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  • : It is now. I was just indicating that--perhaps as useful background, even though it's in the Kennedy Administration--you were of course involved in Viet Nam from a very early time, and I'd like to get some indication as to how much Mr. Johnson as Vice
  • AGGRESSION BY COMMUNISM IN THE ORIENT. IT IS THEREFORE EXTREMELY DIFFICULT TO FIND A FORMULA. TWO BIG QUESTIONS ARISE: FIRST OF ALL, DOES CHINA WANT THE WAR TO END? PERSONkLLY, I DON'T THINK SO. NEXT, DOES THE SOVIET UNION, WHICH IS FURNISHING MOST OF THE AID
  • with a small group of inside people--people that he had been associated with for some period of time largely, and people who were of his particular bent, very imaginative, very humorous, very light and gay. I didn't fit into that particular category, so
  • in 1949, I went to work for the legislative department of the UAW--United Auto Workers union--here in Washington. My job was mostly research; I read the [Congressional] Record every day and I came to the Hill to get bills and attend hearings. I also
  • liley woal4 U •• re ■-ned e,-raU ... a1alut Hwl-Halph•a6 ...a Wllat Cluk'• aaaly•l• 4•• net aay, la my J•azneat, la wt.al poUcy ,.. allftl• follow 1f tiler• l• DO t.reak la the Puu talk• aad lf &bey coatlat• "re .. tile telepa•• IMaok" to u eacb time
  • bolleve· they lmve abandoned thlt ldua of general electioais. at leaat at this time. SEC!tET- -- EYES ONLY Saturday, February 11, 1967 4:20 p. m. Mr. President: Here are Nick's views on General Taylor's memorandum to you. W. W. Rostow ...SEGRE'f
  • . At this point, he had to leave and we agreed that call him Saturday morning to determine a definite get together with him again. Investigator I would time to Ol"TOUU.. POfllM NO.. 10 MAY 1ta IIOITIOH QSA f'PMR (41
  • to dis cu s some urgent problems. I have told her that· I shall be very glad to do so just as soon as you get back, and I send this note to askii you will call Mr. Marvin Watson on your arrival so that no time will be lost in having this discussion
  • [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh GERMANY -- I -- 2 M: My goodness. G: From that time on after my school-teaching period, I went into the "oil business asa geologist having had only two
  • , or Germany, or relations with the Soviet Union, is very much easier than it is to say anything really sensible about a process as flexible, variable, and multiple as the process by which the foreign policy decisions are made and carried out. I think one
  • assumption of its responsibilities effect. on July 2, 1965, when Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 goes into Title VII prohibits discrimination or national origin, among employers, in employment based on race, color, religion, sex, labor unions
  • down there, if not every day, several times a week. So the only alteration in the travel plan that was made to pick us up was Washington to New York, and then we went directly down to the Ranch. Mrs. Johnson met us at the ramp and took us in to the old
  • who felt that he was overstepping and overplaying his hand. Once again, Goodwin was exiled, this time to the Peace Corps, where he became a speech writer for Sargent Shriver. It was in this kind of obscure post which someone said is as far as you can
  • : July. At least, I left at the end of July. Previous to that you had been director of the Bureau of the Budget under the Kennedy administration, and that had been your only government service since the time of the Truman administration. Is that correct
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh (TAPE iff 1) January 10, 1969 This is an interview with Mr. Henry Fowler, former Secretary of the Treasury. The interview is in the Main Treasury Building, in Washington, D. C. The date is January 10, 1969. The time is 10
  • association, as I have been saying for a very long time (sometimes with a feeling that, with the exception of you and one or two others, I was talking into a vacuum), is a major and increasing alternative. Witness the major Soviet aid which started in June
  • Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Dougherty -- II -- 3 home, 1413 East Bowie Street. We were building a ranch home, a hacienda, but we lived in town at the time, and my wife Patricia
  • is located at 1211 Connecticut, N.W., in Washington, D. C. 610. I am now in his office in Room The date is February 25, and the time is 3:20 in the afternoon. My name is David McComb. First of all, I would like to know something about your background
  • the world. He haa alao been connected wi t Department a long time. He ia a very responsib per n and will be good for this Job. t3 . A prel now, and he will survey p with ia being ■ ometbing made by him in two or three week ■. Concernina the other book
  • Washington D.C. Senate Office Building Verbundenheit ... ·~ ,s-__, WESTERN UNION ................. _............. ......... .,, TELEGRAM .. • .,._..#, LOCAi.TIMI ar polaf(t#orialn, Time fllnce W. P. NAHMA~ Tlae&lla aa. lhowa III die claallae oa .io
  • 1ith the Gandhi visit bed;nd us. it is time to begin shoring up the Pakistan side of our affairs in the s ubeontinent. first step is to tell Ayub ~ hat you said to _ rs. --andhi about Indo- ak relations and l ashrnir,. since- we promised to "'eep
  • : "A.I.D. 's vigorous pursuit of the War on Hunger requires personnel h~h priority throughout the Agency to give attention and energy to the use of 6/ food resources. January ,191;7 "- - State of the Union Mes.sage: ''Next to the pursuit of peace
  • urging to extend through FY 1968 in order to provide a smoother transition. CWSnow plans to end this operation by June 30, 1968 and so informed the Jamaican Government some time ago. We are prepared to expand further the child maternal welfare feeding
  • FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: News Media Contacts -- Tom Lambert. Los Angeles Times, telephoned about your State Department appointments. I backgrounded him on each man. Hugh Sidey, TIME magazine, telephoned to ask if there was anything in reports that TIME had
  • would not get to him in time. Mr. Perry called Stewart. He was at the airport en route to Washington. Mr. P gave Stewart's secretary the info and asked her to try and intercept him and tell him of same. I called Dr. Johnson and told him the progress so
  • Honduras problem, but might require time to make arrangements. (7) Concerning proposed US-WI consultations before December 16, he would be unwilling to participate until he received US commitment. To do otherwise, would make him po_litically vulnerable
  • , Oregon. 4/11 LBJ surveys labor supply in Portland shipbuilding industry. 4/13 LBJ meets with NYA personnel re: war work centers, leaves Portland via Union Pacific. 4/15 LBJ arrives in Denver, Colorado, meets with Orren Lull, Colorado NYA director
  • is expanding rapidly must cop.e day-by-day with of reasons over a period concern >~ATO context, to U.S. purpo·;e that of Greece, of time have been national through and role has largely the focus of particular Nevert:ieless, these being
  • , considerations of geography and seniority. I think that Russell was a little con­ cerned that McFarland wouldn't work hard enough at the job. McFarland, I don't precisely know what it was, but he seemed to be having some personal problems at the time
  • are allowing the almost wholly goverr...rnent-controlled media to feed the growing anti-US and pro-Chicom sen.thnent in Pakistan. Oux Embassy and USIA report' US prestige is at an all-time low. The risk here is that Ayub may paint himself into a corner
  • and wanting some help. We usually tried to get up ahead of time what sort of American involvement there was in a country, if there was any at all--if so, what was it, what type of aid was the US giving them, and the monetary levels, and that sort of thing
  • for a year and was here every Friday. But full-time I'm very new, beginning around the middle of April. M: When did your first contact with Mr. Johnson take place, back when you worked for the Senate Armed Services Committee in the late 1940s? H
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh October 10, 1968 B: All right, sir, if we may start here, when did you first get acquainted with Mr. Johnson? H: I met Mr. Johnson some time in the forties. assignments--OPA, Agriculture, other things. I was in Washington
  • ) INTERVIEWER: PAIGE MULHOLLAN July 20, 1971 M: I can refresh your memory fairly quickly, I think. I've talked to Mr. Baker, and he's quite sorry that he was not able to come back this time because he enjoyed meeting you before. You all had finished talking
  • particularly, as far as the national administrations have been concerned, with the Americans for Democratic Action and the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, and UAWand other labor organizations at various times. R: You did that better than I could, so
  • of unity. ~tever we do from this point :must ma.ke allowance for the insane, the excessively stupid. and the superstitious . We may have to admit here that our unity must be confined to the mass _movemant in health of' the human race through time
  • where press (Press room located in Rm. Union facilities available.) time and rest. MORE ( * Sam Aldrich, Chairman of the Hudson River Commission will give an historic introduction to the river.) - 5: 15 p. m. Press 6:30 p. m. Candlelight tour
  • leader of the Union armies who wenl on to become the country'.- 18th President, the exhibit opened in January and will run through May 4. The exhibit is jointl_ ·rxmsored with the National Portrait Ga lcry in Wa.hingt D.C .. when~ it \\JS sho,\.n
  • of alien influences. American labor unions, to their great credit, have stood resolutely against the incur­ sions and influence of communism s,ince World War II. At the same time, American business has played a part much larger than it receives credit
  • EMPLOYEES: Transportation, ·Last evening Marad you heard and the State of the Union our President deliver his third State of the Union message. All of that stirring speech is of vital importance to us as Americans and federal employees. I hope you
  • See all scanned items from file unit "State of the Union"
  • Folder, "State of the Union," Transportation Department, Legislative Background and Domestic Crises File, Box 1