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  • 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
  • , was trying to get a promotion. F: Well, you and I were born about the same time, and I've got a cousin named Wilson. It's W. Wilson, so you can figure that. Half the kids I grew up with were either named Woodrow or Wilson. You can always date them. I
  • Biographical information; Bean's educational background and notable people Bean grew up with; the first time Bean met LBJ; Bean's political career in the early 1940s and after his return from WWII; Bean's work as a Texas state legislator; working
  • and Scooter Miller at the Women's National Democratic Club. Lyndon and I also went to a reception honoring Margaret Chase Smith at the F Street Club. She was an important figure in that time, and, to a considerable extent, a friend of ours. There were
  • I got, but going through these papers on the conference-- G: This whole period almost seems to have been a time when the President was trying to garner affirmation of his civil rights programs and was a time when some of the civil rights leadership
  • and Trades Union Introduced by Mr. C. J. Haggerty, President of Raiding and Construction Trades Dept. :, Grand Ballroom /Hiif House Date >£NT LYNDON B. JOHNSON DIARY ,. June , The White House /01 'resident began his day at (Place) " Time Telephone
  • with Mr . Johnson . When did you first meet the man and have knowledge of him? B: I first met President Johnson when he was a Senator . As you know, he occupied a particularly commanding'position there and I had occasion from time to time in connection
  • , to restling oil rigs, to football. there is a myth of the supporting women who fostered these male enterprises, diminished nowadays t the exhibition of furs and bangles in the sky boxes, and pompons and pomty bras at half­ time on the field. I distrust
  • £fort in ch a progr her So-vie a nod b th t 1th Union c uld plac rbi bu such an ac ion is 1 ary er egy f ,r eith r s futur, to pl Sovi . lhe ta et f nuclear ol a th ny e Ann i.y United l a no s nt \) 'A th time e scien ific efforcs
  • , who at that time was Secretary [Robert] Weaver, would become the acting secretary of housing and urban development. F: Why was that put in? C: I don't know. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B
  • , which at that time was recently established on the initiative of Governor Earl Warren. Then I became, as a young faculty member, under some very special circumstances, the first chancellor of the Berkeley campus in its history. K: Was that because
  • in terms of financial and technical effort is a crash program to provide major expansion of TV coverage in the USSR in time for the November celebrations. Cost­ ing about US $140 million, this program contains two features designed to rivet the attention
  • , 1969 INTERVIEWEE: ERIC TOLMACH INTERVIEWER: STEPHEN GOODELL PLACE: Mr. Tolmachls office, OEO, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 G: I think last time we were talking about the R&D programs, at least at one point in the tape we were. I thought I'd ask
  • they all graduated from Oxford, they moved back to Autauga County, but they didn't sell their property up there. They kept that for some years afterward, and I visited them several times in Autauga. I had several conversaUons with Minnie, Lady Bird's
  • to Austin in the legislature in 1939 as a member of the House and served three terms. F: Did you know young Congressman Johnson at all at that time? D: I met him after I came to the legislature. or three times during the six years. He visited there two
  • went up at twelve noon. That was the time it was delivered to the Speaker [of the House] for inclusion in the Congressional Record and the President of the Senate. Here on the highway safety and transportation stuff when we were touching so many
  • a state put up to make the through :f'ine highways Texas now has. Lyndon Johnson has voted every time with Roosevelt :f'or better roads. Ot oourae Just beoause these Uncle Sam checks are not seen--these tens of mill~ons--by the man ~iving the road, he
  • Attach. Harriman US image memo to President ll/19/64 re Mac- ) December 12, 1964 C:Ommenta on State of the Union. This time at least WWR•a p:roae seems awfully drab--and the clichea tb:ed. To me ... pa,ochial as I've bocoine--wo need __lot
  • Includes suggestions for LBJ’s acceptance speech at 1964 Democratic Convention and for 1965 State of the Union Message and small amount of material on transition following assassination of President Kennedy
  • we are trying to modify during this visit), he is the closest thing we y.ye to a friend in Sukarno's court. 'Weare anxious to strengthen time in Indonesia's de­ our influence with him, at this particularly sharply, velopment. If Indonesian public
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh October 29, 1968 M: The tape is now running, Mr. Finletter. Let's start in a very general way. Can you recall the first time in your career that you came into contact with President Johnson? F: I really can't. My
  • around and see him from time to time, and he does make some avuncular comments about it, but he's not really engaged in the day-to-day operations of it. One of the reasons, I think, is because of Congressman [John S.] Rooney [D.-N.Y.], the Congressman
  • , Maryland, visiting my parents for the weekend. I got a phone call. My boss at that time was a guy named Frederick Stalfort, and he called me up and he said, "Coffey, where in the hell are you?" And I said, "I'm home." "Vlell," he said, "You're going
  • to establish a relationship between this reported regiment and one of those believed deploying; however, the coinci_dence in time points toward such a relationship. Each of the deploying and the divisional anti"'.'aircraft divisions battalion is possibly
  • INTERVIEWEE: DAVID E. McGIFFERT INTERVIEWER: DOROTHY PIERCE McSWEENY PLACE: Mr. McGiffert's office, 701 Union Trust Building, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 McS: This interview is with David E. McGiffert, former under secretary of the army from 1965
  • to the front j crew area where George Christian was sitting with a Press Pool of I Mr. Jack Southerland--U. S. News and World Report j Mr. Forrest Boyd--Mutual Mr. Max Frankel -- New York Times j Mr. Frank Cormier -- Associated Press I Mr. Merriman Smith
  • "in right earnest". t? settle their d1ITcrcnccs. • . • · . . I • \: I '\ Foreign Minister Swnran Smgh Indian Union. This is the' posi- the time of signing the Tashkent mnde the appcnl directly .to Pnki- : tion on whicli India· takes its Declaration 'each
  • 11:AmIR,GTO!fDC YIWm COUHTY JUDGE . BASTROP , TEXAS - --- JUllE -' $_ ___ --- •r 1217~B __ _ If ACCOUNTING INFORMATION TIME FILED C . WILLEVER VICE-PRESIDENT WANT .A REPLY? ' 1942 BO?J ORABLERE STAND I FER "An~wer by WESTERNUNION
  • of ncr space and outer space. These rocket forces, promises categorically two zones relate quite diJfercntly to that Soviet rockets could be launched our security. from satellites "at any desirable time Outer space engulfs the limitless and at any point
  • . Time went on and finally one day when Secretary Wirtz was out of the city I received a call from Joe Califano asking me to come right over to the White House which I did. He said, "Jim, the President doesn't LBJ Presidential Library http
  • Hospital but due to bad weather, they were diverted to this hospital. SFC Union K. Melton, USA " "* SSgt. Charley Waters, USA MSgt. Frederick W. Holm, USAF A 1c William Kirkland, USAF SSgt. Anthony G. Horvath, USAF _ MSgt. Everett Sagraves, USA Corporal
  • to Vietienne was delivered. to Bunker has not be en. The message THE PRESIDENT: Somebody asked me how I read accurate accounts of what Hanoi is doing. I tell them I read leaks from the State Department in the New York Times. SECRETARY CLIFFORD: We may get
  • and came back Monday afternoon! And this sum m er I can think of a time or two when a very hard-working P resident has done it, but he has also taken his work with him, and packed m ore into those three days than any human ought to. After an hour
  • N. Palar The Chinese Ambassador, Chow Shu-Kai The Ambassador of the Union of Burma, U. Ton Win The Ambassador of Laos,Khamking Souvanlasy Secretary McNamaraRobert S. Senator George D. Aiken (Vt. ) 7/14/66 Thursday -Senator Wallace F Bennett, Utah
  • said, So I got a cup of coffee . We were sitting there drinking it, and about that time Lyndon walked in . At that time I didn't know that Jesse was there to meet Lyndon, and he didn't know that I was there to meet Lyndon . came in . Lyndon We
  • /HITE HOUSE Date SENT LYNDO N B. JOHNSON June 23, DIARY •"'"1 'resident bega n his day at (Place ) The Time Telephone In Ou t Lo 7:31a f "Thiii'oda^ Friday Day Cf W. Rostow 8:25a BREAKFAST • -9:42a Secy _________ -9:42a j Secy -9:42a
  • when he came to the Senate or even prior to that time, if you knew him as a Congressman. H: Well, I first knew him in early 1947 when I organized the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, as its first chairman, and he was a member of that Committee from
  • . During the time Mr . Johnson was president, you were frequently described in the news media as a longtime Texas associate . I wonder if you could perhaps begin by just describing how that early acquaintanceship came about and just how close
  • really quite a short time to that important project. He went up, oh, I think maybe to about a three-day session and made calls on Senator [Tom] Connally, Senator [W. Lee] O'Daniel, I believe, and Bob Lovett, one of the undersecretaries. When he emerged
  • an apartment for John and Nellie Connally in preparation for their arrival; Connally's work as LBJ's executive assistant; Truman's 1949 State of the Union Message; children's birthday party for Sam Rayburn; Felix Longoria; the University of Texas purchasing
  • little time before, so I should have at least Some memory and some responsibility from the beginning of the system. M: Right. Now, I wonder if you could begin, perhaps, by recalling any early acquaintances that you had with Mr. Lyndon Johnson prior
  • you were, I believe, assisting Marvin Watson as appointments secretary, which would really go from 1964 to the time in which you assumed the actual position in 1968. So you would have been assistant to Mr. Watson during that period. Could you tell me
  • . Kennedy at that time, Archie asked me a few times to prepare some speeches on housing. And I did that. I prepared a couple of speeches for John F. Kennedy, and of course, I had met him when he was by here. But that was really where my expertise