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  • . "Gainesville Sun", Gainesville, Fla., daily newspaper, on 12/12/67, stated Alachua County Grand Jury will -convene 12/18/67, to investigate charges of criminal activity in Gainesville, Fla., made by, Negro male, IRVIN LEE DAWKINS. DAWKINS accused police
  • is an opportunity. I.might also tell you about the time that he sent me as a delegate to the Texas Press Club Association. We had in the college a press club, and those of us who edited the newspaper or annual belonged to the press club. of it. I believe he
  • to at least judge the [work he did]. M: Yes, but I was a novice myself. He was good at everythi n-g he di d .. I had been assistant editor but other than the exposure on the College Star I didn't have any newspaper experience. It was all flying
  • from him, whether you were a constitutent looking for Army-Navy tickets, whether you were trying to help get a dam on the Colorado River. closeness of association with him. There was a great You also felt in that office there was very much a kind
  • never was intimate with him or closely associated with him, even after that time. McS: Mr. Fountain, during those Senatorial years are there any things that stand out in your mind as far as either issues or legislation that you particularly think
  • Biographical information; first association with LBJ; LBJ-Sam Rayburn relationship; 1960 convention; LBJ’s acceptance of VP nomination; Lady Bird campaigning in North Carolina; civil rights legislation; religious issue; Senate luncheon; LBJ’s trips
  • to convalesce at Brooke. At that point I was president of the American Heart Association, and because of that and because I was involved in the care of President Johnson I was asked to be on "Meet the Press," along with Ted Cooper, who was then in charge
  • on the second floor~ Renderings by Graeber, Simmons & Cowan, A.I.A. Architects, Inc. In association with R. Max Brooks, FA/A 3 Foundation Board Meets At LBJ Ranch Members of the LBJ Foundation Board of Directors, meeting at the LBJ Ranch on June 7-8, approv d
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Thursday, October 17, 1968, 3:00 p.m., at office, Jess McNeIl Machinery, San Antonio, Texas P: Mr. Bardwell, you've had a long association with politics, particularly San Antonio and Texas and among some early politicians
  • Discusses his early association with LBJ as Secretary to Congressman Kleberg; LBJ's wedding; NYA appointment; LBJ's early working habits; the 1941 and 1948 Senate campaigns; the War Production Board; Kilday-Maverick relationship; Taft-Hartley Act
  • that way for a number of years. Fulbright has been dead for some twenty years; Crooker, Freeman, and Bates are all retired from this law firm--they have no further interest in the firm. I'm really the senior partner. M: And you've been then associated
  • grew. of cost program will not be taken now associated to policy its as about goals. opponents which they borrow without de Gaulle to disperse. is and prestige. ignorance of the force, the experience After it and statesmanship weapons
  • was a type of mentor? P: Well I suppose everybody felt close to Nr. Sam. And because of my associations in the 1936 presidential campaign, where I was directed to become the executive director of sixteen farm states-F: Yes. P: --by Henry i'Jallace
  • . MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON May 27, 1966 TO: THE PRESIDENT FROM: Okamoto You wanted to see a few of these prints of the labor press reception before they were distributed. These are for newspaper publication. May we have them sent out? Yes
  • tenure as president that if my constituents (I was from 1961 to 1969 executive vice president of The American Bankers Association) and I agreed with him on an issue, we would do our best to go in all-out support. If we disagreed, we would, if feasible
  • Walker's first contact with LBJ; Walker keeping LBJ informed of the views of the American Bankers Association (ABA) members; Walker's banking and economics background and support for increased political power of the ABA; Walker's December 1963
  • association, as I have been saying for a very long time (sometimes with a feeling that, with the exception of you and one or two others, I was talking into a vacuum), is a major and increasing alternative. Witness the major Soviet aid which started in June
  • in the meeting were: 1. Those present agreed unanimous ly that representatives of the Associated Industria l ists of Alabama and th~ state Chamber of Commerce will ca ll on Governor Wallace as soon as possible to request that he appoint an official bi-racial
  • of relationship started many years before, way back in 1955, and that because of the long period of association I never felt that I was out of place. B: That also implies that at least you didn't see any real change in Mr. Johnson. H: Yes, it does. I do
  • [these are] declining tax bases in many of these rural counties as out-migration has taken people away. The age level, the medium age, is going up, with a lot of the younger people leaving. Agriculture, which was never a very viable enterprise in these mountains
  • [?] instead of belonging to Harris Blair. But I had it kind of down as an organi- zation that was more religious than it was pertaining to college. G: Okay. Last time you mentioned that LBJ devoted a lot of his time there to the newspaper, the College
  • OF THE.SECRETARY DOT FOR RELEASE Sunday, May 7, 1967 SECRETARY BOYD PLEDGES SUPPORT . . OF AASHO SAFETY RECOMMENDATIONS Secretary of Transportatio~ of the Federal-aid highway recommendations American "'.'- 2767 program for improving Association Alan S
  • . On the corresix1ndents' panel were Frank Cormier, for a long time with the Associated Press and now retired; Helen Thomas, United Press Interna­ tional and dean of the Whjte House press corps: Marianne Means, Hearst Newspapers and l(jng Features syndi­ cate: James
  • and Native American settlement sites across the country. The United States Newspaper Progrnm, created by the NEH in ID8'.2,is microfilming .>4 million pages from hundreds of thousands of local newspapers that would otherwise be lost to decay. The Endowment
  • -2­ VI. (FYI: The World Bank and the Asian Development Bank, as well as a nwnber of private enterprises, will be examining Indonesian develop­ ment possibilities in the months ahead.) You may wish to conclude by asking that a development program
  • protection t mpcred the 111herent hardships and cruelties of\\ hat is still, by some, called the free enterprise system .. The R osev It Revolution, the New Deal, to this day is both celebrated and not quite forgiven The poor ;.ire still though! y the -.tern
  • of tradi­ tional exports, which is fundamental to maintaining reasonable prices on the world scene, is that the export crops have often been the first to have reasonably efficient marketing systems associated with them. It is often more profitable
  • That was after he was in Congress. Wait a minute, when did he go to Congress? He had returned here-I was very much involved in the marriage. Youth Association. Did you know anything regarding that appointment to the National Youth Association? H: I had
  • with you? H: Yes, we had a very close association during the time. When I entered the Congress he had preceded me by two years, I believe it was. He was a member of the Naval Affairs Committee of the House of Representatives at that time
  • Biographical information; first association with LBJ in Congress; LBJ’s chief motivation and goals; 1943 and 1948 elections; Sam Rayburn; Charlie Murphy; oil/gas industry; Bob Kerr; Natural Gas Act of 1938; Senator Francis Case; Area Basin decision
  • he was ready. So we had the most open kind of interchange with the members of Congress, and their staffs, and with the associations in the city until about the time the program began to be put together, whereupon the curtain came down. We were
  • th~ remember one newspapers about it, there was a lot of conversation among the Democratic Parey workers in our precinct where I had been a there wor~er, . . with \"Tas a good bl t •..•. u.L-ere were some evening rneetlngs .-. various members
  • Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 4 a good friend of the newspaper publisher in the area, Mr. [Eugene] Pulliam, and it seemed to me that my press
  • 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
  • . Frank Boyden . Headmaster of the Deerfield School Mr. Boyden. tf*pbx*f ^6» Mr. Gary Potter. President, National Association of Independent Schools Mary Rather who was once Mr. William Saltonstall. President, Massachusetts State Board of Education
  • / the Parade Magazine newspaper boys PRESS covered Warren Reynolds, Publisher of Parade Bill Delaney, Ass t to the Publisher • Jack Anderson I Michael Bailey Robin Bayles Carl Binstea d j Joel Denning . John Grisetti i| Steve Hawald : 11 Mar k Kennedy _ Stephen
  • in the Secretary's office . all concerned with it . We were Our particular concern was that, as we saw the case despite the fact of the way it appeared in the newspapers, that really Billie Sol Estes had primarily taken--if you can put it that way--some private
  • of books and a number of articles in public finance and social security and other associated areas. During this whole period, since I've joined Brookings, I've always been interested in public service, and largely through my friendship with Walter Heller
  • just popped out of the wall and then the hordes of friends and people that were reading in the newspaper, they made a--they had a news release and announced this program. Then everybody just came in. But this organized man would have the mail on his
  • you have the idea you were W: Not at the time, I didn't give it much thought--in that area, an~~ay. F: How long did this association continue? W: It continued to the present time. F: So that any time he was in New York he was likely
  • : Rather than waiting until it was through. H: Rather than waiting and being encouraged and prodded, as I felt sure I would be, to resign under the incoming administration. Moreover, I had no desire to be associated with the new administration. M
  • "B.2"; "THANKING J.M ROACH, GENERAL MOTORS, FOR COOPERATION FROM HIM, HIS ASSOCIATES AND BOARD MEMBERS IN MATTER OF HOLDING DOWN PRICES ON NEW AUTOMOBILES"; "J.M. ROACH 9/26/68 4:40P" WRITTEN ON DICTABELT; RECORDING STARTS AFTER CONVERSATION HAS
  • LBJ THANKS ROCHE AND HIS ASSOCIATES AT GM FOR HOLDING DOWN PRICES ON NEW AUTOMOBILES DURING CRITICAL TIME FOR US ECONOMY
  • "B.4"; "THANKING HIM FOR COOPERATION FROM HIM, HIS ASSOCIATES AND BOARD MEMBERS IN MATTER OF HOLDING DOWN PRICES ON NEW AUTOMOBILES"; "HENRY FORD 9/26/68 4:50PM" WRITTEN ON DICTABELT
  • LBJ THANKS FORD AND HIS ASSOCIATES AT FORD MOTOR COMPANY FOR HOLDING DOWN PRICES ON NEW AUTOMOBILES, PRAISES LEO BEEBE'S WORK ON FINDING JOBS FOR THE POOR
  • ASSOCIATION--THE WHI'IE HOUSE There is sornething very special about this presentation. Two different worlds are t ou.chi ng -- evei so lightly, but nonetheless meaningf ul ly. The first i s the world of t echnology of scientific pretgress. w o rld
  • Press release, "Remarks of Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson upon Presentation of the 1968 Distinguished Volunteer Service Award of the American Heart Association - the White House, 2/21/1968"
  • to start off by asking you, if I figured it right, you worked for the AP [Associated Press] for twenty-one years, is that right? M: Yes, twenty years. G: That's a long time for a wire service. My impression of a wire service kind of a job was, you
  • McArthur's work for the Associated Press; the difference between working for a wire service and a daily/weekly publication; Mrs. Eva Kim McArthur's work as Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker's secretary; Bunker's attitude toward McArthur's and Eva's