Discover Our Collections
- Tag > Digital item (remove)
Limit your search
Tag- Digital item (2216)
- new2024-June (171)
- new2023-Oct (67)
- new2024-Mar (63)
- new2024-Dec (57)
- new2024-July (42)
- Rostow, W. W. (Walt Whitman), 1916-2003 (242)
- President Johnson's secretarial staff (181)
- Johnson, Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines), 1908-1973 (178)
- Johnson, Lady Bird, 1912-2007 (93)
- Mrs. Johnson's secretarial staff (72)
- Bundy, McGeorge, 1919-1996 (53)
- Friends of the LBJ Library (51)
- Califano, Joseph A., 1931- (46)
- Federal Bureau of Investigation (36)
- Johnson, W. Thomas, 1941- (33)
- Reedy, George E. (George Edward), 1917-1999 (24)
- Carpenter, Liz, 1920- (18)
- Vice President Johnson's secretarial staff (16)
- O'Brien, Lawrence F. (Lawrence Francis), 1917-1990 (13)
- Wirtz, W. Willard (William Willard), 1912- (13)
- 1965-xx-xx (30)
- 1966-xx-xx (22)
- 1964-01-08 (20)
- 1967-xx-xx (19)
- 1964-xx-xx (15)
- 1965-07-xx (15)
- 1967-10-xx (13)
- 1961-xx-xx (12)
- 1967-09-xx (12)
- 1967-11-xx (12)
- 1968-03-xx (12)
- 1968-05-xx (12)
- 1964-08-xx (11)
- 1968-02-xx (11)
- 1968-06-xx (11)
- Vietnam (249)
- Johnson, Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines), 1908-1973 (234)
- LBJ speeches and statements (109)
- Congressional relations (94)
- Press relations (90)
- Labor (85)
- Business (71)
- Transportation (70)
- Legislation (66)
- Civil rights (62)
- LBJ Library (58)
- Diplomacy (57)
- Public relations (53)
- National politics (51)
- Johnson, Lady Bird, 1912-2007 (46)
- Text (2069)
- Audio (186)
- Still image (6)
- LBJ Library Oral Histories (684)
- National Security Files (556)
- President's Daily Diary (187)
- Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings (148)
- Reference File (97)
- White House Central Files (73)
- Lady Bird Johnson's White House Diary (72)
- Papers of Charles E. Marsh (45)
- Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission) (41)
- Vice President Papers of Lyndon B. Johnson (37)
- Papers of Tom Johnson (31)
- Pre-Presidential Daily Diary (28)
- Meeting Notes Files (24)
- Administrative Histories (22)
- White House Social Files (22)
- Transcripts of LBJ Library Oral Histories (668)
- Memos to the President (268)
- President's Daily Diary (181)
- White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts (148)
- Meeting Notes (55)
- Country Files (54)
- Papers of Charles E. Marsh (45)
- Annotated Transcripts of Lady Bird Johnson's Diary (41)
- National Security Action Memorandums (41)
- Sound Recordings of Lady Bird Johnson's Diary (41)
- National Security Council Histories Files (33)
- Lady Bird Johnson's Daily Diary (31)
- National Security Council Meetings Files (29)
- Files of Robert Komer (28)
- Folder (979)
- Oral history (684)
- Daily Diary (238)
- Telephone conversation (148)
- Meeting notes (89)
- Newsletter (51)
- Personal diary (50)
- Report (40)
- Histories (33)
- Chronology (21)
- Folder listed on subject guide (16)
- Correspondence (15)
- Speech (14)
- Memorandum (9)
- Manuscript (4)
2216 results
- the same time. meaning more elderly people depending upon a shrinking work force for support. The proces is already taking hold in Japan. -uropc. and the European parts of the former Soviet Union-and may be beginning in China. Young History Researcher
- , of trying to improve the lot of the least advantaged people in society by all kinds of programs. He would have wanted--I've heard him on this subject so many times--it to be through minimum wages and through endorsement of labor union programs. He has
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 39, August 18-31, 1967 [5 of 5]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 21
(Item)
- the United States and the Soviet Union as Co-Chairmen of the Eighteen-Nation Disarmament Committee are L g J submitting to the Committee a draft treaty to stop the dangerous spread of nuclear weapons. " (2) He would like to delete the words, "without further
- . The time had not yet come tor Jehovah to move in world affairs in such a way as to build the Kingdom of Heaven here on earth. It seems as though God must have designed a particUla.r destiny far America; as though the Lord might have said during the growth
- to recommend a DOT to the President. Second, the role I played in helping hold the FAA and its employees behind the bill. But let me tell you how I spent my time after the decision was made to establish a DOT. The State of the Union Message was delivered
- of radio time. Ys LGt•e don't waste time on him. de.teu recket. , Y; H1 Will till Fair Pe.rk, tour thousaud, may over-tlQW, I elshing out, but it doesn't make any difference. Ro\\1 about A. J. He 1s pulling the old con.flict-of irtz1 ls he caning
- ARCHIVES PROCESSING NOTE You will find two versions of the document withdrawal sheets in this file. The original document withdrawal sheets were completed in the 1970s and early 1980s. Since that time, many of the documents have been declassified
- there. There's no excuse for those towns now, because they can go to the county seat in less time in an automobile on a good highway than they could get in a horse-and-buggy or a wagon into the town and do their shopping and get back out to home in time to milk
- night when I could get with him about the contractors fighting with the unions and what might come out of it . Now that ' s going to take a little time . If they want to issue it . . . some body told me that you had asked Mr . Ka zenback to draft one
- VHITE HOUSE . DENT LYNDO N B . JOHNSO N began his day at (Place) LB PLt Time J RANCH , TEXA S _ Telephone f or t 11 ; Da ..... Col d an d ic y outsid e bu t n o slee t o r rain 7:45a Awak y weight In Out Lo LD • , , r
- I MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON NOTES ON INFORMAL COFFEE IN THE FAMILY DINING ROOM - JANUARY 31, 1968 Present: The President George Christian ~ Hugh Sidey - Time Carroll Kilpatrick - Washington Post Merriman Smith - UPI Frank
- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh October 19, 1968 W: I was born of southern parents in St. Louis, where they were residing at that time, briefly in 1923. We returned to the South. My mother and father were Tennesseean and Alabaman people with a long
- , that is directly. I started working for Time magazine in Paris in 1950 and at that time the French war in Indochina was going on. So I had a good deal to do from the Paris end of covering the story, that is, from the French end of the story. And [I] became
- •resident began his dayat (Place) Time Telephone 1 f. 1 In Out Lo the I or t ...... Activity LD 11:34a t - _^r" ___^____ White House ______ July 17, 1967 Day Monday (include visited by) Joe Califano - pl
- with the White House, you r;iean? F: This was discussion with the White House--this was a discussion with President Kennedy. We had a discussion about it first in New York from early in December of 1960. And it was considered for quite some time. On the one
- welcomed shade and that comfortable feeling of deep roots. There was a marveloU.:s; swimming hole off the campus that must by now be lost t c-; the forces of progress. But the center of life was the Union Building. We all gathered there at the Post Office
- frequent conflicts with party leaders, Mao's authority has not been seriously challenged sµice that time. In July 1935 he was elected to the Executive Committee ot the Comintern and thus seems to have enjoyed the Soviet union's blessing at the time. The Red
- Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Gordon -- IV -- 2 happy phrase. I didn't at the time. There \Vas just none better around and for SOme reason it was felt necessary to have a rubric
- IssueNumberL August1, 1991 "It's all here-The story of our time, with the bark off!' -LBJ at dedicationof Library,May 22, 1971. 20 years of Library faces, pages2-3. "20 Yearsof The faces on these pages and the cover are some of the leaders
- but that certainly has no objection was rather if the u.s. more milj,. time for U.S. weapons, the Joint Committee to the PAL System for U.S. weapons. mentioned also that the destruct had been weapons at the bases visited, and he assumed on other weapons 1n
- : Hello! CULBERT: Hello, George Christian? CHRISTIAN: CULBERT: Yes, sir. This is David Culbert calling from Baton Rouge. couple of questions? Now, is this a convenient time? May I ask you a I know that you are leaving the country tomorrow
Oral history transcript, Everett McKinley Dirksen, interview 1 (I), 5/8/1968, by William S. White
(Item)
- was something of a secretary to Dick Kleberg. That's when I first met him. I had a great affection for Kleberg. He was a very interesting person. But the time came when a vacancy developed in Texas; and Lyndon Johnson went back, announced his candidacy
Oral history transcript, Joseph A. Califano, interview 18 (XVIII), 1/6/1988, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- think he wanted to be a judge. That's my recollection. I mean I was not in the White House at the time. I may have been there at the time the switch was made. I don't think I was there at the time Celebrezze decided to go but, yes, he wanted
- INTERVIEWEE: JOHN CONNALLY INTERVIEWER: Joe B. Frantz PLACE: Governor Connally's office in Houston, Texas Tape 1 of 1, Side 1 F: Governor, you and I, I think, share experiences in this. We must have both been undergraduates at the time that Lyndon
Oral history transcript, James C. Gaither, interview 4 (IV), 3/24/1970, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- in excess of two hundred thousand jobs were found for disadvantaged kids that summer at no cost to the government, and some one hundred and fifty thousand full-time jobs for the hard-core unemployed. What makes it really remarkable is that the whole
- don't have much time." And I said, "He'll certainly do the best we can." He said, "Well, I am very anxious to have this in order to incorporate it in my State of the Union r·lessage." This \lias in April or nay, something like that, I've forgotten
- Biographical information; time in New Orleans at Tulane University; studying in Europe; member of the Department of Surgery at Tulane; military service in 1942-1944 with the Surgeon General; post-war medical research program with the Veterans
- . " ) THE WmiE House D^t^ PREStDENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON DAHY MAHY Sept. T^ P^w.,, h.^,h;, Entry ! ^ ^ . Time Telephone . In Out !^%_ 11: 1 la To Lo ^ „rPi,r^ White or t , Activity House ^ 20, 1966 TUESDAY (tnciude vtstted by) LD Cabinet Room
- to start in the period of 1953 because 1953 was the period during which Mr. Diem prepared of his coming back to the country. I was at that time special assistant to Dr. [Phan Huy] Quat, who was minister of defense in the government of Prince Buu Loc
- got into that political race, and we had met many of the political figures of the state. I don't remember exactly when we met President Johnson, but it was sometimes in the 1930s. He was director of the NYA [National Youth Administration] at the time
- --selling automobiles in the retail trade and implements, employed by J. I. Case Company as a retail salesman, out of the Kansas City office for a couple of years. B: Is that the Case Farm Implements? L: J. I. Case, at that time was known as the J. I
Folder, "Right Wing Extremism," Records of the NCCPV (Eisenhower Commission), Series 11, Box 5
(Item)
- ~ ,, -- - - -- -- --- - - ------- ---- -- - - --- ----- --- --- - ------ -- - ----- ------------ - ------ _____ -- ..............__ -- -- - DO YOU KNOW ..... How many hours a week the right-wing spokesmen occupy the air waves with their pl'.opaganda? (Over 10,000 such broadcasts a week take up more than 2,500 hours of radio and television time.) What's happened to the revenues
- proved by the Congress this year. c. Agreed that no major review of NSC 5704/3 was necessary at this time. d. Noted the .President's decision that for the next few months, until further revia w, the level of export controls would be that existing
- of Congress for about six terms? I: I guess I was elected seven times, but I came in and filled out an unexpired term, and then resigned in mid-term, so I did not serve fourteen years but (was) elected seven times. F: You had been a judge prior to your
- interviews you talked about Viet Nam) and talk a bit about the time from when Mr. Johnson became President in November, 1963, and how this affected your relationship with him. I know you were brought back in a much closer connection, and so I think we'll pick
- was not able to go to' college as my stepfather had had a financial disaster, you might say. gone broke and he had lost all. The bank had At that time the federal government di dn 't protect people 1ike they do nm'l. So I stayed out three years and worked
- , and went to the Senate at the same time. Do you recall the first meeting or first contact that you had with Mr. Johnson? Mundt: Not precisely. I'm sure it was when we were both members of the same Congress back there about 30 years ago. And I presume
- of these docu ments. At the same time, I believe that the author may well have been familiar with the content of the Gilpatric Report and was almost certainly aware of the current proposals being made in connection with the San Francisco speech. I base the above
- . Senate as a staff director for the Labor subcommittee. Is that correct? S: Right. M: And you worked there from 1961 to 1963. From that point as an assistant to the Undersecretary of Commerce and also apparently at the same time a director
- , did the Department of Agriculture, was your main interest developing local leadership for rural programs? How did you view the focus of the task force? B: To use the words live been using a long, long, long time, my purpose and the purpose
- STATES:MIGHT BE MADE'. •-:°'.'-'. .. , .... ' ,,r 1 1I~' • •· . IT WAS LEVISON'S SUGGESTION THAT.':.PEOPLE LIKE-:JQHN KENNETH GALBRAITH,,' . ,_..:;·;-· :: ' KING, JAMES WECHSLER, ·THE EDITOR ·or THE' "NEW ·YORK POST~, DR.,'.JOHN .. BENNETT, PRESI DENT OF UNION