Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

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

2216 results

  • was in--was it Joe?--was just unsupportable. Well, I'm getting--at this late date, I'm not quite sure of my time lapses. I know at one point, when I saw how bad Wisconsin was and various other places, I sat down and wrote a memo--I don't know what ever happened
  • histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh %8&+$1$1 This is an interview with W. Evans Buchanan in his office in Rockville, Maryland, 8 2 0 Baltimore Road. The date is February 7, 1969; the time is 2:55 p.m. First of all, to say something
  • to the money centers of the North and East. Lot of congressmen in those days, and with a great deal of justification, looked upon our part of the country as a sort of a stepchild, and we were glad every time we could make a stride in bringing ourselves somewhat
  • Johnson's time spent sight-seeing and attending events at the Congressional Club or the 75th Club; visiting Bill White in New York City; Sam Rayburn, Wright Patman, Nat Patton, and other Texans in Washington, D.C.; visits with Aunt Effie Pattillo; summer
  • agona 11 y across the street from his TV station. He said, "What in the hell would I do with it?" I said, "Well, it's a good buy." a building on it. razed the building. The labor union owned it and they had It was an old Methodist Church at one time
  • INTERVIEWEE: LYMAN LEMNITZER INTERVIEWER: Ted Gitt i nger PLACE: General Lemnitzer's office, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 2 G: All right, sir, please go ahead. L: It was about that time that General [George C.] Marshall took over from Louis Johnson
  • of nickel, platinum, beryl ore, magnesium, and castor oil, all cur­ rently in short supply in the commercial market. 3. Accurate, comprehensive, and timely statistics are ~ential to the development of sound economic policies by government, business
  • the report had been presented to Kennedy before he went to Dallas. There is, like, a month's time lag, or something like that. After Mr. Johnson became President, Esther Peterson was designated special assistant to the President for Consumer Affairs. I began
  • TI ON NA FORM 1429 (6-85) ---' Sent to Mr. Jorden on 5 Sept. '69. Memoranda. for the Record of Meetings between Mr. McCone and the President 47. 6 January 1964. Review 48. of State of the .Union message. 7 January 1964. NSC meeting
  • are then expressed in the State of the Union and other messages. The basic problem with that approach is that after awhile, there is very little new thinking and basically every idea is bureaucratized; it's compromised and cleansed, and by the time it gets
  • 1,1ork oefon" \ve send a message, one, and we can't do that unless we spend some time on the message. Two, I think we ought to exchange some viewpoints on what legislation we can get-Tape 2 of 2 LBJ - -wh:::n he talks, say, "Now, I don t want to come
  • / U. ALEXIS JOHNSON Tape 21 (21a) It is Thursday, March30, 1972. Muchhas happened since my last tape in Novemberof last year after I had returned from a trip I took at that time out to East Asia. First, on the personal side, on February 4 I
  • issued by Federal nbly to pnss District Judge Frank ~t. .John· lcmnlng the son, who has consistently up· Solrnn, held desegre~ation Jaws. y, president Despite the colll't orac1•, Union oC the1·c was anoU1er march In rs AFL·CIO, Selma yesterday, thi~ time
  • . c. 20420 LBJ:JCM:BM:gt rG II-:< •January 22~ 1969 : Dear Red: Thank you for your kind remarks about my State 0£ the Union Message, and for : your generous evaluation of my Presi• :··. dcncy. I am so grateful for your l!-ble · eervlce in j:entral
  • Intelligence Agency personnel. Some materials in this file unit relate to substantive foreign affairs and national security concerns of the time, including developments in Vietnam, a memorandum regarding the presence of Communist flag vessels on the Mekong
  • , Tentative schedule s fiimed u Breakfast Iol)I) - times to be set when schedllle at the hotel. udience with the King. ( mn.bassy wishes to request such audience in behalf of the Vice­ President. ) Call on Prime Minister. (Possibl!~resentation the scroll
  • by Henry Ford's pee goons and all that stuff way back in the thirties I guess and he put a union together and it worked. At this stage Johnson was also--you got to remember Johnson's also--Reuther's going in there. He's talking about cities. Johnson's
  • a■ ex:preBBed in 1950 in the doM ■ tic and policie■ of the 80T1et Union. international !hu■ a •In the camp ot peace are the SoTiet Union, the Popular China ot Mao !■e be, the popular democracies of hope and A■ia, the liberating moTement ot the colonial and 1emi
  • here. At that time, I don't think there was any union here unless it was the railroad union. I LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library
  • , Aviation who Committee. and aeronautics. Railroad The first therefore for the conduct prov~ded created Administration, and ~ Departmental Order promul- for the continued component units of Roads and at the same time, a Federal
  • . Mulhollan PLACE: Mr. Bundy's office, New York City Tape 1 of 1 M: This time the subjects I want to talk about--and for your time benefit I hope we can wind it up--are Latin America, Europe, and the Middle East, particularly. Suppose we begin with Latin
  • Swedish horse out here in your office. P: Then when I came back in 1957 I began as legislative representative for the Industrial Union Department of the AFL-CIO. Then, of course, I began working-­ t~: r'1r. Johnson P: He was majority leader
  • Biographical information; trade union movement; 1960 campaign; consumer programs; consumer legislation; packaging bill; truth-in-packaging bill; women's rights; Betty Furness; Women's Bureau; equal pay bill; labor standards; interagency
  • re1utions with the United States. They appi::areo to be turning to the we.:;t, rathrr than to the · Soviet Union, ior help in obtain­ ing an Israeli troop withdrawal. Soviet arms 511ipments taperzd oft I · Israeli Lin!! Hardens At •about this• time
  • for your information. A 26 minute summary is also available on 16 mmfilm and we would be happy to show it at a time and place convenient to yourself and interested members of your staff. 2. (U) The participants in EPSILON I-65 and those of us in the Joint
  • was a member of Congress a time or two and when I was in Washington. He probably won't remember those occasions, but I do. But I have no idea when it was. And I don't remember my very first association with him as a member of Congress. I knew that he
  • in a stream of political talk all very much over our heads, but he is in such high good humor we enjoy it anyway. So we practice, and we learn what he wants us to learn, and how to say it, and as we win the city championship for the first time
  • its year and I was scheduled to make a brief address and give a paper at the conclusion. I did return to Washington and then ensued the various meetings incident to my assignment described by Mr. Halberstam. However, during that time I got
  • where we really hammered out a draft of the National Defense Education Act. At that time it was limited to, and only to, engineering, the sciences. I don't remember in categories exactly how it was spelled out, but that's the way it was. This expansion
  • of the time I was in the Un i ve rs ity, I was on the YMCA cabinet. Fo r two yea rs, I was state president of the Baptist Student Union. I was advertising manager of the Texas Ranger for several years. forensic activities. And I went in I was captain
  • into labor unions too? R: Wherever we could. Any time there was a structural organization that we could pinpoint, we tried to have our man as an activist. did, really, was commit a lot of people to work. fit too. And All this And this has a bene- Utah
  • VH,;E HOUSE date JEN? LYNDON B. JOHNSON DIARY , .. , . .„, Wed, . the White House ^ President began hi s day at (Place) Day •1 Time Telephone 1 In Out Lo f or t Activity Dale 8:06a C. 8:19a t 9:08a %f 9:50 10:15a Mr. The Hon. Vice
  • Sanders , Sue Higgins. /HUE HOUSE Date >ENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON October DIARY 'resident began his day at (Place) Time Telephone 11 In Out Lo the Whlte H 10:25a f 10:35a t • re 10:45a f _ Monday (include visited by) Oval Ofc 10:02a f_ 10:15a t
  • I V 1965 : , ■ Friday, August 27th Lyndon's 57th birthday was oddly divided between a quiet morning (I actually lay in bed and did some recording) and hours of riding the nice edge of tension. Some time during the morning I got a call from Lyndon
  • Telephone call from Bill Moyers; ceremony and presentation of Johnson City park; tour for guests from Time-Life; LBJ arrives in Texas; LBJ's gives a reminiscent speech; Johnsons and guests go to boyhood home; LBJ picks up little boy and gets a kiss
  • /HITE Housf IENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON Date DIARY > ,, y ^^£?C4 The 'resident began his day at (Place) : Time Telephone =1 1 In Out Lo 6:52a t f or t • LD : • Activity The '_ Secretary _„__ Under ! Walt __ — . , .—. with OFF RECORD Mike
  • HUE HOUS E Date Ma y 16 ENT LYNDO N B . JOHNSO N ; MARY resident bega n hi s day at (Place ) Time Telephon 1: Th e Da y t_ Tuesda y e ~T . 1 ~ Activit y (includ e visite d by ) t *" Highes 7:50a | Whit e Hous e - , 196 7 i t
  • Archives LBJ Library and Museum The object(s) described below is released from the archive collection of the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum to the museum. Description of object(s): Telegram, Director, FBI, to Marvin Watson, re Student Peace Union
  • a White House Fellow. This would be in the latter part of the fall of 1965 through one year of the program. had gotteu in~o We how you became involved in the presidentiaJ corres­ pondence, his personal letters. At our closing the l3st time you had
  • came out of the Senate, that was the only bill that could have been passed? C: I think that's a good statement. B: Yes, of course, at that time. At that time. Was there much distress among the liberals at what had happened to the bill? C: No, I
  • in certain subjects, but which weren't the sort of things that would get him in trouble. Now, on other occasions, State of the Union messages, like that, we had the chance to participate by seeing drafts at various times that Walt Rostow would ask
  • Rusk's son [David], who at that time was quite active in civil rights matters, was involved. He worked with Sterling Tucker, who is now the vice chairman of the District of Columbia City Council, and he sat in on the meeting with us and was our principal
  • leaders were in his office at the time, and we were discussing this question with him. The next time I met him was in a conference with President Kennedy. A number of the civil rights leaders were involved in a conference with President Kennedy and Vice
  • , engineers-G: Technicians. K: Yes--the backbone for a strong military-industrial complex in the Soviet Union. G: I've said many times that Sputnik did more for American education than Robert Taft or a lot of other people could possibly do, because