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  • , 1987 INTERVIEWEE: LAWRENCE F. O'BRIEN INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. O'Brien's office, New York City Tape 1 of 3, Side 1 G: We finished last time with a discussion of the Salt Lake City speech which, I believe, was the end
  • of vice-presidential debates; Spiro Agnew's reputation; Wallace's support from organized labor; money to promote voter registration in New York; the campaign status in September 1968; campaign committee meetings; the recording and release of the Salt Lake
  • . meeting o£ Preaklenta the greatest possible success. -zAfter you have a-a aumed your new post, 1 shall be countb1g on you from time to time to a,nrve your country in an advisory capacity. You. will leave your post ln Waelllngton with the thank
  • acquired its second wind in the campaign, Since then, with renewed confidence and reported infus ion of new funds, Balaguer has waged adept and aggressive campaign, striking at Bosch and the PRD most successfully on issues of communism and violence
  • to enter the office building. The demonstrators appear to be La.tin American, probably Cuban. They car­ ried lettered signs carrying such slogans as nhands off Cuba and Vietnam. 11 and 11 Yank.ees get out of Cuba.•• Comments ove-rheard from the Polish
  • thing that ought to be part of some record. Naturally you get curious about a new president, so I pulled the Lyndon Johnson file--Congressman and Senator Lyndon Johnson file--after he became president of the United States, or maybe even while he was vice
  • treatment of Gronouski, 1964 campaign and the Post Office, Bob Hardesty, Bobby Kennedy, news media’s treatment.
  • Tuesday, September 6, 1966 Peter Lisagor, Chicago Daily News, came in to talk about Viet Nam,; but rmainly, presented hi& highly favor.able and optimistic reactions to the weekend whistle stopping in the Middle West. He said: How do you a-q ua.re
  • THE WHITE HOUSE MRS. LYNDON B. JOHNSON, Daily Diary WASHINGTON Mrs. Johnson began her day at (Place) Entry No. Mrs. Lasker's American, New York Date Thursday, July 1, 1965 Time Activity 1. 11:15 Left with Mrs. Lasker 2. 12:00 Arrived FDR
  • Daily Diary
  • Lady Bird Johnson's Daily Diary entry, 7/1/1965
  • Lady Bird Johnson's Daily Diary
  • MRS. LYNDON B. JOHNSON, DAILY DIARY THE WHITE HOUSE Date December 5, 1964 WASHINGTON Mrs. Johnson began her day at (Place) Entry No. New York Day Saturday Time Appointment O P Activity (include visited by) Expenditure Went to David Webb
  • Daily Diary
  • Lady Bird Johnson's Daily Diary entry, 12/5/1964
  • Lady Bird Johnson's Daily Diary
  • INTERVIEW VI DATE: February 11, 1986 INTERVIEWEE: LAWRENCE F. O'BRIEN INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. O'Brien's office, New York City Tape 1 of 4, Side 1 G: [Let me ask you about some] issues in 1963. O: Yes. First of all, [I'll try
  • DAILY DIARY INDICATES LBJ IS MEETING WITH HHH AND TIMOTHY COSTELLO, HARRY YVELLER, MENDLE ZUCKER OF NEW YORK LIBERAL PARTY AT TIME OF CALL
  • DISCUSSION OF GOLDWATER'S RECENT APPEARANCE IN NEW YORK, WILLIAM MILLER'S STATEMENT ON IMMIGRATION
  • as it was functioning, and consequently we proposed in 1967 that there be a significant change in the law to give it a different kind of a complexion. We had our last meeting in December of '67, which was the same month that we got our new amendments. I took
  • statement. Themes: - NlJ ldfy§2 , NARA, Date- z::: 7-9 ~ . The challenges confronting the hemisphere in the next decade and the importance of continued inter-American cooperation. Unique opportunity of Summit meeting to give AFP new di­ rections
  • Aclva11eemea& of Colorecl People 20 ••t 40ta Street New Tork. New Tork ehw ~M)tJ. 147 • 1 JAM Honorable Lyndon President ot Waabingto ILIGINI GE JlOAD ,N. Y. '0 iHE WHllE HOUSt 'p- APft 1121AM '6~ -~~..,._R.f~~VEO EXECUTIVE PR f-J/N>- Dear Mr
  • aao the., found it better t.o pat cloth on a Comiah hill and go back t.o t.he apot tha DfJJ4 dq to pick up Un. And ~ then go back t.o t.he blldn•e 1n hand-tbe"olotb owners t.t.J make sane garments and the new t.1n omers to aa:ll aouthard
  • / / / / THE WAS HING T ON DAILY NEWS D e cember 10, 1965 . ,: ., - •·• .,.. "-t . .." ' _ - ,, THE shadow cast by threat of coming immense. Grafn ships stacked up in world famine deepens with the Bombay har)>or last spring, at a muc_h _ emergency U. S. decision
  • WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENT IAL LI BRARIES) FORM OF DOCUMENT CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE DATE ~ JCjq,J. ) 3/18/68 #2 memo Rostow to President, 6:00 p.m. S 1p [Sanitized NLJ 86-144] #2a cable New Delhi 242 3/18/68 S 2p [Duplicate of #136a, NSF
  • C'f"fTI'......U::•"".,...1 one. I didn •t stay a. minute longer than! needed and •t so dafter I got started., (How~•er I oertainly d , o t to oourt any more suoh aasignmental) lh- .. Lovett ts e. u:rtly polished gentlaman. Re waa beautifully dr~:rnecl
  • Judge appointments, Army Air Support Command for Austin, office visits and mailing. Attachments concerning judge appointments for new Municipal Court of Appeals in the District of Columbia
  • from Governor Richard J. Hughes of ·New Jersey who, in a letter to me, says: - - , r •ff "I returned from this trip with a high respect for the courage of the Vietnamese people and with a confirmed belief in the • honesty of the September 3 elections
  • and the distinguished representatives of the press and other United Nations; UNESCO; Dr. Kurt Waldheim, Am­ Committee; prominent scien­ news media. RESOLUTION THE 7th INTERNATIONAL UFO CONGRESS UNANIMOUSLY STATES AND PROCLAIMS THAT UNIDENTIFIED FLYING OBJECTS - UFO's
  • Fonville, State Rep, Williamton, Del. Hon. Thomas R Fortune, Brooklyn, NY Mrs. Willie Stevens Glanton, State Rep, Des Moines, Iowa Hon. Quentin Goodwin, Civil Service Commissioner, Chicago Atty. Curtis M. Graves, Houston, Tex W. T. Meade Grant, Jr. , New
  • Daily Diary
  • President's Daily Diary entry, 6/3/1966
  • President's Daily Diary
  • President's Daily Diary
  • insti­ tutions of learning, _having been labori­ ously transplanted from the East to Si­ lesia, hundreds of miles, are now creat­ ing a new Polish culture in those very same provinces which once gave birth to that culture. In the light of the recent
  • . Dobrynin, Soviet Ambassador, US u M G EUR ' WH J. r 7 Ambassador Dobrynin askedfor my personal advice on what he or his Embassy should do with respect to the President-Elect. He understood that Mr. Nixon would probably remain in New York until
  • and Teetering 22B: The Pleiku Attack and the Shaping of a New Course 23: Competing Pressures and the Baltimore Speech 24: Negotiations: Word and Deed, Public and Private 25: Shoring Up Proves.Not Enough 26: The June-July Policy Debate: The Framework
  • the Nigerian dispute. We will work for peace in Nigeria every way we can. But the solution will have to come mainly from Africans. 3. The new U.S. aid policy for Africa is designed to build regionalism and burden-sharing, not to serve a.s a smokescreen for U. S
  • mentioned the A-11, the new US interceptor plane. He said it had a speed of 3.2 Mach and a ceiling above 70,000 feet. He said this was a very considerable technical advance which was of great importance to the Free World .. He said he had sent a message
  • Council health Council Southern .) year~ Yuntil in the next it almost political triumphal In this Suu himself the admin­ in sel­ This Phan Khac Suu ~-~ to the J . in the Navan­ but stage, somewhat he guided new Charter
  • assassination -- to reassure a nervous world that "the gove nment in Washington lives", and to acquaint millions abroad with the new leader of America and the free world. Minutes after the bullets struck John Kennedy, USIA threw all its resources into this task
  • Record, 10/18/65~ p. A5856-A5857. Reprint of editorial from Chicago Daily News, October 18, 1965. Klan modernizes its terrorism. Drew Pearsono Washington Post, 10/18/65, p. Bll. Story of Klan use of citizens band radio, infiltration of police forces
  • . I talked to people in the U.S. Geological Survey and obtained polished samples of some very beautiful American rocks. The next project was to get these over to the White House for Mrs. Kennedy to see. Me and my quite large tummy, and a rather heavy
  • . Watson's comment? Washington Post Baltimor·e Sun N. Y. Times Wall Street Journal Washington Evening Star Washington Daily News !_ ✓ Disapproved ------- Approved / {:!) MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON v{ I t·-- June 18, 1966 12: 15 p. m
  • ··tJiROUG)t :HAI.PHO~JG/ HAVE -. SET NEW :,;RECORDS~J: U,t:MARC}t: .· 1~2,~703'>'1£TRIC --·TOMS ';'OF · CARGO'. -PA_SSED THROUGH:_ TME .": PORTr:·:-DURING.:·_:-t ltE' 'MONTH o,·.~'APRIL THER£i-- VAS'i A SL IGJiT-.. DECt INt·:·t . O~ J.3'2·9 .00lJ_METR IC
  • VICE PRESIDENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON DAILY DIARY The Vice President began his day at (place) Entry No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Time Telephone f or t Lo 10:00a t 11:00a t 1:15p 1:45p f 3:45p 5:30p 8:45p Day Wednesday Waldorf Astoria Hotel, New York City
  • Daily Diary
  • Vice-President's Daily Diary entry, 5/31/1961
  • Vice-Presidential Daily Diary
  • Pre-Presidential Daily Diary
  • VICE PRESIDENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON DAILY DIARY Day Friday Rashtrapati Bhavan (President's House) New Delhi May The Vice President began his day at (place). Entry No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Time Activity (include Date. visited by)* Lo LD 7:15a 10:30a
  • Daily Diary
  • Vice-President's Daily Diary entry, 5/19/1961
  • Vice-Presidential Daily Diary
  • Pre-Presidential Daily Diary
  • VICE PRESIDENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON DAILY DIARY Day Monday Feb 19, 1962 The Vice President began his day at (place) P-38 Entry No. Time Telephone f or t Activity (include visited by)* Lo LD 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 11:45a 12:00n 1:00p 3
  • Daily Diary
  • Vice-President's Daily Diary entry, 2/19/1962
  • Vice-Presidential Daily Diary
  • Pre-Presidential Daily Diary
  • SENATOR LYNDON B. JOHNSON DAILY DIARY Day Friday The Senator began his day at (place ) Waldorf Hotel, New York City Entry No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Time Telephone f or t Lo 8:00a 8:30a 10:15a 10:30a 10:45a 11:00a
  • Daily Diary
  • Senate Daily Diary entry, 1/22/1960
  • Senate Daily Diary
  • Pre-Presidential Daily Diary
  • -Pft.ES'fl)EN:I.' f1 om Mc G. -£. Seg:e± 1 #.~;l....Jl:leJ:llel.....-l-.;t;.e--tt'l~~~~l,..4~r-'.l,~~~~±:t ~7·f~112:, .¥5'Bb ve(-70v\­ #90a cable #97 memo Seerc L ~J~---~~t.~ Vl~.z-41u ff· r-e. p~ c'°'xc..·k°"' r text of New Delhi 1865~ Secret
  • mu.s t .0 2 a :. n new to make the necessary c..rra~ge~ ents to replace all ~hei.r APC' s over tne next .ten years. Finally, .they face the q uestion of -the new generation of pla~e s , tanks and related items which t~ey will need in · the early 1970's
  • will total no more than $285 million at the new rate. ~ The F-111~ cancellation is now estimated to reduce U. K. · procurement from the U.S. by $861 million - or $731 million after the $130 million in estimated termination costs are taken into account. ~ts
  • !or Discussion iculturaJ. with Pril11e Minister Develo 1ent The rele..t •ons i:p bet'treen } inister Su.bre..rnanianand Mrs. Gandhi good. s. G..ndhi has generally su:9ported Minister new agricultural development. p_ o.;_ as it evolved f' c:.n our discussion