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  • of the time he was in Congress I was Treasurer of the Democratic National Committee, and I paid attention to most Democratic Congressmen, particularly those who would be influential in raising money, and he was one of them. LBJ Presidential Library http
  • NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS SERVICE WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORM OF DOCUMENT @2 Memo i4-a memeem to President from Wh7R re: India . i.iv secret :....-.· IYL.J lit·. ~ - 0 S 1:t 1111l, J t/i.;.,/o M- S c;B 1 p c~ ,• ':J-, NSfi
  • A (National Security)
  • National Security Files
  • . FILE LOCATION WHCFName File : Roy Wilkins RESTRICT!~ COOES (A) Closed (Bl Closed (C) Closed by Executive Order 11652 governing access to national security lnfa-mation. by statute or by the agency which originated the document. in accordance
  • for International Development presently is not using dollars to support the National Rat Control Committee in the Ministry of Health of Indiac. It is- possible, however, that local currencies generated by PL 480 sales are being used for purchase of commodities
  • --to President, 7.00 p.m. C 1 p epe.t' , 0 _,.,_q5 r,atJ "'4 ·&.Jbt FILE LOCATION NSF, Memos to the President, Walt Rostow, Vol. 43, 9/21-30/67 RESTRICTION CODES .• Box 23 (A) Closed by Executive Order 12356'governing access to national security information
  • A (National Security)
  • National Security Files
  • areas, the famous interagency youth committee, which was to circumvent the State Department and USIA, or at least the stodgy parts of it. But no, I don't remember specifically. G: Anything on a cabinet-level committee? Did he advocate that to your
  • National Youth Administration (U.S.)
  • , when Alabama started to go Republican it was the three big cities. The country stayed Democratic, and Sparkman knew that, and that's the way he played the political game down there. Also, Sparkman had been the vice presidential candidate in 1952 and had
  • really be running it off because it was so certain that he would win. The Democratic Party's national convention was held in Philadelphia, the convention made famous by Humphrey's civil rights speech and the walkout of the southerners and all that sort
  • -- were not unproductive from the point of view of the present Administration. At least one Democratic official who had been criticizing the Administration's Justice Department was silenced, for all practical purposes, well before the national Presidential
  • Committee, Political and Personal Papers
  • on the War on Poverty Task Force. Were you involved at all with the President's Committee on Juvenile Delinquency? S: I really was not particularly involved in that. I think that what I did before this task force was formed that got me into it was that I
  • Leonor Sullivan Cong Mendel Rivers , Armed Services Cong. Wright Patman "The President met for about an hour and a half with the Committee Chairman and Democratic Leaders of the House of Representatives. Priority legislation was discussed. Also
  • it was the Committee on Public Works. I took up his charges one by one. Of course, the first thing he did is say he didn't mean dishonesty in its usual sense. Like Arthur Morgan before him at TVA, you used that word in order to attract attention, and then when you're
  • that the commission was dominated by public utility interests; cases regarding Idaho Power Company and Pacific Gas and Electric; Morgan's accusations that the commission and Swidler were dishonest and the [Senate?] Committee on Public Works' resulting investigation
  • on me last night to congratulate the Committee on th e success of its efforts to help bring about genuinely democratic elections in the Dominican Republico He fo und nothing to criticize in the electoral process and claimed that he and Thomas had
  • A (National Security)
  • National Security Files
  • consider the-- what went on, sometimes there were meetings. Of course at that time in the House, Mr. [Walter G.] Andrews [R-N.Y.] of Buffalo was the head of the Armed Forces Committee, but Uncle Carl Vinson was the senior Democrat on the committee
  • Adams; gaining minority representation; John Doar; Jim Folsom; Patrick Moynihan; rehabilitation program; attitude toward voluntary or national service systems; Ted Kennedy; definition of uniformity in relation to draft; criticism of lack of uniformity
  • A Intelligence Report TS 52 p 6/28/68 A Intelligence Memorandum TS 2p 6/28/68 A J FILE LOCATION NSF,Memos to the President,w.Rostow,YaJ.86, July J-4, J968 CODES RESTRICTION Rox37 (A) Closed by Executive Order 12356'governing access to national security
  • A (National Security)
  • National Security Files
  • ~ V t/ 4 A r:.t~.J> " A ~T~ { e"' ~ ?-
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  • National Security Files
  • everything was transferred to HEW. The main purpose of it was to convert what was the Federal Security Agency into the Department. This had been attempted several times before. K: I did not know that. S: Oh, yes. The Democrats, particularly I think
  • of one little room in a hotel, like I think he said Truman had done. Ed Johnson, predictably called Big Ed, senator from Colorado, had us out to his state for a meeting of Democratic leaders, which Lyndon addressed. And I think it was called the national
  • ; the 1960 Democratic National Convention; LBJ's reluctance to fight for presidential candidacy in 1960; support for and disapproval of LBJ accepting the vice-presidential nomination, including the reactions of Sam Rayburn and John Connally; Lynda's location
  • the executive committee of the National Security Council sat down with a Mac Bundy, there were questions of what happens if the oil flow stops; what's the impact on the international financial markets, what's the military situation, and so on across the board
  • How Saunders came to work for the CIA in 1956; job duties and how Saunders came to work for the National Security Council in 1961; the process of presidential decision-making and the role of the NSC under different presidents; preparation
  • and programs for jobs in the border area. The President met with members of the Committee on U.S.-China Relations of the National Institute of Public Affairs. - I 13 . WEEKLY COMPILATION OF PRESIDENTIALDOCUMENTS 260 7 Pakistan
  • A (National Security)-SANITIZED
  • Folder, "March 31st Speech, Vol. 8, Excerpts and Taylor's Memo," National Security Council Histories, NSF, Box 49
  • National Security Council Histories Files
  • National Security Files
  • Boord CROSIY N. BOYD, President)(. X . . NEWBOLD NOYES, Etl1tor BENJAMIN M. Mc:KELWAY, Ed1toriot Cf,oir1T1on DEMOCRA:rro-- - -··- ·- ---·-·-- · --- ----·-··MoNoA·v~---oc-ro8£ti --9,- . 1'·9G7 NATIONAL COMMITTEE
  • forces have been trality for all Southeast Asia shot at by Communist Pathet Lao troops on the Plain of would be taken up. The opposite view came Jars. from Democratic Leader Mike · The disclosure that the Mansfiel
  • 'governing access to national security information. Closed by statute or by the agency which originated the docµment. (C) Closed in accordance with restrictions contained in the donor's deed of gift. (8) NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION NA FORM
  • A (National Security)
  • National Security Files
  • ~nce and dest~~ctio~. l£ it coz;:tfuues to burn, we can see on the horizon the gathering threat of a divided · . . . . . A merica: two nations, confronting each other across the ruins of our -. . -democratic dream. That must not" be. be. I I . I
  • Order 12356·governing accessto national security information. (Bl Closed by statute or by the agency which originated the document. (Cl Closed in accordance with restrictions contained in the donor's deed of gift. NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS
  • A (National Security)
  • National Security Files
  • presidential nomi­ nee . F: What did you do, incidentally, during that campaign season? You had Senator Kerr running for re-election, and you had the national Democratic ticket . Did you participate at the national Democratic level, or did you stick
  • Early involvement with Senator Robert Kerr; first contact with LBJ; Sam Rayburn and Kerr; managing Kerr campaigns; Kerr's early interest in LBJ for president; LBJ's work for Oklahoma; organizing Oklahoma for LBJ; 1960 Democratic National Convention
  • bf Representative mate rural dls~ncts_ in Tex~ were Luther A. Johnson of Corsicana, counted and O Daniel was given a ranking Democratic member _of the tew votes margin by the late re- House committee on foreign affairs, tu.I'J?s, It Is known
  • WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORM OF DOCUMENT ,,.#-h .Gabie DATE CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE Stat& 548 te Panama Secr et 2 p Ralph Dungan for LBJ Secret 3 p ~ R ESTA ICTION A Cmo #4a memo 4/13/64 A FILE LOCATION National
  • Folder, "NSAM # 296: Interdepartmental Organization for Panamanian Affairs, 4/25/1964," National Security Action Memorandums, NSF, Box 4
  • National Security Action Memorandums
  • National Security Files
  • to convince them that this was a great addition to the national ticket and would help the Democratic Party in the November election. F: Fortunately, that worked out. On an occasion like that you have got very influential people like Walter Reuther, Soapy
  • Biographical information; JTBC AM, FM and television; 1960 presidential campaign; 1960 Democratic Convention; Communications Satellite Corporation; USIA
  • life. He could have moved probably from being a congressman's secretary to a staff director of some committee. If Kleberg stayed on longer and longer--seniority was even more rigid then than it is now. They became chairman of a committee
  • of the Young Democrats; Sam Fore, editor of Floresville Chronicle ; Deason assists LBJ in setting up state NYA program; sources of LBJ's appointment; early employees: L. E. Jones, Marie Lindau, Deason, and Sherman Birdwell; organization of state NYA; living
  • derground testing In Nevada. The report wus given by Senator Henry M. Jadcson, Democrat of Washington, who ls chairman of the Military Ap­ pJic:ations subcommittee of the Joint Congreuional Committee on Atomic f.llergy. · 'I In a Senate speech on imple
  • A (National Security)-SANITIZED
  • National Security Files
  • ] Reedy -- XII -- 6 reality of the figures on missile production. That's what misled us, misled almost everybody, the figures on missile production. G: Anything else on Sherman Adams' charges that the Democrats were play­ ing politics with national
  • J..t.. sold r""r~' ~ ""/11..t'" si I K Soc..f(s. r------- November 18, 1965 Dea• Bob: Maay thanks £o·r your kind letter of November 16 regardlna the report• and recommendation• prepa~•d by the Committee• of the National Citlaena• Commleelon
  • A (National Security)
  • National Security Files
  • 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Well, Mr. Johnson was always on the Joint Atomic Energy Committee when he was in Congress and [\'/as] very interested in its operation. Did you not encounter any
  • went on active duty in the navy but before he went to the South Pacific. You know, he went out on the West Coast and did some work there for the Manpower or Navy Department. I think he was looking at NYA [National Youth Administration] projects, as well
  • How Rather went to work for LBJ; LBJ's work on National Youth Administration (NYA) projects on the West Coast before shipping out with the navy in World War II; Lady Bird Johnson's interest in photography, movie-making and drama; Rather's
  • meetings with Fowler and Ribicoff. G: LBJ met with the Democratic members of the Senate Finance Committee that day, or evening, 6:00 p.m. C: This is a long . . . but this is the first--I mean I'm sure there are internal. B: And you had gotten
  • . Johnson when we had invited him to come to Arizona as a speaker in the Adlai Stevenson campaign, and had had some association with him at the national Democratic conventions when I was a delegate from Arizona. But after that time, I had no real close
  • Concession business; Assistant Secretary appointment; early proponent of HUD; Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations; minorities; HUD areas of responsibilities; Renewal Assistant Program; “Negro Removal;” establishment of national goals
  • Johnson •. Because . .. it was part of his effort to capture. the nomination for the Presidency in 19.60: to use the record that he had made as Democratic Leader in the Senate as, in effect, the launching platform, the basis and background of his
  • or political congressional news reporting with Lyndon Johnson? G: Yes. Not very much contact. I covered the Preparedness Subcommittee hearings when the President was chairman of that committee, and when Cy Vance, as a matter of fact, came down from Ne't
  • Biographical information; reporting political, congressional and military affairs; 1960 and 1964 Democratic campaigns; Cuban Missile Crisis; Cy Vance; Robert McNamara; crises operations; defense directorates; public affairs
  • was supported by national organized labor . I really think that he probably received contributions from their polit­ ical action committee . Of course, as I said at the beginning, that's hearsay and speculation on my part . G: Is there anyone I should talk