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  • HOLD FOR RELEASE UNTIL DELIVERED TO THE SENATE OFFICE OF THE WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY THE WHITE HOUSE NOMINATIONS SENT TO THE SENATE ON AUGUST 31, 1966: Reynold E. Carlson, of Tennessee, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
  • A - District Director, Cheyenne James H- District Director, Wilmington George O - District Director, St. Paul Evan S - District Director, Honolulu HA-District Director, Pittsburgh / See page 9 for more n,^ March White House Dav 1, 1966 TUESDAY Activity
  • press this oppositibn. epresentatives, and at your ood office to ex­ The ocial security approach is jut strictly distasteful to many people such as myse f ho see it as only the beginning of addit­ ional heavy taxes. The initial H.R.-3920 as embodied
  • . & Mrs. Truman Blocker, Jr. Exec. Dir. & Dean, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston Mr. & Mrs. Ernest D. Brockett Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Mrs. Douglas Chandor Texas Weatherford, Mr. & Mrs. Herbert W. Cheshire Mrs-Maxine Cheshire. wa·shington
  • unemployables? B: That came considerably later, didn't it? F: Yes . B: That was the organization that Henry Ford was involved in? I was not involved in that personally, but our company was involved in it . We did a lot of work on that in the Pittsburgh
  • /1 Johnsons are at the Ranch. At noon Skeeter Johnston calls LBJ (Lyndon Johnson) to inform him of Senator Kerr’s death. Phone conversations with Jim Webb, Reedy, press follow. 1/2 LBJ helicopters to Austin for the afternoon, returns to Ranch
  • York; Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio; Long Island; Chicago; Indiana University; Pittsburgh; Wilmington, Ohio. D·CLAS 11-lf:.D 11526.. . 3.5 E NU__:filA-l,._'-l~-1'.4,\ NARA. t J·3f5·'.dt:Ql) Marvin ~-14 lo (~-2-65) o·r'FICE OF TH& DIRECTOR ITED
  • more than we ever had before. As I just said to some people in the press the other day, I thought that while John Kennedy recognized the mayors of America and recognized the big city problems, not much was accomplished while he was president. Now
  • ._~ ••1 .-,'l',l , .... • .• ~.. • • --.., ''.":.••~'
  • be the creation of a high-level touring panel of Viet-Nam experts who would make the rounds of the u.s. publicity media (press, TV, radio, Holly­ wood) on the kind of schedule which you had me ;follow shortly after my return from Saigon as Ambassador. Such a panel
  • INTERVIEWEE: SARAH McCLENDON (and her daughter, SALLY O'BRIEN) INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: National Press Club, Washington, D.C. 16~ Tape 1 of 1 M: I thought you might be interested to know the first time I ever met Lyndon Johnson. I can't
  • Biographical information; meeting LBJ; Lynda and Luci Johnson; LBJ’s relations with the press; Senator Styles Bridges; visits to the Ranch; LBJ’s resentment of press criticism; LBJ’s sister Josefa; Bobby Baker; Johnson’s lack of trust of people.
  • ...~ .. :_•. ,... . .•.. • :.>-.:i_~;!-.,...t ..•• ...... _r·.:.: ,;:.::·:.· ••.. December 7: •• · :,..•. • ,· ; :. ~~"?'~-'i • ••• '',1··1 •..••'.• . .i! 1rst Press Conlerence.;· As 0£ !-', •1968, ~: . ::_Press· conferences · ~ < ;,_:;.-.. had been held
  • Press relations
  • Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh ROBERTS -- I -- 4 There was a local reporter riding on the White House press bus. The only discussion I remember about possible crowd hostility
  • ; the Kennedy staff that stayed to work for LBJ; LBJ’s relationship with the press compared to that of previous presidents; (dis)advantages of getting close to the president; LBJ’s relationship with Phil and Kay Graham; Great Society speech; type of access press
  • of Beaufort in a continuation of these demonstrations. DEMONSTRATION SCHEDULED IN PITTSBURGH,PENNSYLVANIA A "Christmas carol march" in honor of civil rights martyrs is scheduled to be held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on December 28, 1967. The march is being
  • that it was not a worthwhile investment. As a matter of fact, the Columbia Broad- casting System decided to turn in permits that they had. Other large organizations followed suit, including the Westinghouse Broadcasting Company which was a pioneer in Pittsburgh. F: I
  • had pressed the button, unless someone had made a decision that this was to go. I said it seemed odd, but I pointed out that things like radio and television changed the world from where it had been and it was quite possible that conditions in cities
  • of papers, including the Pittsburgh Courier group, the Chicago Daily Defender, the Tri-State Defender in Memphis, the Michigan Chronicle in Detroit--altogether about ten fairly good newspapers. Mc: And some in the South as well as in the North? M: Tri
  • Rowe writes he will not press LBJ again on the subject, he feels LBJ is the most qualified candidate and that he should try for the nomination even if he loses. 1/19 Eisenhower submits “balanced” budget to Congress calling for estimated receipts
  • of the exhibits. At 11 :00 a. m., he will meet with the press in the auditorium of the Museum of History and Technology to introduce his executive staff and outline the new Department's role. In the meantime, and continuing until 9:15 p. m., the public
  • Press
  • Mr . Preside nt: ~:: ~ _.w nd ..Qea_r:g _ Y...o u o v~;:__1_~~evi_:; iqry e?D.QEec~ tY,rne ~._sl.Q.~n __y our pl
  • at a dinner sponsored by the Women’s National Press Club to welcome members of Congress back to Washington. 1/5 The Democratic Policy Committee clears the controversial natural gas bill for Senate consideration by mid-month. Already passed by the House
  • union dues. He wouldn't have to belong. He'd just have to pay his dues. B: Do you recall how the mainstream press handled this? Were most of the--was most of the press anti-labor or pro-labor? M: I think--I don't know whether anti-labor is the exact
  • ; higher education for African Americans; Morehead's work for Southern Education Reporting Service and Southern School News; negative press coverage of the South; school integration and racial violence in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1957; the legal
  • - - ,.. • • Dr. Wright, ~s con:ve:..:1.01"' also served as chaiman until a militant aection of th~ ccnference objected to his moderate position &nd :moderate atatEaments to the press ·.L'ld successt'ully inst&Uee more mli~ant chairmen including Ron Karenga
  • . I arranged meetings with a number of big city mayors [including, among others, Dick Daly in Chicago, John Collins in Boston, Dick Lee in New Haven, Jerry Cavanagh in Detroit, and the mayor of Pittsburgh] offering to approve CRP financing
  • people on the staff, Elizabeth Scully, the daughter of the then Mayor of Pittsburgh, an administrative assistant, and Jeanette Heine, H-E-I-N-E, a secretary. We built from there. I was trying to build the organization. Aubrey kept a very close hand
  • >7 Bi • AAA.Date~ MARTINLUTHERKING, JR. Los Angeles, California Milwaukee, Wisconsin New York, New York Newark, New Jersey Petersburg and Richmond, Virginia Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Washington, D. C. (unknown) (unknown
  • B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh CAVANAGH -- I -- 30 House on this idea. It'll be announced Monday. the press release over to the ~~hite I just
  • magazine went to press on Sunday night, but they did most of their editing through Saturday. He knew that correspondents had to file overnight Thursday, so that the editors in New York got the raw copy on Friday morning. zine's night. Now, I want you
  • Sidey’s contact with LBJ during the Senate period; his work with Time magazine covering LBJ; 1957 Civil Rights Bill; Sam Rayburn; LBJ’s relationship with other politicians; press coverage of LBJ in the Senate years; difference between Senate
  • . Foreign Minister SHIINAma.de'the apologetic remarks attributed to him upon arrival in Korea, quoting different versions of the remarks which appeared in the Japanese press as an example. 3. Kang emphasized that the Christian ministers do not wish to push
  • surprise when the appointment came through and people, you know, the public-C: Extremely critical. M: Why do you want a TV actress, ad woman, doing something like that? C: All right. everything. The press was very critical. Let' s go to the job
  • . On the spending side, the detail , here is the ima ge of the new President that has emerged. .January estimate of $98.4 bil­ Ry STERLING F. GREEN lion has been reduced by Associated Press $100 million. Thus the indicated budget Wa s hin glon - l-n the half year
  • Press relations
  • me the editorial cartoon clipping from the Pittsburgh Press regarding the mission to Berlin. I really appreciate friends like you· who see something in the·.paper, realize that · I might not get the opportunity to ;look at it, and take the time
  • --- Disapprove __ of Pittsburgh. . Approve___ ✓ _ Richard Stewart, Superintendent of Insurance, New York. Everyone agrees that he is one of the outstanding men in the country in this field7·should be on this advisory group. Approve___ Disapprove
  • press him on it, and I don't know why he chose me, so I can't really answer the ultimate question, which is how come Livingston got so much involved? It's perfectly true that I have another academic interest in the comparative study of federal systems
  • AND ·WALTER JE.NKINS Char}cs ~Ulen, ~tate Democratic Chairman for Indiana, called and 8$ked several questions: (1) llSenator Johnson would be wilUng to have a press conference. · (2) tf he did not have an official press conference, he be willing to Just
  • on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] Reedy -­ XVI -­ 17 be Stu Symington; I didn 1 t press him at the time. But what he said
  • the Senate confirms·. (In your press conference on August 31, 1965 you said that Conrad would be promoted to Commander, but the papers had not been signed. They are now signed and ready to go. } 2. L. Gordon Cooper ..... The President has requested
  • ends opens Room; greets Planning Press is members. meeting. report responds his remarks; ceremony ends. ' 'I' ,, I I '. • I / ~ ' , ,., I I I,. , WORD COUNT: Draft Remarks Secretary 240 for the President Cohen, M-i
  • . • A source of this Bureau who has furnished reliable information in the past advised that James Haughton, Director of the Harlem Unemployment Center in New York City, at a press conference.on February 18, 1968, called for "rebellion or jobs'.' and announced