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  • Mongoose ~self, but I wrote down Chet Cooper, who was my assistant or deputy part of that time and was working into the White House in a staff circle to which he I think eventually went full time, was involved in some of that planning and he wrote memos
  • and that race and so forth. Once Lyndon knew I was aware of what was going on, his interest was to keep me from writing anything. I was very willing to cooperate because I was eager to help in any way I could. And his efforts paid off. forty seats or more
  • . I would say that I did not know of any breaches between them, and so far as my knowledge is concerned it [their relationship] was always a cooperative one. But whether it was more than just the normal � LBJ Presidential Library http
  • to come to us from the national NYA headquarters: Aubrey Williams. One of them was we would get copies of his directive to the WPA telling them to cooperate with us in every way. We would get directives that were addressed directly to us, telling us
  • oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Territo -- I -- 4 Leader wished full cooperation in, that Juanita was acting on his behalf, and meeting everyone and learning really what they did for the Senator, what their specific task
  • and Boggs on the Democratic side and Ford and Cooper on the other side--and John McCloy from New York and Allen Dulles would be willing to serve on that commission if I was to head it up. And he said, "I think this thing is of such great importance
  • cooperation (see statements of Gervais in Exhibits I through V) . To further encourage Gervais -- who by then was living in Canada under the name of "Paul Mason" (making it impossible for the defense to locate him) -- to remain outside of the U_nited States
  • likewise, if they wished, -- secretly, and without having to assume the public stance of cooperating with.the US. This UN umbrella cum private US assurances at least an interim solution to the problem. SiQI.Uia'.l.I.,IMDI S might offer Bf!left!'l
  • but the cruel mas­ tery of the whole European economic system as well. Rather than rely upon the cooperation of many hands to re­ strain a new German giant in the future, the men at Potsdam wisely chose to keep Germany from becoming a giant again. In short
  • to progress. has did. South cooperation he arrived my husband Mendel our was Olin Johnston, partnership days that served to assure of that and local Lyndon partnership. governments in America. must you that exist if our nation He
  • to education. ­ So much for background. It's enough to indicate how things stood in my first two or three years in the Office of Education. The first rr,ajor piece of legislation to be enacted after I came to the Office was the Cooperative Research Act. 1954
  • and honored American in~erest ' the ,. , co~fl1ct. Cooperation Yea~ in every·conce1vable that ._could lead to peace. I called it of the Century. it now the assignment { Among the· many committees • public formed from both the private 1 I
  • ,- cooperated with tb" t.fnit.ed States anti !!ttppo?'ted AJwrii,an proposal11 1.n th@ 1Jn!ted Jlfatione tom'!!. has ~ei,d it !OJ"'C9ein Korea, it eonti'!'lN to Mintain thft"'f!. Cle&J"aDees RA - Phillirs AID.MSl- ~ Although the Tu,eld.sh Ooftm--tent
  • The United States and the Soviet Union have agreed to explore the possibility of scientific cooperation on methods of desalting sea water, including the poaaible use of .n uclear power. A• an initial step, a meeting of U.S. and Soviet representative
  • ; delay in appointing Secretary; rent supplements; role in formation of Model Cities Program; staffing; Dwight Ink; favored decentralization; informal meetings of all Presidential appointees; housing for HUD; cooperation with other departments; Philip
  • any inflationary effects of the Federal Government's own activities; and to achieve through cooperative efforts, patterns of collective bargain'ing and of business price determination that are consistent with over-all price stability. 12. Similarly
  • a major effort to increase its own food. production. In this connection, India and the U.S. might both request that the Ford Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation. in cooperation with or as consultants to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, greatly
  • several weeks, while the United Nation• General Assembly has been trying to hannner out an acceptable resolution on the Middle East, one thing baa become increas• ingly clear to me: The solidity of tha Latin American bloc and the Latin American cooperation
  • THAT THEY PROVIDED WHAT WE CONSIDERED TO IE THE IAJIE flllNIMUM OF COOPERATION NEEDED FOR PROGRESS ON ·su&STAITlVE ISSUES. THIS CONCILIATION EFFOftT WOULD IE FORE OOMED TO FAILURE UNLESS iOTH SIDES COULD AGREE TO SUSPEND HOSTILE ACTS AND TONE DOWN PROPAGANDA DURING
  • have done a great deal of dam.age to our interests and to their own: --They 1ve wrecked a good system of tacit cooperation between Hussein and the Israelis. We had his tacit agreement to keep his arm.or off the west bank of the Jordanj and he had made
  • , paralyze, and even destroy the growing institutions of international cooperation in which it has a voice; and, 4) to distract us militarily to keep us from the social works which express the aims of our society and afford the permanent basis ·of its
  • . these- shortcomings and in cooperation with other-governments....lprivate foundations launched a .massive down to earth effort to develop and introduce seed varieties suitable to the requirements. As a result India now has improved seeds for all five major food grains
  • Senators Cooper and Aiken, the Speaker, Mr. Boggs and Mr. Widnall. He had a nice -- but non­ committal - - time with Dirksen. The only clearly negative signal he got was from Symington who said he simply couldn 1t vote for anything which cost money
  • matters. M: His was an attitude of cooperation. H: Oh, yes, and constructive cooperation. M: Why was that? Did he wish the best for the country, or--? H: I think he wished the best for the country, and I think it was just that simple. President
  • , however. G: How did you get it through? H: Just by plain hard work and lobbying the living daylights out of people and getting the cooperation of some of my colleagues, like George Aiken on the Republican side, on it. G: Did Johnson help you
  • , that and making sure that the Nixon people were fully briefed on everything that was going on and that we be cooperative. G: Did he and Nixon have some misunderstandings about foreign policy and the fact that he was still president? B: I would put
  • . On the international scene, Indonesia has: rejoined the UN and associated agencies, settled its quarrel with Malaysia, supported regional cooperation. Economic More progress than expected. Tough stabilization program imposed and runaway inflation checked. Suharto
  • class" Negroes. 4. Those present said this was the first such meeting ~f Negro officials and thatthere was great need for more coordination of their wo~k and more cooperation among them. · Rep. Hawkins agreed to call everyone together again on his next
  • cooperative and delightful. It's a real honor to get a chance to meet you and listen to you, and we certainly appreciate it. D: Listen, you could talk of Johnson . . . Some things should be made public. In some things it will be up to him, what he wants
  • l'n including the television and radio people. They also have shops in there that work with movies on films that we have agreed to cooperate in. We will not cooperate unless we feel that the script is in the national interest. There is no reason why
  • poverty figures where we, cooperatively with the Council, prepared a correction of a newspaper story that went to the President. G: Is it the Council of Economic Advisers or OEO or both working together that determines the poverty criteria--the income
  • said, this country couldn't have but one President. If this government was to function, the Congress would have to offer cooperation to the President. I think that the Johnson-Rayburn team in those years demonstrated that with this kind
  • for cooperative activities, but that wasn't basically changed. I: You mentioned in one of your books how upset the Japanese were, particularly in the early part of our Vietnam escalation in 1965. Was there adequate consultation, or any consultation
  • Vice President Johnson’s limited involvement in Asian affairs; comparison of LBJ’s and JFK’s interest in foreign policy; Reischauer’s relationship with JFK; developing a rapport with LBJ; cooperative activities between Japan and the U.S.; Japanese
  • in and [was 1 more&ncere in what he tried to accomplish. longer hours He had the interests of the farmer at heart, but he also knew the consumer is involved. In order to get farm legislation passed he knew that he would have to have the cooperation of city
  • cooperative in view of the fact that I was from outside the organization and this position had traditionally been reserved for those who grew LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories
  • to 1956, you've got a real problem in the state politics with, in one sense the Shivers group on one side and the JohnsonRayburn group irate against it. M: Did you get involved in that? I didn't get too heavily involved in that. Of course, I cooperated
  • in the White House discussing the many problems that he was facing. Of course he was very anxious to have the full cooperation of the AFL-CIO, and I would say that he got that cooperation. I would say that at that point when he had the responsibility thrust
  • and supported by China and the Soviet Union, the extent to which we could obtain the cooperation and support of our principal allies in the area, Australia and New Zealand and so forth, the extent to which we could obtain like cooperation from our Western