance record Perhaps_ one- set in 1965. The methods with Prime in 1967 and 1968. ·the policy measures The previous ancl of these A. I. D
  • are drying up. If we cannot find ways to prevent that happening, future his­ tories will be written from press "Accessissues."Robert Schulzinger;John Prados; W. Roger Louis; John Brademas;Martha Kumar; panel chair Hugh Graham. (The panel is applauding
  • ATTACHMENT ____fi:Y 3HE 1 1 Situation Report in Viet-Nam August 4, 1967 Opening of Campaign The presidential campaign officially began yesterday. In their opening campaign statements and press conferences, leading candidates said the following about
  • and circumstances of presen­ tation, including any press releases, since this will be the first time that other than American citizens will have been recipients of the Fermi Award • .~ i:;Jmt~~~ j'Executive Secretary LIMITED OFFICIAL USE UNITED STATES ATOMIC
  • School. To sum it up, I was somewhat surprised with his serious approach and that he had gone that far in his thought process, although, as I said, I recall associates of his visiting me in New York several months earlier proposing I resign and take over
  • was a good student, but you know, nobody studied too much. G: I gather there were a lot of bull sessions. H: Yes, bull sessions. G: What was he interested in? H: He was interested in debate. There was a press club out there that he was a member
  • Association Dinner on November 8, 1963 (15} Vice President's call November 8, 1963 (16) Vice President's Arrival November 7, 1963 Statement in Brussels, on Prime Minister Lefevre on Text of telegram from Amb. MacArthur on meeting between Vice
  • became Johnson's associate special counsel, what did this do to your duties? A: There were a few other duties added, I think, as is true of most of the people on his personal staff. They didn't have just one niche. I also had the responsibility
  • States to •1t a terrible price to pay for a pack o! Mr. HOS:\!ER. l\ir. Speakrr, today we ·selectively proliferate purely defensive words v.·hich could be quite meaningless re-~~!\·ed a message from the t>-residc:nt nuclear armaments to hard-pressed U.S
  • , Mayor Ivan Allen, Mills Lane of Citizens Bank, Sherman Drawdy of the Georgia Railroad Bank, Jim Carmichael of the Scripto Corporation, and W. Brooks of the Cotton Producers Association. Do you recall that meeting, that dinner? H: What year was that? G
  • Judge Powell, who was the uncle of his long-time secretary Mary Rather. Anyway, through the years Senator Johnson had many ties and associations with this firm. F: Let me intrude just a moment. You mentioned the five most important. Can you name
  • on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Wozencraft -- IV -- 15 men;, they said, "Here is a chance to pay off a political favor." And we had pressed upon us one thoroughly unqualified former English teacher in a high
  • decisions regarding Hatch Act amendments; debate over whether a federal employee should be allowed to be a precinct chairman; the Commission's draft report being leaked to the press; legislation resulting from the Commission's work; John Macy's involvement
  • may wish to reply of grant and Technical Republic. the role of private SECBET The Chart er of investment under the SEORE'f -sAlliance for Progress program of economic its adeptness 2. Support self hard pressed military involvement
  • Press
  • to the mass exodus of press and camera crews• estimate about five minutes for motorcade to depart. l.:00 Mot.uJ:cade will proceed down St. Pauls Boulevard and make left at Golden Triangle on to Brambleton Avenue, down Brambleton to Nvc>folk Little Theater
  • in seeing the Assistant Attorney Generalship filled promptly with a competent person. In December of 1965 I went to a meeting of the American Law School Association in Chicago to talk with LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY