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  • be approximately ten days after he had announced his non-candidacy. I quickly took a trip to Indiana to survey the scene, met with the Kennedy supporters and returned to Washington. The farewell in the Post Office Department and with the President at the White
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • and don't have to be in competition for the consumer dollar, like building a post office building--let the government say, "You've got to pay your carpenter $50 .00 an hour or whatever ." M: Now, if you had a free hand as a builder, you could build
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • that problem previously. C: No, we really hadn't that much. F: You'd gone through the outer post. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • being what they are, that you could have brought a dog in and given him the kind of publicity, all the press exposure he got, and no one ex post facto wouldn't have claimed him. A: It seems especially now that he was a famous dog [someone would have
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • it was on Navy Day in 1966, when Senator Robert Kennedy was out in California doing some campaigning for the Democratic ticket out there, and I was in Long Beach then and Assistant Secretary of the Navy, not a very important post in Washington, But I had gone
  • graduated from Harvard in 1961, and free-lanced for a while--traveled for a year and then free-lanced writing a book about the travels-­ then went into the Marine Corps for a brief period, came out and rewrote the book, worked for the Washington Post
  • really got a lot of publicity, and we had a big press corps that would travel with us, and she got--for a First Lady, she really got a lot of publicity and a lot of mileage out of those trips, made it to newspapers, and not just the Washington Post
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • CAR ADVANCES FREIGHT AND INITIALS cs TOTAL BOOKS CTNI DO 11 873 1135 130 •A I I LOCATION WARli:HOUSE I POST OR SECTION PLEASE I DELIIIE.RED __JJJ5 TOTAL PREPAID ________________________ BY DELIVER WHO IS HEREBY THE ABOVE
  • policy.) VII VIII The Veteran's stake in 60 million jobs. Homes and the Common Man. (Producing for modern housing and homes will be the greatest single opportunity for furnishing post-war jobs. Modify FHA to provide lower interest rates, lower down
  • not realise that the ' Saturday Evening Post averages $SO,OOO worth of advertising trom th e Du ?onts and att111ated companies every issue and that one branch ot the Du Pont family 11 heavily supporting Smathers. - STRAIGHl' GOP-DEMO FIGHr - Real tact
  • yesterday, and for the first time we have a fairly clear picture of the post-independence government. We are not recognizing immediatelyo Today and tomorrow we'll respond to press queries by welcoming South Yemen to the family of nations. Then if the NLF
  • to stay on guard at all times? K: I think the times of greatest importance were in the immediate post-1963 period. I think these were periods of difficulty. Robert Kennedy appreciated the support President Johnson gave him in the 1964 campaign
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • . It was just a conversation about what the impact of this would be in the totality of the campaign. But it was difficult to sort of see at that time. F: Moving on, when you offered yourself for the post of majority whip, did you ever discuss the possibility
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , property tax adminis­ tration, post-secondary and vocational education, social ser­ vice delivery systems, special revenue sharing, energy policy, and state insurance policy. Between the first and second years of study, students are required to participate
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • -in-Residence program Ambassador William J. Jorden, former U.S. Ambassador to Panama and a member of President Johnson's National Security Council Staff, has been installed as the Library's first Scholar-in-Residence. The post, the first of its kind launched
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • in commencement, but not for commencement I 964. There were more volunteers than could be accepted, and the posts had to be carefully assigned to reflect University constituencies. In a similar departure from recent tradition a large proportion of the graduates
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • 'lary of tatc Henry Kissinger, Fo1wer Seer tary of Defense Roberl M N, mara and Congresswoman Patricia Schroeder. Serving on each of the panels also vill be three or four citizens who have part" c1pated in the comm unit discus­ sions. Wash111gton Post
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • House, when he visited the Library to discuss that fascinating history of the White House. 3 VISITORS TO THE LIBRARY Katherine Graham, publisher of the Washington Post, wa., here for the opening of the exhibit on Drew Pearson. (See page 6.) Charles
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , and she read intelligence for the O.S.S. in Washington-they returned to Europe and married in Oxford. Writing a memorandum for the State Department outlining a proposed structure for post-war Europe led to Walt's working in the late 1940s for Gunnar Myrdal
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • and Luci did the honors at the ribbon-cuning. The U.S. Post Office commemorated the event with a spe- cial cancellation which was present­ ed in honor of the day. Several mementoes of the opening are avail­ able at the Museum srore, including signed copies
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , 140 photos relating to the Vietnam War, and 15 images of Museum arti­ facts. The National Archives staff created digital images of all those 9 items and put them on the ARA web site. Our staff posted oral histo­ ry interviews to our own Library web
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • of meeting Jacquelin (Jackie) Thornburg, his new secretary. Born and raised in atchez, Mississippi, Ms. Thornburg flipped burners in L.A. for a while aft r high school. then went to work for the Chicago Post Office in 1970. Since then she has worked
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , to be followed by the Senate papers, the Vice Presidential papers, the post-Presidential files, and finally the personal papers of associates. Of the Library's one million security-classified docu­ ments- primarily concerned with foreign affairs - more than
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • particular attention to: " (l) The majo r military and economic assumptions used in c al c ulating existing conventional war stockpile objectives. " (2) The assumptions, techniques , and goals used in the establishment of post-nuclear attack supply
  • . G: Did Morse feel that he was politically vulnerable in accepting this post and did he resist the President's-- C: He agreed during that phone conversation. I don't know how long that phone conversation lasted. He tried to get--I don't know when
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • with employment discrimination. We looked, I believe, at requiring--military installations maybe even had an order issued saying that you couldn't advertise your rooming house or your rooms on the post, on the military installation, unless you agreed to say anyone
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • of the Union stuff, these stories? B: I'll check. C: Because they're important stories. This is the [Washington] Post, I guess: "There with an agenda rivaling the original Great Society program in scope, President Johnson last night laid before Congress
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • the veto. Late May The Saturday Evening Post publishes an article about LBJ as a possible vice presidential nominee in 1952. June 6/7 LBJ and Tom Connally meet to discuss appointments for the federal district attorney position for the Western District
  • . . . . The next 90 days will tell which direction we go from here.” Mussolini put to death by firing squad of Italian partisans. May 5/1 Hamburg radio reports that Adolf Hitler has fallen in battle at his command post in the Chancellory in Berlin. 5/3
  • egg buying program throughout Texas on Monday to insure producers a return of 26 cents/dozen. LBJ says price would fall to 20 cents/dozen without relief. 3/29 LBJ and Ewing Thomason named to Post-War Military. Planning Committee. 3/31 FDR permits
  • , understand the extent to which the job in New York is and must be limited in its authority and, ultimately, subordinated to the Secretary of State. He has come to understand the inherent limitations of the post. 3. On the other hand, he is intensely loyal
  • 'IAS STILL IN THE 7Qm1A!IVE!·STAGE·:ir17;.c ,··A· n1UZ,,8ER OF' ASSIGNMZNTS .STILL O?~N. 4. WITH REGARD TO THE PRL"'lE. MINISTER' S POST , HE "AS -·u JC:iE ASI NGLY OF THE VIE~ THAT_OR. NGUYEN >LUU VIEN)tAILTHE. M9ST DESIRABLE tJUALIFICATIONS. < HE
  • that "White House staff," quote, unquote, were interfering with the conduct of his office by making suggestions to him of one sort or another which he resented. G: These were like where to build the post office or jobs or--? O: Some of that, but even
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Street, Wub.ington, D. c. ICYdear Boba I have to en•1n• atter postal aaked your letter is found to laws, Solicitor the be tor the Post Office Depertaent ot Septeaber 19 and its enclosures. It thl one on which action aight be taken under
  • to Abe. So we spent time with the Star, we then went to the News, we then went to the Post; and our position was that the printing of a story without knowing the facts could destroy this man and his family, and he has been a loyal worker for twenty-five
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • to the neighborhood. The Post Office Department 13 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] was one of the very first to do something about it. More on LBJ Library oral
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • a::rivcd Lori the U. S. by ship 041 nvo ::x.cnths 1 leave frora post, the desirability of L.-it~::-:ru9ti."lJ his v~cation to r~tur:i to Chile soon for a ten-clay period. I ~:;:.;..:. 0.'1...l:tr~ o-f tl':e background ccnce~nirlg his hvo L."'lonths 1 lcava
  • followed after in her tradition of contribution to the country. It was on that occasion that the President announced the appointment of 10 women to high level government posts. My appointment to direct the Women's Bureau wa s among them. M
  • the morning [Washington] Post and there was an article saying that Glen Wilson and Eilene Galloway have been appointed by Lyndon Johnson to new space jobs. I was appointed a special consult- ant, and Glen was appointed a coordinator of information
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)