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  • the decision finally to send the telegram. I can't remember although I was in on the process, but of course once the telegram was sent out, no matter what the telegram said and you'd have to refer to the telegram, as far as the newspapers were concerned, what
  • purpose, of course, in saying that he was supporting George Grant would be so the newspapers would pick it up and say George Grant is being supported by Aubrey Williams, and Aubrey Williams has repudiated James. That was the tenor. Now to digress and go
  • to the Kennedy Administration to have any Admin~tration. contact with Mr. Johnson back in your news career or in private career? D: Only vaguely in my news career. However, in 1955 and 1956, I was on Capitol Hill associated with Senator Estes Kefauver
  • Biographical information; first association with LBJ; Estes Kefauver; Douglas Dillon; Pierce Salinger; Joseph Laitin; Horace Busby; George Reedy; Henry Fowler; Bill Moyers; Bob McCloskey; Frederick Deming; George Christian; relations with the White
  • on the advisory committee. It was certainly in the early days. G: Do you recall anything between the association, Lyndon Johnson and Alvin Wirtz, in this period that you observed? LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT
  • visite d by ) e Presiden t t o mjdr's room- d a t boo k b y Sen . Fran k Mos s entitle d TH E WATE R CRISI S n at th e newspaper s o n th e stan d --this p Lynd pl Th y 24, 1967 e /: / 7:22 7:24 POFF RECORD: 7:24 OF / 7:26 X_ 7:35 '^^ Date Ma
  • B'rith Women Marianne Means, Hearst Newspapers Howard Samuel Allen Mercill, Amer. Assn of Retired People Walker Sanbach, Consumers "fDr. Richard L. D. Morse, KansasStateUniV. Mrs. Wilbur Morse Union ? " Leon Schachter Blanch McKee" ' Phillip Scheffler
  • you were associated with him in the first Congressional campaign, weren’t you? K: Yes. G: In your view, what was the President’s basic strategy? K: I think he used the same technique when he first ran for Congress that he does right now - to see
  • friend of Mr. Fred Basham and they were both good friends of Mr. Johnson, and they wanted to introduce me to Mr. Johnson. Mostly the associations I had with him in those days, in the NYA days, were just friendship and all of us were interested
  • during those activities? C: No, I did not. B: Was the adding of Mr. Johnson to the ticket acceptable among the political groups you were associated with--the liberal groups in New York? C: Yes, it was. B: There were some liberals
  • . E . M. House . This interests me very much and I am calling it to the attention of some of my associates . Your watchfulness is greatly appreelated . Yours very sinc erely , TRANSFERRED TO HANDWRmNG 104 East ~8th St. New York. Sept. 20 • 1932
  • me up one Sunday morning and asked me if I'd read page 78 of the New York Times. I said, "No." It was down three flights of stairs from me. And he said, "Well, you go downstairs and get the newspaper, the New York Times." And I went down and got
  • of the Great Society, In April, the LBJ Library and LBJ School of Public Affairs joined with the Texas Young Lawyers Association and the Texas Bar Foundation in a con­ ference held at the Library to . urvey the status of the program. Panelists Dan Morales
  • , subsidized credit program is needed and will be effective for breaking the pattern of discrimination against Negro small business enterprises so that they can participate fu14r in the physical upgrading of ghetto areas. We would dissent on both grounds. Our
  • , and my insistence upon good quality work from students had a good effect. To this day, I'm afraid, it is a source of dismay to my associates sometimes. I'll bounce materials back that came to me for signing and say, "Look, this can be better written
  • the lines that we thought would be practical, [would] be more [a] private-enterprise-type of a bill. It became quite evident as we sat at conference with the House on this thing that it was going to pass sooner or later. It was just a case of time
  • talked too much and demanded too much and was never satisfied and was a lot of fun, all the things that we kind of associate with Jewish people. 1 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library
  • ghettos. ·con. ., versely, rumors amplified by radio, television and the newspapers -- especially with regard to· guerilla bands roaming the streets -- created within the white communities a sense of dange~ and terror. To Mayor Patricia Q. Sheehan
  • Services in which Dr. [Jerrold] Zacharias [physicist] was the leader; he and Wiesner were very close and intimate associates. I had brought both of them into the government in the Troy Project when I was Under Secretary of State; had worked closely
  • the results were much bettP.r than I expected. I'wanted to congratulate • • on a good job. you and your associates Sincerely, Rob~tner Secretary to the Cabinet and Special Assistant to the President r j. . Governor Farris~r The White House Washington, D
  • tn me -- and Washington was warmer." Mrs. Johnson's revealed sense of responsibility - at the expense of herself - was in a speech this June to the American HomeEconomics Association in Detroit. ''For me," said the Fiut tn become an involved
  • with the Indonesian government for economic development of the country. In this enterprise, our corporation is associated with Daniel, Mann, Johnson, and Mendenhall, one of the world's largest architectural-engineering firms, and with the Stanford Research Institute
  • Service regulations and other problems that were confronting people who had bachelor's degrees, the American Bar Association several years ago suggested that law schools should give doctoral degrees. So now I am a Doctor of Jurisprudence. LBJ
  • contacted Kay Graham and put a responsibility on Kay and her associates to work particularly the Republican side of the House to assist us in acquiring signatures. We enlisted the Washington Post as a lobbying entity in this instance, which of course
  • of the Kennedy people were still [here]. C: Yes. A majority of the staff, in fact, is still Kennedy people. Ralph Dungan [who] was one of Kennedy's close associates was my boss. Ralph had somewhere between twenty-three and thirty-five people working for him
  • 6, 1967. He also circled "The Public Health Service has found that cigarette smoking is associated with--" He was even bothered with--this was a memo to you--the phrase "is associated with." C: Yes. Well, no, there he might have been saying
  • the portrait in the White House. The President was away at the time, and it was unfinished so I didn't want hinl to see it anyway, nor Mrs. Johnson either. But he had arranged to have it shown to some of the people on the White House Historical Association
  • beginning to take the view that as long as they're white there's no difference. B: That bloomed a little later. It's associated publicly with the Meredith March in '66. was really asking was how early first signs of it began. R: Oh, there were signs
  • Associate Director by prearrangement of the Florida Legislative Reference Bureau. I had a couple of years there. There was a link that's interesting in this Administration. One of the leading Senators of that time was Leroy Collins whom I worked
  • to Washington in behalf of some company business, in the interest of a company with which I was associated. I always had wanted to meet and get to know Lyndon Johnson, ever since 1941, when he had come so close to winning a special election against . . . F
  • followed him and hounded him throughout his time in Washington. G: He seems to have been at odds with the Texas Observer for a long time, never appreciating their attacks on him. Do you think that got his goat more than non-Texas newspapers criticizing him
  • an associate in the firm in which my father was one of the senior partners in the summer of 1937. Except for two interruptions, which I'll mention briefly, I've been an associate and later a partner in that firm continuously since 1937. I was away from the firm
  • . From 1936 through 1963 you were associated with the Chattanooga Times as a reporter, then Washington correspondent, and finally editor of the News Focus service. This last period was from 1958 to 1963. In 1963 you became a columnist for the Chicago
  • - The National Association of Manufacturers will give a dinner in honor of President and Mrs. Park at TUESDAY,MAY25 a.m. PDT Departure a.m. HST Arrival from Los Angeles, at Honolulu California. International Airport Lunch to be arranged. p.m. Possible
  • . On the spending side, the detail , here is the ima ge of the new President that has emerged. .January estimate of $98.4 bil­ Ry STERLING F. GREEN lion has been reduced by Associated Press $100 million. Thus the indicated budget Wa s hin glon - l-n the half year
  • on sales of n&vvautaro­ biles be earrnarked to finance programs associated with the disposal of junk cars, as well as highway safety and beauty. (The recent arrend­ rrents to the auto excise tax left in effect a portion of the tax whim oould re used
  • , that basis title. That job also carried with it the executive directorship of the World Bank and the International Development Association and so forth. Since then it's been changed. M: That's why I was confused. I knew that now those weren't the same
  • thing that Lyndon Johnson did in 1941 was promote navy advertising in small Texas newspapers, navy recruitment ads. B: Through his stations there? G: Well, no, in Texas newspapers. He tried to get the navy to take out ads in small weeklies
  • must be trained for this. I gather from what newspapers that this is being done. At least, • I read in the I hope so. 2. The police must be trained, especially, to be able to dis­ criminate between the instigators of riots and the innocent victims
  • President's departure September 13, 1963 Newspaper articles President's visit Assessment 1963 of trip statement, and Prime Minister Fornebu Airport, Oslo, and editorials highlighting the Vice to Norway (Oslo's 227 telegram) by Embassy, Helsinki's A-141