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  • FI LE LOCATION NATIONAL SECURITY FILE, National Security Council File NSC Meetings, vol . l Tab 4, 3/5/64, Secretary M::Namara's Mission to Vietnam OAS Action on Venezuelan Arms Cache RESTRICTIClll CODES (A) C losed by Executive Order 11652 qovemlnq
  • Folder, "[NSC Meeting on] Secretary McNamara's Mission to Vietnam; OAS Action on Venezuelan Arms Cache, 3/5/1964, Volume 1, Tab 4," National Security Council Meetings Files, NSF, Box 1
  • National Security Council Meetings Files
  • National Security Files
  • , ..:..----~p~p~.~ / I ' 1-1t1:1r111teffl'C,----r-ffO'!itfflf-'ri~r:l,Q._~~ ~ ~ -~ £-4' ~ IV'- .J 'l/--.31 V \ I ,, I/ FILE LOCATION National Security File, Memos to the President, Walt Rostow, Volume 25, April 1-15, 1967, Box 15 RESTRICTION CODES
  • A (National Security)-SANITIZED
  • National Security Files
  • important precedent. And, as I remember, Lyndon Johnson did work for that bill. B: Yes, he did. Then what was your attitude toward the 1960 Democratic ticket of Mr. Kennedy and Mr. Johnson? R: Quite frankly, I was very distressed when Mr. Johnson
  • in Indianapolis. Ind. --is former Chairman. Democratic Natl Committee -to be named Amb to Spain (done in press release today) Mr. McKinney is now Chairman o f the American Fletcher National Bank & Trust Company VH.TE H TsE date JENT LYNDON B . JOHNSON the DIARY
  • was going to be used in other ways. What eventually did happen to it was that all of that material was turned over to the Democratic National Committee for use by Vice President Humphrey in his campaign. We updated the material and delivered it to Senator
  • , of the Future Forum steering committee, moderated the panel. Mr. Baxter. a former aide and com­ mittee clerk in the Texas house, was the first Republican to be elected lo the Tra­ vis County Commissioners Court. His special interests are telecommunications
  • and·is patterned after the IIGT at llubamaad's Temple o:f Islam lfo. 2, Chicago. 15 APPENDIX STUDBNT MOM-VIOLBMT COORDINATING COMMITTEE (SMCC) On llay 12, 1967, a source advised that SMCCude an official announce•nt of election of national officers
  • Folder, "Black National Movement - FBI Report - File #3," Records of the NACCD (Kerner Commission), Embargoed Series, Box 14
  • Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission)
  • the legislation was ; I'd have to check it out, but Lyndon wanted it out of the Rules Committee . In those days we , had twelve Members in the Rules Committee, eight Democrats and four Republicans . was the chairman . Old man [Howard] Smith, I think, Two
  • the most needy by a committee. The care and m.aintenaDce of' the property has been assured by the sponsoring organization. ~ Catbolic Relief Service - National Catholic Welfare Nev York $50,000 COnference, This allocation was reserved for one-time
  • : International Platform Association The Ambassador of Bolivia, Julio Sanjines-Goytia sat at Pres. table on July 22. Mr. Rostow says that H. E. Colonel Jaime Berdecio Z. , Minister of National Economy while Barrientos understands Captain Felix Villaroel, Aide
  • of the Defense Department, which the President said he was willing to do if Bob could deliver in advance the majority of votes on the Senate Armed Services Committee, which McNamara was unable to deliver. G: He tried to do that? C: He tried to do that. Yes. He
  • of the National Lawyers Guild, an organization which has been designated as a com.~unist front by the Committee on Un-American Activities, United States House of Representatives. Wachtel is a partner in the law firm of Rubin, Wachtel, and Levine, 598 Madison
  • . Charles W eltner, Democratic National Committee — President had asked to se e him prior to Weltner's appearance on "Meet th e • this coming Sunday) --Weltner will be on the TODAY show for 8 RK(.C)RI) U soo««««TP.,,T,wcofr,« „*«.-,«.-,,,_ mins Thurs
  • that an • nation can pay for being the "biggest ki on the block," but :Mr. Valencia has pu the issue 1n keen perspective and I cal his remarks to the attention of my col­ went to leagues and readers of the CONGREs­ no sham Thaila sroNALRECORDby asking
  • ; although my title, as far as I was concerned, was counsel of the Senate Democratic Policy Committee. So I think that most of his top staff people were in the Policy Committee orbit, so to speak, except Walter Jenkins and Lloyd Hand, who were in the Texas
  • , there was a great outpouring, both at the time and when he returned in January, of affection and of comradeship for him. I just sort of breathed a sigh of relief because I thought he was good for the Democratic leadership for goodly more span of time, that he would
  • Democratic National Convention; the support of John Connally and the Wesley West family; early memories of John F. Kennedy; LBJ's senate majority leader office; committee to select the best senators throughout history; LBJ persuading Texas delegates to vote
  • to that effect. G: Would he have favored a more aggressive defense of Eastern Europe, do you think? J: I think he would have. I feel sure he would have. I don't know how far, but we had no defense at all. G: The Democrats were really on the defensive
  • for most of the middle part of the year we were meeting once every week or once every two weeks just hammering out the program and policy positions of this committee. In the early days we thought that perhaps we ought to try to set up a large national
  • Biographical information; Assistant Secretary appointment; primary duties; Troika; tax surcharge; freedom to express opinion; economic forecasts; Federal Reserve Board; Wilbur Mills; President's Advisory Committee on Labor-Management Relations; wage
  • NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS SERVICE WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORM OF DOCUMENT Pueblo meetia-g -11lJ.24.l-68- ~8 ·J.1-q5 . 'T'" a "2. 'I Nw ' ~ · 7,0 x ~ m.r--- RESTRICTION DATE CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE ;J - g
  • Folder, "[NSC Meeting on] Cyprus, 1/24/1968, Volume 4, Tab 62," National Security Council Meetings Files, NSF, Box 2
  • National Security Council Meetings Files
  • National Security Files
  • /oh PICKLE -- V -- 21 F: A bit more conservative than the President . P: But I think other groups, labor groups, liberal groups, national political leaders, all felt that Ralph Yarborough would come nearer supporting the Democratic ticket
  • on that because of the President. G: Let's talk a minute about the national defense needs. Did this impair the movement of troops? C: By and large [Robert] McNamara took the position that he could go either way. If we wanted the emergency board, he could
  • Johnson's days the Democratic National Committee went down hill--the machinery, the party machinery. Did he ever discuss this problem 9 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories
  • Robert Kennedy's offer to leave LBJ's cabinet following John F. Kennedy's assassination; the 1968 presidential campaign; Edward Kennedy's role in the selection of Massachusetts delegates to the 1968 Democratic National Convention; the 1968
  • 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Lyle -- I -- 2 became very closely related because I was interested in the state dilemma, more than in national politics. G: Yes. Now you were elected
  • by committee. After considerable consultation with his Democratic colleagues, he did not try to force issues in a demanding sense or dictatorial sense. That wasn't his style. He had a rather reasonable working relationship with Dirksen. We ran
  • 14(B) of the Taft-Hartley Act; combining 14(b) with a farm bill so that urban and rural Democrats would support each other; Orville Freeman's involvement in lobbying for the farm bill; the Appalachian Regional Development Act and the Public Works
  • : The combination didn't cause you difficulty with your other delegates and the Ohio Democrats? C: You mean Johnsorrs? M: Yes. C: No, we accepted Johnson. M: When you went to Washington then for President Kennedy, were there any particular areas of HEW
  • staff, but I see by the paper you are going ahead with that appointment. I have worked long and hard for the Democratic Party. I supported you in the last election. I have served as Chairman of our County Democratic Central Committee, and I presently
  • that would give a Democratic candidate appeal. I strongly sensed that he was aware even then that he was in an underdog position with reference to Kennedy. But that was my first close contact with him and I saw very little of President Johnson again until
  • : --in 1937 . B: Through my brother Phil . My brother Phil was head of NYA in Oklahoma and Lyndon was, of course, the head of it [in Texas] . NYA, National Youth Administration, I think that's the proper-­ G: Right . B: Yes . That's the name
  • Biographical information; LBJ's Naval Commission; Naval Affairs Committee; LBJ military service overseas; LBJ and Sam Rayburn; LBJ and Forrestal; LBJ and John Connally; Board of Visitors of the Naval Academy; LBJ investigations of Navy Department
  • General Nicolae Ceausescu's remarks on the United States _in, his talk before the Grand National Assembly on 24 July 1967 and an entire paragraph on the United States was modified. Before the revision, the United States was treated harshly and accused
  • A (National Security)
  • National Security Files
  • Kennedy came out surprisingly well in the state. G: He did carry the state. C: He carried the state. G: Looking at the earlier phase of the campaign, the primaries and conventions, did you attend the Democratic Convention in Los Angeles? C
  • 1960 Democratic National Convention; Alabama citizens' opinion of John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon; the Kennedy/Nixon debate in Tuscaloosa, Alabama; LBJ's and Lady Bird Johnson's 1960 campaign trip through Alabama; LBJ's ambition; LBJ as vice
  • of all, tell us just a little bit about what brought you from Indiana and DePauw University, and so forth, right on into a life in Washington. B: Mr. Frantz, back in 1958 the Democratic party in Indiana faced a peculiar circumstance. As in many big
  • • THE PRESIDENT THE WHITEHOUSE AS A REGISTERED ANDVOTINGDEMOCRAT FROMTHE CANDIDACY OF AL AT SMITHIN 192g TO THE PRESENTDAY, I AMSICK TO MYSTOMACH THE USURPATION OF THELEGALLY CONSTITUTED DELEGATION FROM MISS. ' . . BY THE FREEDOM DEMOCRATIC PARTY,ANDTHE ROUTEOF
  • c Collection Title National Security File, Memos to the President Folder Title "McGeorge Bundy, Volume 7, 10/1 - 12/31/64" Box Number 2 Restriction Codes (A) Closed by Executive Order 13292 governing access to national security lnfonnatlon. (8
  • A (National Security)
  • National Security Files
  • Meeting of' the Bipa•tisan Leaders and the National Sec·u rlty Council at 1a:-OO noon today SUB.1ECT ·: \ .Jack Valent! and J have worked out a:n attonda:neo · ~she6t wbieh is attached at Tab A. 'T b one change fi'om yeste~day te that we have added Mahon
  • A (National Security)-SANITIZED
  • National Security Files
  • ones were going on in very full scale. The Dale Millers, by that time their party for the Speaker--for his birthday--had become customary at the Woman's National Democratic Club, a heavy contingent of Texans, but a widely expanding group. You felt two
  • broken leg; Lady Astor; Mrs. Woodrow Wilson; LBJ's subcommittee work in 1951; tension between Truman and General Douglas MacArthur; MacArthur's dismissal and his testimony before a joint committee hearing; the Johnsons' interest in starting a television
  • NATIONALCOMMISSIONON. URBAN PROBLEMS ROOM640, 80615THST. N. W.,WASHINGTON, D. C. 20005 PHONE: 382-8226 June 28, 1968 Dear Mr. Levinson: -}. I am happy to send you Volume 2 of the Hearings of the National Conunission on Urban Problems. As you
  • File unit description: This file unit contains a substantial amount of material relating to the formation, activities and findings of the National Commission on Urban Problems - Codes, Zoning, Taxation and Development Standards (also referred
  • and with the commissioners. We went out all over the country. I got special groups in, and we organized certain people. School districts, we brought a fellow in from--oh, I can't even remember what his name was, but he was one of the leaders in the National Education
  • the fact he was shackled--and I kept saying this to him, "You are shackled by this unit system. You cannot be a national politician if you've got to appeal to the worst and the most primitive elements in Georgia. How can you be a national politician?" I
  • Biographical information; how Abram met Richard Russell; Georgia’s county unit system; Russell and civil rights; Herman Talmadge; Charlie Bloch; Thurgood Marshall’s appt. to the Supreme Court; Supreme Court appointments; the Democratic Presidential
  • to accommodate both his constituency, which were the Democratic senators, and his view of the national interest quite extraordinarily well. G: Anything on his association with Everett Dirksen during this period, when Dirksen was minority leader? F: Every
  • about the state of the economy, But the Congressional committees dealing with education in both the House and the Senate are not typical committees. They are "spenders." They are, Democrats and Republicans alike, quite liberal, progressive