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  • A Barnhill, John T Bell, Gerald R BeMiss, Hon. Fitzgerald Boatner, Charles K Boutin, Bernard Brownridge, John A Bush, Monroe Cain, Stanley A&xxk Carlin, Paul Carver, John A Cassidy, Lt. Gen William Castro, Nash Clapper, Louis S Coston, Dean Crafts, Edward C
  • to control rural areas serving as access routes or bases for insurgent activities in neighboring countries; Venezuela needs to expand its security capability aga i nst the likelihood of a sustained Castro-supported subversion threat. S_Ee~EI _ SECRET 5. 3
  • ' i t ' 'i ( • !t ; ~ r \. '~ ';• ;r 11. In response to a question of the President, as to the involve­ ment of Castro - · 1.S{c) Mr. McCone recalled a report 3.4(b)(1) warned of a move in December 19 3 - January 19 The President requested
  • 7 on Cuba;** that is, 11 . we believe that Castro does not intend to force the issue until after the US elections, when he will seel( UN action. If this fails, there is con- 8 9 10 siderable danger that he would order a shoot-down, calcu- 11
  • week were the notable progress toward elimination of the rebel zone in the Do·m inican Republic, the labor difficulties in Uruguay requiring emergency security measures, and the favorable _..: though qualified - - response of Castro to our proposal
  • for Europe our Cuban policy . He explained to them that our economic denial program was not expected to result in Castro's downfall, but wa s an effort to prove that there was no future for Com­ munism in this hemisphere. He said he explained how the standard
  • of the committee? I'm thinking particularly of Bobby Kennedy. M: Not that I know of, no. F: Did you get the feeling that this blunted Castro's subversion in Latin America? M: Unquestionably it weakened Castro's stature throughout Latin America. Whether
  • addition to being one of Lady Bird Johnson's closest advisers­ and closest friendsash Castro is the former Director of National Parks in Washington, D. . On August 27, 2006, he came to de­ liver the address at the laying of the wreath at President Johnson's
  • on in. - Sates Ambassadors: J.WesleyJones, Amb to Peru MauriceM. Bernbaum.Amb to Venezuela RAUL H. Castro,Amb to El Salvador JohnW. Tuthill,Amb to Brazil Claude Gordon Ross, Amb to Hait Bowdler Sayre Amb James Symington Hon. Covey Oliver, Asst Secy of State fo r
  • ." The President added: "I am Iisting everything we can think of to make this hemisphere better." The President said failure of the United States to act in the Dominican Republic would have resulted in another Castro, and that the threat of communist aggression
  • the ones which were outlined in this paper in 1960. Certainly Berlin continues to be a crucial point; Laos continues to be a crucial point; obviously Vietnam does; Castro less so than in 1960. Today, I think one would clearly add the Middle East
  • · rooms. The Kennedys tried to g ·t the atholic clergy t > dissuade those in the march from staying overnight. Many govern­ ment agents were assigned toke pan ey throw Castro. Robert Kennedy ran the committee, which came up with many schemes, some of them
  • implied by the return of former President Quadros. by the threat He has made it clear that he has not changed bis sympathetic attitude toward Castro and that he intends to re-enter politics. following in the October congress­ Should be obtain a significant
  • from 1957 to 1961 when Castro threw us out. 1 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Bowdler -- I -- 2 F: You picked a vital time
  • National Capital, Inc. Nash Castro estimated that $974, 000 was to be spent on the beautification of highway approaches to Washington by the District of Columbia, Park Service and the Highway Commissioner of Maryland. Secretary Udall announced
  • Laos (Sanitized 6/29/00, NLJ 99-40; more released than previous sanitization) 52 memo Bundy to President re Castro announcements (Sanitized 2/10/00, NLJ 96-106) (duplicate #52a, this file) 52a memo Bundy to President re Castro announcements
  • a 8peaker's Committee is not only getting someone else to do the speaking, but ~earing the interesting bits of information they bring back. qr instance, Nash Castro is just back from a Honvention of the uarden Living Industries of the ~astern United ~ta ~ es
  • , of the conference. F: Yes, he was. Had you become involved yet with National Park Service? L: No, I was just getting to know Nash Castro at this time. Then Mrs. Johnson started the idea of forming a committee, and I thought she should form a committee
  • Castro; Committee for National Health Insurance; beautification stamps; 1968 campaign; dedication of Lady Bird Johnson Municipal Park in Fredricksburg; Laurance Rockefeller and Mrs. Aston; how to spread beautification around a city.
  • yes, everything was fine from then on. increasing what he wanted to free them. Now, we failed because Castro kept About a year later Donovan, who had previously been head of OSS during the war, got these prisoners out. When we started
  • LBJ (Lyndon Johnson) is in Washington, goes to the Capitol today to look at the new majority leader’s office (P-38). Later he attends parties at Senator Bible’s home and Walter Hornaday’s. Castro assumes power in Cuba following the collapse of Batista
  • Lady Bird reads newspaper headlines; Lady Bird works on speeches & Beautification luncheon; Lady Bird has hair styled; Lady Bird works with staff, Nash Castro & Jane Freeman on tour guide script; Lady Bird calls LBJ in Honolulu; LBJ's eyes
  • • . FO RE IGN OFFICE SITUATION. ARAUJO CASTRO LEFT OFFIC£ YESTERDAY AND FRAGOSO IS ACTI NG FOREIGN MINlSTER . AIR FORCE LINEUP . ACTING MINISTER IS RANCISCO MELLO FORMER COS. COWDR THIRD AIR ZO NE RIO DE JA NEIRO IS DARIO CAVALCANTI DE AZ AMB UJO
  • : Government; we took the intiative H. E. Abdul Rahman Pazhwak, Permanent Rep of Afghanistan to the UN in breaking relations with the Castro ^Mr. Hadj DAzzout - Charge d'Affaires a. i. , Algerian Mission to UN government; Cambodia broke The Hon Raul Quijano
  • weeks in office were the worst. We had the Warren Commission, the men being held for ransom in Bolivia, the shootings in Panama, and Castro cutting off our water at Guantanamo. Not long after that came Cyprus and the Dominican Republic. We have had
  • the President was down there, the President had on his desk back in t.jashington papers to name the Ambassador to Bolivia. F: That's Raul Castro. T: Yes. All I could reu-ember is a South American country. And~ by the way, he wa3 thuught
  • States that hates He Chi Minh, this is to the President's everlasting credit because it would be very simple to make him the figure that Castro was awhile back. But the second thing is the boob tube. I think we really have failed to understand
  • of flamboyancy. It was just sort of an amusing thing, I think, on the part of the staff. G: What was his characterization of the office, do you--? R: I never heard him characterize it. G: Okay. Now, early that year Castro assumes power in Cuba. Let me
  • LBJ’s Capitol office; P-38; Castro assumed power in Cuba; resignation of Theodore Green as chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee; annual battle over Rule 22; LBJ’s motion to change rules to two-thirds of those present and voting than
  • not a great deal, I did some of the staff running around and checking on local projects, although most of that was done by Nash Castro, who would report directly to Liz and then, through Liz, often directly to Mrs. Johnson about progress on park service
  • in the years since the White House Confer­ ence on Natural Beauty in 1965. Participants will include Laay Bird Johnson, Lauranc Rockef Iler, Henry Diamond, William Ruckelshaus, Nathaniel vings, Ian McHarg, Nash Castro, William K. Reilly, Charles Haar, Robert
  • projects and schools in the poorer neighborhoods, and by turn­ ing vacant lots into playgrounds. The other approach, championed by Mary Lasker and Nash Castro, fa­ vored beautifying the parts of the city seen by the greatest number of people around
  • Washington, such as Supreme Court Justice and Mrs. Thurgood Marshall (right), and friends from her years in the nation's spotlight, at a number of events honoring her, including a din­ ner in Statuary Hall on Capitol Hill, which Nash Castro M.C. 'd (below
  • . December 20: /\MO 1G Celebration of Lad Bird John on 's birthday. ash Castro. former Executive Secretary of the Cornmillee for the Preservation of the White House, will give a presentation on the new exhibit, '·Holidays in the Whit Hou 'e." •RIE 'OS