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  • reluctant to set traps, to set ambushes, to have hundreds of listening posts and observation posts and strive to deal with the greatest degree of stealth and the greatest degree of secrecy. Where we had American advisers accompany units that did attempt
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , for a post-colonial developing country. Much better than in the North. And against that background of success and consolidating and economic progress, et cetera, he was able to--there never was a big indigenous communist movement in the South
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , a quivering young reporter from Galveston who most recently was given an administrativeeditorial position on the Houston Post after many years as their Capitol correspondent; Wick Fowler, who was later a war correspondent for the Dallas News; the brilliant
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • knew that I was a friend of Vice President Humphrey's because the Vice President frankly had really hoped that when I returned from Bulgaria in early-1965, that I could go on to another diplomatic post abroad. He had talked with the President about
  • departments would handle it, and whether there would be a new agency as opposed to having HEW--? B: Which period, is this pre-assassination or post-assassination? G: No, post-assassination. B: Post-assassination, the answer is yes to your question. G
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • newspapers, had their best on the beat: Murrey Marder, Chal [Chalmers] Roberts of the Washington Post; Ned [E. W.] Kenworthy, Bill Jorden, Max Frankel of the New York Times; Pete Lisagor of the Chicago Daily News; John Cauley of the Kansas City Star; Paul
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • operate or park a ■otor vehicle in the pukiac areas of or oa the roads adjaceat to the Pentas,:,n coeltary to these recalatioes 01 to tile directioas of police omcer& on dllty or to the directioos of posted sips. 2. The provisions of aubparagraphs a. to d
  • ] Castro, and so on? C: Yes, I did. I talked to them. I didn't hold as many meetings as the Justice Department people did by a long shot, but on critical points I'd talk to them. F: Was your place considered kind of a command post, or was that somewhere
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • . Then it was shortly after that we started getting the responses of civil turmoil, and I can't remember whether it was that night or the next night where things erupted in Washington. I remember that [Joseph] Califano set up sort of a command post, I believe in his
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • some men in Colorado that were alerted. B: Did you set up in the Justice Department or the White House a kind of watching post that was later used? C: Yes. We set up in the Deputy's office a center that operated twenty-four hours a day for probably
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • planning was beginning, the Anacostia Park project would get underway. She also praised Wolf von Eckhardt's Washington Post editorial on Mission '76 making 1976 the Bicentennial, making the celebration the achievement of all the many plans on our drawing
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • offered a war service appointment in the Bureau of the Budget. This was one of the temporary appointments that the government was making during the war years. The Bureau of the Budget was sort of a command post for the White House in relation
  • Biographical information; how Carey came to work for the Bureau of the Budget; John Steelman; post-war work and staff of Bureau of the Budget; cooperation between government and universities in scientific research; National Science Foundation Act
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • in~ • terest in the Club and/or the National Rifle Association will be notified by th~ -: Oen•. Douglas MacArthur American Legion Post ·1n this regard• . We call your attent~on ·toi the enclosed leaflet on firearms for further details. . · · · ·· COBO HALL
  • when I was there, and that's right down the big hallway in Old Main Building. Then you came to a side hallway to the right that went by the student exchange, and there was a little office just beyond that--or post exchange, you know
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • : And [Creighton] Abrams was being given responsibility to oversee that process? LG: Yes, but it started very slowly. It was one of the decisions that came out of the post-Tet review. G: Were you involved in that post-Tet review or were you up to your ears
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • in terms of urging him on a little bit, egging him on; but it \'1as very low-level stuff and certainly not enough to make a case that they were stirring up the waters. F: Is Cyprus a good 1istening post for the r~id-East It creates its own problems
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • could think of, from the day laborers that were involved in maintaining the posts up to professionals in science and engineering, in research and development, and everything in between. So, as there comes at some point in any program
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • the Acting Administrator? P: No, my contacts really fell into two categories--one were the contacts in connection with the budget question which we just discussed. The other was the series of contacts with the President in the post-flight activities when
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • back home and it was a small town and everybody had a post office box. Daddy went and checked his post office box before he took my mother and my brother home, and my brother had received orders from the 8th Naval District in New Orleans to report
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • . Johnson is. But the President just always treated us very, very nice. G: How had he changed or what were the post-presidential years like? Did you have a chance to see him much after he returned to Austin? S: Yes. [I] saw him quite often after he
  • ; Ernest Willinger giving LBJ a plane; Shanks' visits to the White House; LBJ in the post-presidential years; LBJ's behavior around women.
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , some historical significance. Its essential importance, in my judg- ment, is that it fundamentally reversed the post-war priorities of the United States and Europe. Until that speech, it was a central tenet of American foreign policy
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Wolkstein -- I -- 8 W: The old Medicare legislation was in effect coverage of hospital benefits essentially, purely without the major addition of physicians services. That was the kind of form it had taken post-1960. In fact
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • an agreement between business, labor and government for wage-price guide­ posts of the kinds we had in the '60s, accompanied by an attempt by the President and others to convince this nation of what Switzerland, Japan and Germany have by and large learned
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • ; rather, it had been failing lo enter the League of Nations. It became the common wisdom that collective security and military pre­ paredness could have prevented World War II. So collective security and military preparedness became the themes of post-war
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • in the Washington Post editorial, which said in view of the monumental problem, we weren't asking for enough money. And that was also the editorial position of the New York Times and many liberals. Secondly, the feeling that the bill was an instrument a) to help
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • think she was aware of the fact that she had more than anybody else. B: And so it didn't make you all aware? I: Oh, no. No. No. It was just a basic fact, which . . . And then, let's see, we got to the post war years. One reputation the Johnsons always
  • the Johnson Administration; Ingram's son's criticism of LBJ; LBJ's mood in post-presidential years; LBJ's health; Lady Bird Johnson's work after LBJ's death.
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • and Past Pres. , Pulaski Co Flood Assoc ^ dams and the Arkansas Post Robert Nabholz, Pres. , Nabholz Construction Co. , Conway t Ark and President Arkansas Bluff Basi n Assoc and Exec. Committee, Mississippi Valley Assoc. Canal to the Cities of Pine
  • ; "ya ( 6:14p Directo m£ L.^- 6 : 20 Secy pt Post-maste 6:31p Presiden (.^ 6:36 p £ 6:50p Presiden y y y (includ e visite d by ) t t cam e int o mjdr's offic e throug h French doo r an d sai d l g o home whe n yo u wan t to . I a m goin g fo r
  • . J. '_ --other s ther e accordin g t o Monday' s Washingto n Post: Chie f Justic e an d Mrs . Ear Warren, Speake r an d Mrs. Joh n W . McCormack . Justic e Willia m J . Brennan , Jr. 1 l;30a Th e Presiden t an d Mrs. Johnson , accompanie d b y Cap t
  • o fro m Ji m Duesenberr y covered w/ a JA C memo - Mr. Heinema n is i n tow n fo r wor k on the Commission . Marc h o f Dime s Nationa l Poste r Child , Timm y Faas , ag e 4 of Whittier, Calif. and Mr . Michae l Faa s - fathe r -_ Mrs. Be a Faas
  • birthplace. They drove by the Post Office, and went through the Caddo State They then went to the Brick House, Mrs. Johnson's home. They at the changes that had been made. Here they were met by Mrs. Johnson's step-mother, Mrs. Ruth Taylor and some of her kin
  • Activity (includ e visite d by ) Today transmitted t o th e Congres s th e Annual Report o f the Commodit y Credit Corporation . Issued statemen t o n District o f Columbi a Reorganization . Posted Postmaste r nominatio n list - - 6 2 names y To th e
  • Su n\ ; 10:40 i Savill 10:40 j Carrol e Davis , 6f^xns^ga v Christia n Scienc e Monito r l Kilpatrick . Washingto n Post y /HITS House Date August 16, 1967 >ENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON DIARY 'resident began hi s day at (Place) The Time In Out
  • for their posts soon. -- handshake picture 12:15p 1 2:25p ' " . Asst ' They were new within the past year in the Dept. and the PMG thought a brief visit w/ the President would be good for their morale. Appt requestedby the PMG 12:32p The , accompanied j
  • ^ _^ (Mr. White House r» t or t 12:32p To 12:45 "" gu amsey Clark, the A G President asked for a McPherson memo on McPherson's talk w/ Russ Wiggins re Ed Williams an d D. C. Commissioner post) ; MW Senator Robert e Christian Everett Dirksen
  • the VietNam and now will be travelling to all VFW posts throughout the Nation, as well as returning to VietNam on his own inspection tour. election ll:32a t House -*- National Commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Joseph (Joe ) Scerra -of Gardner
  • : The House Committee on Post Office and Civil Service just voted out, 19-6, the combined rate and pay bill. Every major amendment to the pay bill was defeated including changing HHt dates and raising Federal Civilian employees beyond Mo Udall's proposal
  • photograp h wit h the Poste r Chil d o f th e Muscula r sDysafcoaspia x Dystroph y Association o f America , Miss Holl y Schmid t - te n years ol d -- fro m Saginaw . Michigan . --one o f a famil y o f si x children . Mr. Theodor e Schmid t (th e child' s