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2004 results

  • would be much more touchy, much more sensitive. I: Very touchy. It was on that trip that we first began discussing the possible cooperation with the peaceful uses of nuclear explosives. M: Is that a possibility--nuclear sharing for peaceful uses? I
  • , although they may prove to be through interagency cooperation. It's true that we in the Labor Department, in enforcing the Equal Pay Act, coordinate our work very closely with determinations with relation to equal pay as far as EEOC is concerned. I
  • departments and permit new people to put aside the old animosities and get down to business on the problem of trying to integrate transportation development as a whole with urban development as a whole. M: So there will be cooperation? L: Yes. And I think
  • , and then there were French officers there as well as. Americans in it. G: Were there problems in cooperation hetween the two? L: Yes, there were. The French primarily staffed it with their intelli- gence people to keep track of me. I'd sit in there and they'd
  • , 1964, when he met with business and labor leaders urging cooperation and support for Medicare and civil rights. about his effort then? Do you remember that? Did he talk to you LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • did not gener- ate the same amount of antagonism, he didn't contribute very much to the spirit of real cooperation on behalf of the Secretary. My view of the assistant secretaries and the general counsel and the deputy under secretary
  • of the FBI. So the first thing that they did was to try to destroy the spirit of trust and cooperation and patience and human sensitivity, without which no movement can grapple with difficult problems or build a different kind of spirit. But the second thing
  • for the benefit of the people, but Congress has got to cooperate. F: That's exactly right. Congress has got to understand that what the people of the District want is to be able to make their own decisions as it relates to their local problems. Now we all
  • implications of outer space. The other evidence was that when this bill was first sent up to the Hill, they included in the declaration of policy and purpose that we should cooperate with other nations and groups of nations in these space efforts
  • not require the county cooperation? T: ,,' Only this year has been the first time. I offered a food stamp bill myself in the Senate this time, with the proviso for free food stamps • LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • over the damn. But the whole posture from the early fifties was still one of support of and cooperation with the regime. The economics recovery and strength of that island and that government was just beginning to unfold, and it's been, of course
  • : On the other hand, one difference is that Mr. Johnson had the Democratic majority, and Mr. Eisenhower did not have a Republican majority, so that Senator Johnson was-- T: We cooperated very well with President Eisenhower, of course, I know that. And he
  • well. I knew And English seemed to have most to do with it; I think he'd been Kennedy's closest leader in the state and then after the assassination, he was very cooperative with Johnson. And he asked me to be campaign director, which I did. F
  • Committee of the Organization for European Economic Cooperation. B: A varied background. Do you want to add for the record here your authorship? You've written a legal textbook, haven't you? G: I've written two books. One is Foundation Press' textbook
  • on your committee, weren't they? H: All three Kennedys sat on my committee. B: So you must have known all three Kennedys pretty well. H: I did. And they all cooperate mighty well. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • hostile and there never was a real return there. I don't see in that whole period of '53 to '63 any rapprochement, and I think it got off and stayed off on the wrong foot. M: Did that become his technique? you the business there. You said he cooperated
  • , or did they try to handle this through local offices or what? L: What they did really is--Mr. Tijerina, as I recall, created a foundation or a special organization. And he had the help and cooperation of a lot of the great citizens of Houston and all
  • , but certainly when I was in the Farmers Union in the 1950s and even before that during the forties when I was working for the Wisconsin Electric Cooperative back in Wisconsin, I advocated measures of that kind on behalf of farmers as a way to expand consumption
  • . So each year I prepared a report to the President. tive reports. MOst of them were affirma- They showed progress, shewed that more employees were becoming members of unions. It showed that there was genuine cooperation for the most part
  • was that confrontation that I know of. F: Superficially, at least, the relationship between the two men in those intervening years remained cooperative? M: Remained good. F: Remained good even though they disagreed on this? M: Right. F: Did the Governor nurse
  • the shock of the assassination and all has then, as it generally has, a reaction of cooperation with the incoming Vice President who has assumed the duties of the Presidency. I think it was both President Johnson's popularity, his technical knowledge
  • some business interests in Atlanta, at a rather large and grandiose banquet at the Marriott Hotel, what they referred to as the Great American Award. This was something that was sponsored by a savings and loan association in cooperation with the major
  • /exhibits/show/loh/oh Nes -- II intentions~ probably as early as 1962 or 1963. -~ 10 These, as I've tried to point out, were greatly augmented by our failure to come across with any sort of cooperation or assistance in either the political
  • of that sort. Fair enough. I have a question concerning the lines of authority within the U.S. Mission. Now, you testified very fully in your Kennedy Library transcripts about the cooperation which you got from General Harkins and that there was seldom
  • was standing up gave him some real status as a nationalist leader. He already had a reputation as a nationalist leader because he'd never agreed to cooperate with the French. That's another story, about how he--that's one of the reasons, I think, really
  • some experience overseas in areas where one sees many more of these kinds of problems. The service offered me the opportunity to be loaned to what is now AID, but in those days it was ECA [Economic Cooperation Administration], then FOA [Foreign
  • . There was a good cooperative venture between Republicans and Democrats, the Congress and the administration, and a far superior bill was passed than was sent up by the Administration, than was recommended by Democratic members of Congress, than was recommended
  • is of vital importance today is the Congo. Everything seemed to be lost for a wnile there, and that that was going to go downhill and the communists were going to take over. We had excellent cooperation from the military and all of the agencies, LBJ
  • , from the day the bankruptcy trustee took them over. and that stopped further inquiry. half dlYS in his records. He did not cooperate in any way, You see, we just had two and a I knew it was going to happen that way, and so I sent a team of about ten