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2004 results

  • ,Philip, Pro£I'essive Railroading, Chicago, Ill. MURPHY, Rupert T., Wash., D,C. MURRAY, Gordon, Bureau of the Budget, Wash., D.C. MOSLEY,Spencer D., General American Transportation Corp., Chicago, Ill. MADERA,Samuel, Budd Compaey, Phila., Pa. NUNES,F, L
  • with Truman in which he did moet of the talking. He talked about being "imprieoned"--a very nice prieon but in wh ich he had to eerve alone. Re aeked for their continued eupport and cooperation. The Louieiana delegation eaid that the Louieiana delAe,.ww would
  • did And one of the moments I remember about Lyndon Johnson was that when Gordon Cooper, the first American to orbit the earth, had a parade in Washington, he was in a LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT
  • widespread unemployment,and measures to increase job opportunities had to be planned and implemented. The loyalty and cooperation of the Armed Forces, historically a question mark in tbe Dominican political situation, had to be secured. 3. I believe the new
  • , Zablocki, Bolton, Adair and Albert, and Morgan• s staff assistant. In the Senate, Symington and Senators McCarthy, Sparkman and Cooper met together with State representatives yesterday. - They had no trouble with this package and were grateful
  • aseignmenta in Government and giving the nod to the work of the CIA and the intelligence community. 5. I presented the briefing, using the cards attached - no graphics. 6. I was followed by Kermit Gordon who spoke of the budget, explaining the reductions
  • of conversation with Ted Sorensen. Now, also in some of these same discussions I recall Kermit Gordon playing LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ
  • . Cooperation an Institute for Industrial Technology and Applied Science by Dr. Donald F. Hornig, Special Assistant for Science and Technology, and the Gr.oup that accompanied him to Korea July 8 - 15 1965 Submitted August 4, 1965 REPORT TO THE PRESIDENT
  • and independence or th~ should further ~e~ .! strengthen . 1) . secure They their to advance the cause of ~and and cooperation solidarity upon the need fo-;r ~ing or t~e countries that the free nations , affirmed , in the situatio~ progress under
  • ~\ ··# . . ', . ~ . By~ , , . NARA. D:ue ,277- ft? '..:- .: 7 I J SECitET Wednesday, November 30, 1966 --· 9:30 a. m. Mr. President: This broad agenda on Latin America was drafted yesterday by Gordon, Linowitz, and Bill Bowdler. It is worth read~ng as a quick summary
  • to deal directly with the President, and he did on the matters of expenditures. G: On this Vietnam trip, you went out with [John Sherman] Cooper and several congressmen. Let me ask you to describe that-- B: Stuart Symington was along on that trip too. I
  • -- 7 Galbraith and Arthur Schlesinger and Kermit Gordon. Then also, by virtue of having been a teaching fellow at Harvard just before the war, I met a number of the others who were interested in this Kennedy circle, including Professor Paul Samuelson
  • Biographical information; Federal Reserve Bank; new economics; Treasury Department; Organization for Economic Cooperation; Organization for European Cooperation and Development; working parties; Group of Ten; ring of swaps; London Gold Pool; Robert
  • to cooperate with INRA and other revolutionary organisms. Thia information.was relayed to m• by Am.oedo. Accordipg to ~oedo. Miro'• final decision to take ' l aaylum resulted from an attempt by the Government to involve him in the University situation. He
  • See all scanned items from NSF Files of Gordon Chase Box 5
  • Folder, "Cuba [Background Material Used in Compiling Plank/Chase Report] [2 of 3]," Files of Gordon Chase, NSF, Box 5
  • Files of Gordon Chase
  • Higher education fac1lities construetion grants Cooperative research in education · Community service and continuing education y State welfare agency Schoolboards 6o5 Construction of facilities at 3 professional schools (U. Calif., u. of the Pacific
  • ~ .lfl•.J "//-.J.3/ 1 p ~~flef!'lt'"J-----1'1~""f.1i~'t'rl=rITTrnEffi'E-r'P'mn-111fr!f~~ . ~ RESTRICTI ON 09/23/65 A ?-,-rr 11 93 memo #9Ja memo tQ the· PYEsi
  • FORM 1429 (8-85) WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORM OF DOCUMENT CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE #56 me[Tlo to Mr DATE RESTRICTION Dungan from Gordon Gf:lase= ccmf1 dent1 al ~ ~~ J'-/J.,:?'Y #67a cabJe #-67b cable ~Ki 119s ton 3"17 c
  • , to coordinate the assistance provided under this Act and related programs under the Foreign Assistance Act in the context of our foreign policy. To suppletAent existing procedUNs, I have asked the Budget Director, in cooperation with other agencies, to develop
  • ___j I I July 12, 196 6 Jle&r .Dr. -Se.abor-· t IA accw«lanc• wltb S.cUon lUA of the Ato.mlc Etwtrsy Act oi 1.954, •• ~ d , the Atomic Energy Comr.nl••lon bu aubmlt• to4 •l o me a pro~•e4 eupe!"e-e dlag 0 Aar..-eat for Cooper~a ConcemlAg Qvtl
  • the Economic Commission for Asia and the Far East (ECAFE) on its twentieth anniversary. Under able leadership ECAFE has achieved remarkable progress in promoting economic cooperation for development in its first two decades. I have been privileged to pay two
  • , is not and cannot be the job Last February (1965) I sent to the Con­ of the Federal Government alone. We must gress a message on natural beauty. I pointed have the enthusiasm, the concern, and the out, as emphatically as I knew how, the cooperation of every level
  • in conjunction with what the President himself was after and that the very few times that they ended up on opposite sides of the fence were ones which I think would naturally be expected. On domestic matters I can't believe there was any real cooperation
  • achieve peaceful and democratic solutions to their national problem and to select in free elections leaders of their own choosing. The election held on June 1 is the fruit of those efforts. Over the last several years the United States has cooperated
  • SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORM OF DOCUMENT #102 memo CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE re : Vietnam by Chester Cooper secret ~ g-1s-rv NLJ 8~-/J"'f 1 oo.s:. 3 {Mol) () ,,,..... ll29b l,ette r Mohammad Ayub Khan to Mr. Secretary possibl e classified
  • the cooperation of the PCC in the repatriation program, and especially in the process of preparing applications and conciliating any differences which arise between the refugees and Israel in carrying out the programs. (6) Israel would not put any upper limits
  • at $15 million. You already approved Linc Gordon's request to negotiate a loan of $4 million to meet the Ecuadorean emergency financial crisis. The Yerovi Government declined the loan because the self-help conditions were too stiff, particularly
  • candidates and their families, and asking that the FBI afford cooperation where necessary. 5:4la t Hon. Clark Clifford. Secy of Defense 5:47a t The Attorney General, Hon. Ramsey Clark 6:00a f Tom Johnson *6:45a entr y - Georg e Christia n issue d
  • Luther Hodges, Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz, The Cabinet Secretary of HEW, Anthony J. Celebrezze. . . and Bill Moyers Dr. Glenn Seaborg David Bell Jack Valenti John S. Gleason Fred Dutton Kermit Gordon Robert Weaver Walter Heller Carl Rowan Dr. Don
  • , Banking & Volunteer Activities, US Svgs Bond Div. , Wash, DC Gordon Hanes, Pres. , Hanes Corp, Winston-Salem, N. C. John E. Harper, Pres., Aluminum Co of Americ a, Pitts burgh, Pa. .... "Robert E. Harper, PIO, US Svgs Bond Div, Wash, DC ....~~~ Wade N
  • cooperation. In order to t:lake such an objective realiz2..':>le:, so:::.e progress has to be cade in the meantime, nai:;:iely before t:he A.£-=ica.n end Portuguese positions become ·wholly unreconcilable and be=ore the orientation of the nationalists becomes
  • basketball, not so they would grow up to be seven foot giants-these were small. peasant-stock people They ere teachmg them how to get along together. They were the children of peasants; they knew only how to bump each other. not how to cooperate
  • Annex III r Cre_dits_ ~_xtended By the Senegal National Bank to Cooperatives, due at the end of 1966 1966 Farm Program Regions Thies Short term . · Medium term (2 years) Medium .term (S years) Pre~ious Farm Programs 1966 Food Supply Totals
  • and Mrs. Kennedy in greeting Democratic Women on WH lawn. Hosts luncheon at State Department for U.S.-Japan Science Cooperation Committee. Attends 6:45 reception concluding WH Economic Conference, and later addresses American Cancer Society at Shoreham
  • that he had. But he was the only one of them that I came across that was really unabashedly trying to make that kind of wheeling and dealing. For example, Wayne Morse, who was chairman of the subcommittee on education, I had very close and cooperative
  • as conservative or more conservative than Wilbur Mills, yet he was much more cooperative, a friend of the President's. Whether it was the friendship to the President or just his loyalty to the party and administration I don't know, but George was always trying
  • Angeles is that of (1) conciliation and (2) coordination, within the context of cooperation with all the constructive forces at work in the local community. 6. As one of several federal agencies concerned with resolving the problems of Los Angeles
  • , is bein g s u bjected to increasing verba l a t tack by the prime min­ iste r , and, like the two major part ies, suffers from in ternal fac ti onalism. While rejecting EDA bids for cooperation, Papandreou faces the continuing problem of keeping
  • outcry expected; poss i_b 1e increase in USSR/China cooperation"; and, with respect -to a proposal to mine a 11 major po,rt . ~pproaches, they say, 11 Po 1it i ca 1 r is~ is acceptab 1e -­ no direct military confrontation likely; no realignment
  • neutralism,, Japan: abrogation of the U.S. -Japan Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security and elimina­ tion of U.S. bases in Japan; withdrawal of U.S. forces from Okinawa and immediate re­ version of the Ryukyus to Japan; establish­ ment of diplomatic