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  • appt requested by Speaker McCormack March 2 , 196 5 White House Tuesday Senator Bourk e B . Hickenloooe r o f Iow a an d OF Senator Jac k R . fi i Mille r o f Iowa re proposed Hoover F RECOR D Memorial Situation Roo m Director o f USIA
  • The Presiden t presente d th e citatio n t o Mr. Bassemier , an d Mr. Bassemie r i n turn awarded th e Presiden t h e firs t annual Herber t Hoover Memoria l Award -- a gol d medallion pi x Secretary Henry Fowler OFF RECORD On outside porch talking w
  • Cabo t Lodg e an d Jac k Valent i OF Secy McNamara Bill Moyers Jack 5 F TH E RECORD Valenti McGeo Lee Bundy White J Edgar Jack out Hoover Valenti Departed th e offic e an d went t o Sout h Ground s t o Receptio n fo r Congressiona l
  • the citations and th e President pinne d o n the Medals - Press an d television coverag e To the Ova l Offic e w / M W Director J . Edga r Hoove r - FB I (requested by Mr. Hoover ) Marvin Watso n (pl) (The Presiden t handed Amb. Gree n a ltr fo r deliver y t o
  • INTERVIEWEE: DAVID DUBINSKY INTERVIEWER: PAIGE MULHOLLAN PLACE: Mr. Dubinsky's office, 201 West 52nd Street, New York City Tape 1 of 1 (Interview begins abruptly.) M: . . . Roosevelt. D: Hoover--Republicans too. M: Oh, Republicans too, yes! D
  • an original and two copies of this memorandumo I would suggest that you keep your copy in your safeo My copy is in my safe and I am sending the other copy to Mr o Hoover with the request that it be held closely o EYES ONLY - 5- -- 5010-107 OPTIONAL FOAM
  • -- 11 looked like what was the best source of ideas was the Hoover Commission Report, in which they had added up what each of these savings that they recommended would come to. They had a total for it. Well, Proxmire wanted to put all these bills
  • with, I suspect, a certain feeling about King.He had been terribly disappointed in King for good reasons or not. King had become increasingly anti-Administration, particularly on the war. Hoover had supplied the President with a vast amount of scurrilous
  • Clark; pardons and paroles; LBJ’s relationship with Hoover; Omnibus Crime Act of 1968; Model Cities; Robert Weaver; Bob Wood; tariffs; press relations; overseas airline decision; 1968 LBJ campaign and decision not to run; political activities after the 3
  • from the collections of the Library of Congress, the National Ar­ chives, the Ohio Historical Society, the Chicago Historical Society, and the Hoover, Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower and Kennedy Presidential Libraries. From March 15 to April 25, 1976
  • is the 7S foot set back of all. buildings on the north side . We had a major problem with the new F .B .I . building at 7th and 9th and the Avenue .­ We needed cooperation from J . Edga r Hoover, who was supposed to be impossible to get at . I tried the only
  • historic sites; Willard Hotel; J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI Building; Lady Bird’s time and attention; Federal Highway Commission; National Plaza; Owings close to the Nixon Administration; Nixon’s interest in the National Plaza; LBJ Library; Skidmore-Owings
  • an administrative system of overall transport policy coordination was the implementation of the recommenda­ tions of the firs~Hoover Commission of 1949. As a result, the three major transport p'fomotional programs in the Federal Government dealing with highways
  • of, and that was the Hoover Library--which is really not quite a library; it is not a place that people come for library purposes, more a research center--the Truman Library--well, excuse me, I skipped over the Roosevelt Library at Hyde Park--and the Truman Library, those
  • pretty common knowledge that Mr. Hoover and the FBI can on occasions be jealous of their independence and their prerogatives. Has the FBI worked well in cooperation with the other agencies? V: They work very well now. That was not always the case
  • on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 9 first move in an attempt to hold down some of these foreign costs that we were incurring as a government. F: You served on the Hoover Commission in there too. B· I did some
  • Biographical information; House Banking and Currency Commission; Sam Rayburn; Inter-American Bank; International Development Association; Hoover Commission; campaigns for Congress; Kennedy appointment to the Treasury; Chairman of the FDIC; May 1965
  • part of it stemmed from the fact that he was so uninhibited--he was manipulative and calculating in many ways, but he was so uninhibited also on the phone that he thought he was entitled to some sense of privacy. G: Did he distrust J. Edgar Hoover
  • for Bravery and Service. are: Capilla, Kail ua, Oshu, Hawaii G. Glynn III, Westbury, Long Island, New York Mary Lynne Donohue, Sheboyg an, Wisconsin attending; Director J Edgar Hoover Solicitor General Erwin Griswold 1968 VHITE HOUS E dat DENT LYNDO N B
  • . Attorney General Ramsey Clark. Under Secy of State Nicholas Katzenbach. FBI Director J Edgar Hoover, and Exec Director of the President's Commission on Crime. James Vorenberg To second floor of mansion w/ Mr. and Mrs. John Hill — Ambassador Eugene Locke
  • s Distric t Judg e Luthe r W . Youngdah l in additio n to : Ramsey Clark , Deput y AG J. Edga r Hoover , Director , FB I Returned t o Ova l Offic e Members o f the Crim e Commissio n i n th e Ova l Offic e Pictures i n Flowe r Garde n w/ th e Member
  • -- 30 it been three months later we would have had all the information on it. No one else had them infiltrated. Director Hoover came down and set up an office at Jackson, Mississippi. He gave me a list of eighty or ninety names that they had, and I
  • Service and the Soil Conservation Service and the Farmers Home Administration, who had their alliances with their committees and their industries and so forth. classic problem of who's running the government. Edgar Hoovers and the Ed Cliffs, It's
  • over PPBS; J. Edgar Hoover; LBJ evaluated in some detail; the Labor Department reorganization infuriates LBJ; LBJ characterized as to temper, language, schedule, intelligence, energy, vigor; Califano, McPherson, Levinson, Cater evaluated; the RMN
  • were on the Appropriations Committee, nobody touched Nevada unless McCarran wanted it done. McCarran was notorious for making enemies. Hoover were great buddies. He and [J. Edgar] He set up that Senate Committee on Internal Security because Hoover
  • . You need not •11• the ■e plctarea ■ ellt to y
  • and scenes from the pa ·t. John Fawcett has been Chief of the Audiovisual Section since 1973. He began his career as a museum assistant with the Hoover Library while studying physics at the University of Iowa. He soon changed his major to history, and became
  • sident Hoover's. At eac.h place I learned som thing ... First, [the Library is] a research facility. We house all of Lyndon's papers-you can't get librarians to throw anything away-and the papers f a good many of the people who were his working assodates
  • clocked among acceptances those of s Attorney General .Biddle, J. Edgar '· Hoover and Clyde Tolson of FBI, six , major generals, five judge·s headed 1 • by Supreme Court Justice William J 0. Douglas, the entire Federal Trade Commission, Comptroller General
  • they all mixed up? M: I went to both. F: Have you been to White House parties under what Presidents? M: Hoover. F: Roosevelt. M: Roosevelt. F: Then Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy-- M: Truma~ F: Did you ever go under Kennedy? M: No. F: You
  • card and burn it but it wasn't a draft card. It would be a Xerox copy of a draft card because they didn't want to get in trouble. But Hershey was--he was somebody you couldn't talk to. He was terribly out of touch. He'd become not quite J. Edgar Hoover
  • COPY UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE Federal Bureau of Investigation October 22, 1964 FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover today reported to President Johnson and Acting Attorney General Nicholas deB. Katzenbach that the FBI's extensive investigation
  • . He call d J. Edgar Hoover to tell him that he wants the inquiry to be run by the FBI at the federal level, and by state attorney general Waggoner Carr at the state level. Johnson said, "So I looked at the transcript that I had prepared in part and I
  • might be used in the search; that Navy helicopters were al­ ready beJng use
  • , offering limited technical and financial aid to areas facing school desegregation. Reedy reports that J. Edgar Hoover is opposed to legislation in the bombing field, but will not publicly oppose the bill. 1/22 LBJ attends executive session of the Armed
  • about him. Sa7t Houston lived with Lyndon when he lived out across the street from Hoover. F: J. Edgar Hoover. H:· He used to ride to work with him in that black limousine. Sam [Houston] I Was that out on Woodway? ~!ould And call every once
  • and build it up, whereas their diplomatic colleagues were responsible for the negotiation of treaties of friendship, commerce, and navigation, U. S. property protection and so forth and so on. Then, of course, after Hoover's service as Secretary
  • , just as Hoover was leaving office. And the column was beginning to get going when Roosevelt came in in March of 1933. F: When did you first become aware of Congressman Johnson, or do we have to come down forward of that? P: I don't remember exactly
  • of a functional bureau of that sort, where you have overlapping responsi bilities with geographical bureaus. Bear in mind that when the Hoover Corrmission some thirty years ago recorrmended the original organizational structure of the State Department, ··t hat
  • -- 8 the--I can't think of the name right now, but when the Hoover Dam legislation was passed, there were either two or three occasions when the Senate voted to specifically omit the 160-acre limitation because the growers down there had built a canal
  • , Hon. Ramsey Clark 6:19a t James 5: 21a t Hon. \' Rowle y , Director, U. S. Secret Service Ramsey Clark, the Attorney General 5:34a t FBI Director, J Edgar Hoover (b. 1 -6-4) telling him he had asked Rowley to assign agents to Presidential