Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

659 results

  • Donnelly & Sons Ebel, Edwin W., VP, General Foods Corp Edwards, Gordon, President, Natl Dairy Products Corp Engstrom, Elmer W. , Chairman, Exec Comm. , RCA Everest, Philip J. , Senior VP, Transportation Displays, Inc. Ewald, J. A., Chairman, Avon Products
  • The Honorable Barry Zorthian, Director of Joint U. S. Public Affairs, South Vietnam The Honorable Philip C. Habib, Counselor for Political Affairs, American Embassy Saigon also Rusk McNamara Gardner Freeman Harriman U. A. Johnson PRESIDENTIAL GUEST LIST
  • a decisive impact on that situation that certainly he would have liked, and when sent there I think others would have supported him. G: Who was political officer at that time? Was Phil Habib--? W: Yes, he was. In late 1965-spring of 1966, Philip Habib
  • L • MUI.Tm, Abraham MINISH, Joseph WELTNER,Charles NANNA,R. T • ot the GETTYS, T. S. TODD,P.H. SLATrON, William L. STILL, Richard L • BRGJNSTEIN, Philip N• McGUIRE, Marie BAUGHMAN, J. Stanley SCHUSSHEIM,Morton J. MURRAY, Robert W. SFECTCR
  • . Charles Cor ·ran, Shirley James, John Fawcett, Philip Scott. Dorothy Territo, nnd Gary ·arrington Research Photography: Chevalier Frank Wolfe, tlw estalih ·lmwnt of the Joh11so11 nwmori.1I, tlll­ cm1tnh11tio11s. Tlw Sodt't~ for a :.fon· ]k.mtil u
  • techniciamj at work Sights and sounds in the Audiovisual Archives by Philip Scott It is March 31, 1968. The President looks straight into the camera, reading hi::.addres to th American people. "We support a return to the essential provisions of the Geneva
  • of the Soviet and Eastern Euro­ pean Research Program at Johns Hopkins Univer­ sity; Strobe Talbott, diplomatic correspondent for Time magazine; Philip Bobbitt, UT law professor; Robert Kaiser, national correspondent for the Washington Post; James Goodby
  • receiving grants-in-aid and the titles of their proposed projects are· Philip Av1l10"Winning Hearts and Minds: The U.S. Senate & Vietnam, 1964-1972," Muhammad Azmi •·u.s.As A Factor in Pakistan-Soviet Relations 1947-1966," Mitchell Bard ''The Balance
  • the development of "realistic criteria" in assessing the impact of reforms in the Soviet Union. Lewis Gould, U.T. historian (below). discussed his book, Lady Bird Johnson and the Environment. 8 Philip Bobbitt (left) outlined the dy­ namics of nuclear deterrence
  • stay, more than 51I,000 visitors came to the Librn1·y to see it. Corporate sponsor of the exhibi­ tion, which was organized in the Stu­ dio Museum in Harlem, was Philip Morris Companies, Inc. Palmer Hayden, The Subway. c. 1930 oil on canvas, 31x26
  • Middleton, Johnson Library; Don Wilson, Archivist of the United States; Claudine Weiher Deputy Archivist; and Frank Mackaman, Ford Library. 6 Three writers enlivened the spring season at the Library with evening presentations. Philip Bobbitt (above
  • , those allegedly insiders' books, like that one and Philip Geyelin's on the world situation [Lyndon B. Johnson and the World], and so on? Is that written from somebody's staff viewpoint, or is that just investigative reporting over a long, long time? C
  • was called--I would have to check my records to get the exact date of it--prior to the election of '64. The meeting was called by Roy Wilkins of the NAACP, and present at that meeting were Mr. Wilkins, Whitney Young, Martin Luther King, A. Philip Randolph
  • RIVERS, L. Mendel, Congress PHILBIN, Philip J., Congress PRICE, Melvin, Congress HARDY, Porter, Jr., Congress BYRNE, James A., Congress PIKE, Otis G., Congress NEDZI, Lucien N., Congress RANDALL, William J ., Congress WILSON, Charles H., Congress IBWIN
  • LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] INTERVIEWEE: MRS. KATHARINE (PHILIP) GRAHAM publisher of Washington ~ INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ More on LBJ
  • First acquaintance with the Johnsons; Clean Elections Bill; Philip Graham’s background; Joe Rauh; Graham’s support of LBJ in 1960 election; selection of home for Johnson family; 1958 dinner at Alsop’s with JFK; Washington Post editorial policy
  • Civil Rights Bill of 1957; meeting LBJ while LBJ worked with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission; organizing the 1963 March on Washington; Rustin’s relationship with Mr. A. Philip Randolph; how Rustin’s contact with LBJ grew following
  • by way of any private decision of what he would do in the future . M: And you need to deal with what I think one of the better accounts of the whole affair, the one by Philip Geyelin of the Wall Street Journal /Lyndon B . Johnson and the World , 1966
  • AND CONSENT: The Wars for the Twenty-First Century. An Evening With Philip Bobbitt H. G. Wells once commented that throughout human history there have been two kinds of commu­ nities, those of will, and those of obedience. Today most nation­ states, including
  • . The whole thing was so far beyond what I had experienced in sophistication and elegance. The talk was of the stage and people like the [Philip] Barrys--he had written Philadelphia Story--Dorothy Thompson, Clare Booth, Donald Ogden Stewart. I felt very small
  • - introduce d by Gov . 'Philip Hof f - conclude d @5:33 p The Presidential party boarded th e aircraft an d departed fo r Portland , Main e - - arriving a. t 6:25 p Aboard th e plane - - guest>- - Senato r Edmun d Muskie, Joh n Bailey . The Senator an d
  • : 00 ao mo ._ .. TO: PETER BENCHLEY flA/J FROM: CHARLES MAGUMi~ For Presidential reply and return to me today, pleaseo Don't get too funny in the answer to Santora a light touch will be fine • .. (John Morris and Philip Santora
  • . Bruce Philip Segall Reverend William C. Wilson A. Arthur Capone Jack Leff Erwin Wagner Samuel Miller John P. Mahoney Margaret Nelson Walter Andrews Joe Kleinman Mat Sadkin Jennie Sadkin Herman C. Doyle Gertie L. Thompson Mattie I. Conrad Ernest Zane
  • in advance. He was terribly sensitive, as I said earlier, about leaks. One of his best friends in the press was Philip Potter of the Baltimore Sun, and Potter wrote a rather innocent story once saying that the President was going to grant the request of India
  • in the management-consulting business. But before I could make up roy mind I was approached by the recently appointed chairman of the Civil Service Commission, Philip Young, about transferring to the Civil Service Commission as its Executive Director--the top career
  • quote--who was it, who was the first president of the AFL-CIO--Philip Murray, who talked about giving people a rug on the floor and a picture on the wall and a little of the comforts of home. Poverty is a bad thing, let's get rid of it, it was just
  • Company Columbia BroadcasUzig Syetem Columbia Broadcasting Syatem -2Tony Sylvester Philip Carter Don Downing Barbara Furlow Lewis Lapham deRoosett Morrissey Ralph Heath Post • Newsweek Stations Newsweek Time u.s. News II World Report Saturday Evening
  • Ill her husb,md" 1mmc \111011g them • Thi! Philip ~!unay \\ 1111.unGreen \\rnrd. prest11Ml lJ) ll1 AFL t,.IO for Lllfs CQmmitmcnt lo 'iwc1ill pn.1grt· -~ • Tb Susan U ..\11th ~ Socfc:t) \\Hml fm clistuiguisl'lt.'
  • . Editor: Mark Neal Research assistance from: Philip Scott, Gary Yarrington Photography: Frank Wolfe, Paul Chevalier Staff assistance: Yolanda Boozer 16
  • Woodward 1987 Harry Middleton 1988 Philip Bobbitt 1989 Elspeth Rostow 1990 Nicole Nugent 1991 Tom Johnson 1992 George Christian 1993 Liz Carpent r 1994 James Davis 1995 Jake Pickle 1996 Roy Butler 1997 Chuck Robb 1998 Cactus Pryor 1999 Jack Valenti 2000
  • F. 8 i>_tr&·Davis. w. • Kilroy . • John A. Rathme'n / ..Charles D. BostoJF' J~li.~~-~l~ . . J. Philip Wa nd el -- ....., Robert S. Weatherall.A- • 11amK, D~vis Alfred. J. Knapp , . Lawrence s. Reed • . :/ Lyon L. Brinsmade...e..c~ 1 G~or,ge C.Helmig
  • ,,, ·;,;',,,c,••.1 ~J~¼ r. Bettner I •. . o. ftlli• ('ftle ••••) .. /~ Drafted: Philip Manhard approved in S: 10/29/~CRETARY'S -s-ECR~T US/MC/55 DEL:OOATION 1 _d/ / TO THE TWENTIETH SESSIONOF THE NATIONSGENERAL ASSEMBLY UNITED NewYork, September
  • ., U.s. Senate M:cCLELIAN, John L., Senate DODD, Thomas J. , Senate LONG, Edward V. , Senate BA.YR, Birch, Senate DIBKSEN, Everett McKinley, Senate ERVIN, Jr. , Sam J. , Senate HART, Philip A., Senate KENNEDY, Edward M., Senate TYDINGS, Joseph D. , Senate
  • foundation dedicated as a living memorial to those who served with the armed forces of th• United States in the Pacific" Directors Harold J. Coolidge, Jr. Walter F. Dillingham Philip M. Farley Childs Frick John J. McCloy Robert Cushman M1rphJ W. A. Read
  • and the Jackie Robinson Program is now funded in part. "Medgar Evers is going to work for us in California. We have [Julian] Bond, Philips, Evers, [Aaron] Henry, Robinson and others on tape for radio spots. We need money for a full-page ad. The ad publisher
  • *A. Philip Randolph - AFL-CIO *Eugene Ormandy - Philadelphia Orchestra Leonard Bernstein - N. Y. Philharmonic Samuel Eliot Morrison - Harvard Professor *John F. Gallagher - Vice President for International Operations of Sears, Roebuck - 2 - MEMORANDUM
  • McCulloch, of course Milton Eisenhower, Albert Jenner, Patricia Harris and Eric Hoffer and Senator Philip Hart and you. Where did he get Eric Hoffer? H: Well, many of us wondered. (Laughter) F: I wondered what he had to contribute? 11 LBJ Presidential