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  • movement of goods and services, continued many of these controls after the peace treaty. A semiannual import budget was maintained to allocate the use of foreign ex­ change by traders. Investment by foreigners was regulated, and Japanese travel abroad
  • . Max is on the State Department payroll until 14 September, which carries him through this next period of travel and speech-making, and his suggestion is that he might take a little leave in the first part of September and then be available to begin
  • distillation of "proposals" and "counter-proposals" made in the course of these talks. 3. Further details will follow by separate cables. 4. Baggs and Ashmore undertake to keep this entire matter secret. They are travelling from here to Phnom Penh on ICC
  • this traveling for them and actually attending to this work. We'll handle your expenses." I r.efused this. I told Jake back at that time that I was doing this because I believed in Mr. Johnson; that I was an amateur and that I wanted to retain my amateur status
  • the President was in the campaign of 1960. But in 1960 I traveled mainly with Nixon and with Kennedy, so that the answer to your question is that I really had hardly set eyes on the man until early in 1965 when NBC assigned me to the White House as its White
  • : Very restricted. K: Exactly. A Vice President, as the number two man in the entire country, carries the weight, the prestige and the imagery second only to the President and he is much more available to travel. So in effect a President uses a Vice
  • of assignments I have done a fair amount of traveling among federal agencies. I began to become involved with OEO during the task force days when the program was fiBst being created. G: This was from February to April or February to March? LBJ Presidential
  • of priorities? S: Oh, yes. It's more than that, though. I think I can view the thing a little bit more objectively now. I'm not fighting for specific programs that offer a specific budget. I've traveled much more since I left in September than I was able
  • officer who used to travel with me over to the phone. the phone." He came back, and he said, "The White House is on I laughed and said, "It's some drunk. there, Sergeant, and find out who it is." said, "No, it's the ~~hite House." Go on back He came
  • here, based on a plan that had been instituted in Boston, but not very effectively implemented, was that no property would be turned down for insurance if it is insurable in itself; that its location and the condition of its neighbors will not deprive
  • ·Vietnam, Bryant,'._.~ l · go\·ernors, may
  • /exhibits/show/loh/oh Johnson -- XL -- 17 didn't care what happened personally in regard to elections. M: After you returned to Washington, you then went to Boston to attend a diamond jubilee birthday dinner for President [Harry] Truman on the occasion
  • have also appeared in The Atlantic, American Heritage. the Washington Post. the Los Angeles Times. and the Boston Globe. From 1998 to 2003 he was a research fellow at the University of Virginia's Miller Center of Public Affairs. "And that was the story
  • . 14681 - Declaring a Portion of Boston Inner Barbor &D4 Fort Point Cbume l lonnavigable 5. R. R. 15710 • To Exempt tbe Coaaiisioner and Mnlber ■ ot tbe D. c.,eouncil from Prov1 ■1ou ot the Batch Act 1. R. R. 10477 !UISDAYAID MIAJl:I or WEEK
  • chu JBC:ltd tt 423 -3000 - CIAL B. C. I . ~oaghout the CORPORATION World Executive Office of the 141 President CERTIFIED MAIL RETURN RECEIPT Offices: The MILK STREET• July 9, 1965 B. C. Morton BOSTON Building 9, MASS
  • . A number of other invitees were unable to corr-e because of conflicting engagements or because the snow­ storm interfered with their travel plans . The group showed deep interest in che propos2a Summit meeting. These are the highlights of ~he dis­ cussion
  • over all the clubs in Boston that wouldn't let him in because he was an Irish Catholic. And I wouldn't be at all surprised if that weren't the reality. 22 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org More on LBJ Library oral histories: http
  • concerned, and so they started to dip into capital, as we'd say in Boston . M: So one of the questions then--the reason I dwell on this is some of the critics have made quite a point of the timing of DVN units-- B: That is correct . M
  • of 71 mis­ demeanor arrests ,vho lived ·in the 1200 block of :Massachusetts Avenue within 5 blocks of the nearest gun store. 111is gentleman traveled 8 miles in order to guarantee his anonymity. In contrast to Maryhmd, a check of the Virginia stores
  • /exhibits/show/loh/oh ROBERTS -- I -- 5 had ridden in maybe hundreds of presidential motorcades all over the world, and you hear backfires all the time. Motorcycles get hot when they travel at slow speed and they backfire, sometimes they even catch fire
  • had to LBJ; 1964 campaign; LBJ’s inability to announce travel plans in advance; LBJ choosing a running mate; LBJ lying to the press; comparison of LBJ’s press secretaries; the Walter Jenkins incident; off-the-record interviews; naming Nicholas
  • Committee. June 16, 1942 El1.ot1 Knox and the President. Mrs. Reid - Ingersoll-then the columDiste perhaps. Telephone talk with Ingersoll. June 16, 1942 This man sees only high class people in New York City, Boston, Phila­ delphia, Pittsburgh
  • . Some of our leaders have received letters This is not - and has gone on for years. force and violence in the future. speaks to this. of John These are the same race, color or religion. We want the "Americans tor Counter-Revolutionary travelers
  • the severity of our urban crisis from administration proposals for and the great magnitude of necessary solutions, additional taxes and restrictions on travel and foreign investment, it is clear to me that you are well aware of the grave problem of national
  • , to negotiate a stand-by agreement. Fiscal, as well as monetary require­ ments, will form a part of Ecuador's commitments ·under a new stand-by. An AID team is travelling to Quito on June 2, to . recommend to the Goverrµnent further actions in the financial
  • A 1 p. 2 pp-. (. A :7 1 47b report DATE ,~, llf,_ :f 7 7 - .J [probable duplicate of #48a, Internat ' l. Meetings & Travel ; "President's Trip to Guam (Conference) (II)," sanitized] 48 memo A 48a report A S 3 pp. _[_duplicate G--f-# rna
  • EVERYTHING WAS GOING FINE IN WASHINGTOJ AND IN ANS~ER TO A QUESTION REGARDING HIS TRAVEL!~ TO VI~TNA~ SOON, RE?LI D H~ HAO ONE MORETHI 'G TO TIE UP IN WASHItJGTON END PAGE ONE PAGE TWO CS F CR ET ·NO FOREIGN DISSE~INATION> BEFORE HE ao::s A1lD WILL TELL
  • er for the City of New York; Dr. Ford, I believ e it is, who has that capaci ty in Boston and works for the Harvar d Medica l School . The people who conduc ted that autops y were not really the top forens ic pathol ogists in the countr y
  • passed by the 88th Congress. at the heart of one of our moat critical and urgent needs -- a transportation system which can relieve congestion and make it possible for people to travel with comparative ease to places of work, learning and pleasure. I am