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2004 results

  • . Johnson a few weeks later , discussing the problem, and received an answer over Mr . Johnson's signature indicating a desire to cooperate in anyway possible concerning the problem. Gullion said that approximately two weeks after receiving the above letter
  • -:~gons from other k.l~r1 groups. SV T-4 said discussion at this meeting imdicmted the new group would cooperate with the NSPJl ts\nd other groups i .t11 provid:t1rtg lessons in self-defense and in prote6ting esch othe~ 9 s property. STONER was to prepmre
  • .# . -....- -~ --~ ··-~ .D•. - ~ ~ ... . ~ ~ · OllVERSITY SETTLEMENT ·. ,_ ,...,._ ; .. . . ....... ,.s..:..:, . ~ ... [1 of 3] Btm.osrab~l•, b'IUtl nee Cooper Ul\lvar•L~ . Set.tl.elmen-t ~estiinonfal fo#' -Bohorab.1.e $\\a.n\\81 Celler Bew ·York .U.l
  • everyone became very cooperative, that is all these Americans that came out there. Ortiz ran this thing. And the South Vietnamese, some of them anyway, tried their best to sort of play this game. But it didn't last very long, because your public
  • the people in his district to get some kind of electrification project for their farms. It turned out that they needed the cooperation of some big electric company. They did a lot of groundwork and everything else to try to get this all arranged
  • over there? We That's a Because he was suffering with his broken shoulder, I said, "We're going to go there and if they are people that'll help us, fine. If they aren't cooperative, we'll just give up. make it otherwise." We are not going to I
  • Bundy operated to consider options. F: Oh, yes. M: You and Chester Cooper and some others. How far-ranging was that reconsideration? Was it simply a consideration of tactics, or did you all pursue the option of perhaps reversing the commitment? F
  • system, state and local and federal governments, to work together. We knew long before Model Cities got into trouble that it wasn't going to work. Even the federal government, with the President directing the departments to cooperate, couldn't deliver
  • the program work? LG: I think there was a concern that health resources generally--by that I mean doctors and hospitals--in some areas might not cooperate and thus deny care at government expense. This did not prove so. At any rate, in the health area
  • according to the Secretary at that time. M: But you did cooperate? S: At that time I was in the Secretary's office, so I was working both with the Food and Drug Administration and the Social Security Administration on Medicare, and with the Public Health
  • sorts of niceties that come in handy on things like that. F: Are you competitive in a situation like that with the commercial news services, or are they pretty cooperative? S: I never considered myself competitive because they knew what I
  • of cuts down their novelty. S: We tried to get the school s to let out and bring the kids down in buses to stand with little flags. do it. Maybe they're smart. Well, the schools wouldn't So we couldn't get any cooperation from the schools
  • portfolio which dealt with the problems of European-U.S. cooperation on mutual urban problems such as pollution and so forth. And this has been developing and loosely handled in my relationships, which have been fairly personal, with the people handling
  • tribunal--visiting North Vietnam. They were from the communist countries, and he toured the country with them but in his tapes or his statements he would say, "I'm not a member of the tribunal." But he was with them; his statements cooperated with them
  • to that would be that I, without being able to point to any particular thing, could say that he did everything within his power to cooperate with the President of the United States in getting through the progressive legislation that he had recollllllended. B
  • Wyoming," And was always very straightforward that way and I appreciated that fact and was always cooperative where I could be. On the other hand, where it was a matter that could have no deep and abiding concern to Wyoming, he was most persuasive as he
  • volume. But it's an expensive, painstaking process to pull these things together from everywhere. The Grant family had some and they were very cooper- ative, but there are things all over. this. It's a good thing we're doing Grant happened
  • : Oh, tremendous cooperation, there was-- F: No party lines drawn or anything like that? P: Oh, no, none at all. Jim Corman, congressman from California, and Fred Harris, senator from Oklahoma, Democrats, were political members of the Commission
  • , was divorced from OEO and made an independent advisory group. So that today while we cooperate with it in terms of supplying information and attending meetings and generally have good relationships, we have nothing to do with the direction the council takes
  • oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh DePuy -- I -- 23 means something like "cooperation." Now the idea was sort of an amalgam of all the old theories of oil spots and so on, but if you visualize the city of Saigon itself, proper
  • up the details of it. It's all in that thing. I can find it and get it to you, because it was clear to me from there, right there, that they were down there. They were out on the end of the rope, and so they wanted to have cooperation. There's
  • even for the task of raising the funds to pay off these debts. He'd have to agree to appearances and so forth. And on that front he was totally cooperative with me. He said, "You lay it out. You tell me what I should do. If that's what's needed to clear
  • kilometers in one direction and fifteen in another. And they didn't cooperate with him. They came in with the attitude, "Okay, you screwed it up now all this time. Here we are, the big saviors, we're going to help you and bail you out and save your district