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2004 results

  • Amendment; poverty; racial inopportunity problems; critical evaluations; Bert Harding; CEA; hostility toward OEO; Adam Clayton Powell; Yarmolinsky; Job Corps; evaluation of Head Start; BOB; John Forrer; Kermit Gordon; Scultze; Zwick; Cannon; Cary; Senator
  • 11 :15 A .M. Would you please advise me by return wire if your schedule will permit you to attend. Lawrence F. 01 Brien, Special Assistant to the President. VSM:ew ADCEN, George D. AI.LOTT, Gordon ANDTIRSON,Clinton P. B/\RTLETT, E. L. BASS, Ross
  • includes a major address to a. joint session of the Bra~illa.n Congress in which you could treat the Vietnam situation. The itinerary has been checked with Linc Gordon, who thinks it.s !ine. W. W. Roetow / / / Itinerary OK !or planning purposes
  • he C entr l Intelli· fety progr m. and 1968 plans for i. provement. This report was prepared in con on nc with the guidelines fur ni hed by th cretary of L abor . I wish to a ur you of the continued full cooper t ion of this Agency in re ching
  • now become ineligible for new procurement, unless a formula can be found whereby the Bank can financi~ cooperation. Such a99Pera~~_2uld take receive Australi~'s several forms, among which, given the incipient stage of Australia~s capital market, ~ect
  • . General LeMay 11. The Ambassador-at-Large 55. Mr. Moscoso 12. The Special Counsel 13. The.Special Assistant to the President for NSA 56. J.C. King 57. Ambassador Gordon · 14. .A.~1 Director of USIA 58. Ralph Dungan 15. Deputy Under Secretary of State 59
  • forces, the optimum an4 most efficient use of manpower, but also all the voluntary offers of aid and assistance which have come to it or which can be organized and used effectively. The spirit of cooperation and unity which developed in the wake
  • Bob Baskin John Thawley Charlie Boatner Marj Whitman Paul Bolton Al Williams Bi 11 Brammer Gordon Yoder Zygmunt Broniareck Henry Burroughs Bo Byers Dave Cheavens Pat Conway Carrol Copland George Dorsey Dawson Duncan Bi 11 Gardner Harry
  • -- threatening harm to the families if the boys do not perform; threatening the young men if their families do not cooperate with the Viet Cong .. The Communists use terror to impose their will. v i llage officials and others are victimized. Farmers, In one
  • 14th to ask other countries that were cooperating with us in the London gold pool to close the London gold market and undertake the discussions that led to the establishment of the two-tier system on the following weekend. That was a decision
  • in Viet Nam are frequently called mercenaries because of our contributions to their troop support.Was that a necessary prerequisite to their cooperation--that we bear the cost--perhaps even beyond the actual cost of the troop use? R: That is a phrase
  • . COOPER AND MR. THOMSON Pak Visit to the U. S. l. As you know, President Pak of Korea will be in Washington on May 17 and 18 to visit with the President. The program which State has in mind and which involves the President's schedule is as follows: May
  • , Dire c t or STATE D ean Rusk, Secretary U . Alexis Johnson, D epllty Under Secretary for Political Affairs USIA Dona l d Wilson, A cting Director BUDGET Kermit Gordon, Director SERVlCE.SE.T . . WHITE HOUSE McGeorge Bundy, Special Assistant
  • . He supported our effort in helping international monetary cooperation- -and later on I think he developed a real interest in it when he had more time. But that came, I guess, after I'd left. He was interested, became interested after his reelection
  • . Bell, Gordon, Schultze, Zwick-Congress has a very low opinion of the Bureau of the Budget. The second thing is the House Appropriations Committee. and McClellan as well in the Senate. have a peculiar inconsistency which you can't really point out
  • with getting Malone's cooperation in trade for, say, looking after Malone's interests in Nevada or something like that? M= It might well, yes. G= You don't have any particular knowledge of it? M: No, r don't have any. That would be something they would
  • not read that. I mean to. Y: Well, you'll find it very clearly laid out in there. At any rate, the task force that President Kennedy had set up, which was in effect Walter Heller and Kermit Gordon and their staff, the Council of Economic Advisers' staff
  • : former LIFE magazine photographers Gordon Parks and Charles Moore: Mag1111m photographers Bob Adelman and Leonard Freed: then-staff photogra­ pher for the Nm ion of Islam, Robert Sengstacke;and Black Star photogra­ phers Matt Heron and Bob Fitch. The LBJ
  • : That was probably my greatest continuing responsibility, yes, the HEW area. M: Did you start to work in the area of education in HEW from the very beginning, or did this slowly evolve? C: No, I remember in the summer of '64 Bill Moyers and Kermit Gordon
  • constantly to foster the development of free nations cooperating for their mutual benefit. We believe that this comm.unity of free nations can fully achieve the universal goals expressed in the United Nations Charter only when all governments are based
  • and sundry that wo have bad ln the laat two or three da71. At the end of thl• memorandum (by my staff man Cooper) two cbolcea are offered. One l• to let tbe political meas play lt• aelf out bl lt• own way. and the other le to try to keep lt pbm.ed toaether m
  • believed that the Germans could and should do their share to offset our costs in the Federal Republic, and the Germans generally did. That got sharper, and the Germans less cooperative, as the years went on. H: That was mostly after you left? B: After
  • . MIL TOH R . YOUHO, N . OA K. KARL &. MUNDT , 8 . DAK. MARGARCT CHAIC I MITH . MAINE THOMA8 H . KUCH•L. CALI,., ROMAN L. H"-UIKA , H••R . GORDON ALl..OTT, COLO. NORAll COTTON, N , H , CLl,.,.ORD flt , CAI&, H . J . CO MMITTEE O N APPROPRIATIONS March
  • worked for during that period, not necessarily in the correct order, included people like Robert Nathan, Bert Fox, who's I think up at Harvard last I heard, Eddie George, who came down from Dun and Bradstreet, Lincoln Gordon, I guess now president
  • be long before my geography - 2 ­ and parentage catches up with me in the minds of these people," the President stated. The President said he didn't feel he was bigoted, that he found he could cooperate in certain areas even with his critics. He cited
  • good, you and me planting potted pansies on the Mall . this is the kind of thing men are going to I just don't think like ." But we did and_Mrs . Johnson made all of this seem good, and pretty soon everyone was planting pansies . The cooperation
  • process to get a public housing unit built, that unless you have everybody cooperating it just doesn't get done. As a matter of fact, they're even having a problem these days getting subsidy housing built, for a whole lot of reasons, not only financial
  • volunteers to Peru to work with the people in the Altiplano of Peru and help them to organize themselves, and to get their production going better and create communes or cooperatives, and then vote and stand up for what they believed in, you know, everybody
  • , Randolph Gordon, Helen Jewish Corrrnunity Center JOHNSTON., Elizabeth, KOLBERG,Rosamund, LAMBERT, Carroll, Utah State University LiWIS, Cornell, Montganery County Head Start MARLEDGE,Maxine, Omaha Head Start MARTINEZ, Sam NIEMEYER, J .H., Bank St. College
  • visit the United States after the Chamizal ceremony. i ,! As Ambassador Linowitz and Mr. Gordon reported to you on December 19-20 after their return from Latin America, some of the Latin American leaders are sensi­ tive because it has not been possible
  • to~• (White House File Copy) Preaideat NATIONAL INVESTIGATIONS ON AERIAL MAJOR USMC DONALD E. KEYHOlt DIRECTOR COMMITTEE PHENOMENA WASHINGTON. D. C. 20036 GORDON I. R. LORE, JR. ASSISTANT DIRECTOR o,,,ca: ■ 1 ADMINISTRATIVI: 11536 CONNECTICUT
  • . .Both our Governments had much at stake in this sensitive field. The US Government, from the top level down, had an intense interest in ensuring that we had the closest possible cooperation. We recognized, of course, his authority and responsibility
  • , with soil fertility. In every county and air bases and through cooperation every town.snip there are farmer with Canada and the rest of the committees which are prepared to Americas. By preparing commeet al'iy defense need involvini: pletely now, we shall
  • by overall liberalization of its various restrictions. The Japanese were non-committal on specifics but acknowledged their own self-interest, including maximum cooperation with the United States on its balance of payments problem, required more rapid movement
  • , and seemed inclined to build up the "backstopping" function in this field • • He spoke of Patrick Gordon Walkar,now the shadow Foreign Minister, as "having good ~udgement most of the time". He said Gordon Walker had got a little excited over Malaysia", so he
  • but thought it was important that he hi ms e _lf should run as a civilian candidate. The net result of their talk was that whoever was the winner would employ the services of the loser. Ky went on to say that if elected, he proposed to ask the cooperation
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