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  • , and I'm going back to the Post Office Department." And I stayed on. Will and I were doing just about all the writing over there for a period of four or five months till Bob Kintner came along and started expanding the staff while we were there. F: How
  • Biographical information; John Gronouski 1964, Post Master General, called Hardesty to be speech writer; Jack Valenti chief editor; first session, 89th Congress; LBJ and production of bill signing: two or three a day; Indian affairs speech; Bob
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • been director of the I & R [Intelligence and Research] from the beginning of the Kennedy Administration until 1963? H: Right. M: So you served about a year in the Far East post. H: Just a little over. M: Did you know Mr. Johnson at all prior
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • . At meetings we recommended to Marshal Sarit--we thought that the thing he could do best--they had some isolated posts along the bank of the Mekong, sort of border posts. assumed greater importance. But now they We suggested that he put together a regiment
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • in the press, including a cartoon that appeared in the Post on November 28 where the cartoonist depicted Mr. Macy as really a representative in a casting office looking for talent. I proceeded to organize the personnel function. months. This took a couple
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • as a correspondent in January of 1930 and was a correspondent for our three Texas papers-lIm sorry to say we only have one now--a paper in homa~ and two in Tennessee. G: The three Texas papers were? M: We had the Houston Herald-Post. Press~ Alabama
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • naivete I thought, flak you have to go through." '~ell, this is just a little But he told me the Sunday night before he left office when the bulldog edition of the Washington Post came out with a particularly gory story in it, he said, "Now, I'll tell
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • /oh able to do that with the very limited advance warning we had and so on, was a shock within government and it obviously was a shock to LBJ. You know that front page of the Washington Post that next morning with the pictures of the brand-new
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • and down the street notified. · Third, I would send out a penny post .aard to all ·of .the poll tax holders i.n that whole area . . . . . ··and invite them to come•.' in at a certain hour at a certain time.· Fourth, I would have the RA he came
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Case as administrative assistant for years and a very brilliant man, a Jewish boy from--lives over across the border in Maryland. Sam Zagoria. Z-A-G-O-R-I-A. Zagoria. He is with the Washington Post. He is ombudsman on the Washington Post and a hell
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • . You didn't start out to be a career diplomat . I took the Foreign Service examinations in May of 1936, and I started my first post at Vancouver at the end of December of '36 . F: Did you have any background in Latin America, or did you just sort
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • jumped the party, I've never gotten a thing for it ." That's what he said . "And Jamie Whitten, who went Republican in his district got a big"--I don't know if it was a post office, I forget what it was . Abernethy said, "We're using an antiquated
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • the such of generally (as situation a divisicin? in Detroit), leads itself if to 10 f. Justice paragraph of what assistance to the has Post-Riot not is yet just sent say.) not yet This rough indication Federal disaster been states.following
  • . Brief 2:15 p.m. 2:45' p.m. Watson 3:30 p.m. ceremony Depart will be followed Racquet _Dedication (45 minutes) -- Depart by refreshments Post - - Reception Racquet Club. Office with Postmaster General Office 3:45 p.m. -- Arrive Westward Ho
  • ransomed from the Bay of Pigs--well, I also saw Bobby occasionally during the post-Bay of Pigs Cuban assessment which I worked on for Vance. This was really post-Bay of Pigs, I think. No, we're talking about early 1962, and when Vance was secretary
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • if they were going to bear fruit. G: A while ago you mentioned the fact the foreign officer follows his government's instructions and is not a politician. During the time when you represented the Goulart government abroad, you were posted in Moscow
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • :t'aaty~ inquirini attack wi tl1 obset'Ve~ posts Enst and West Gennany would be next step. pr-cpared to do what little as it would, noting in Ho s~id Sweden 'that n~utl'al area of exploration and au~estin~ Vice President replied.that firm US
  • or State SR G H 9799 March 15, 1962 NO: 771, ~arch 14, 2 p.m. DECLASSIFIED ..ST::iT£ Authority By £,.J,.J ;2-S"- "Ft:: , NARS, Date ~- 7 - 7 , CAP PR IGA AID p USIA SY INR RMR INFORMATIQ)l..POOCHED PORT-AU-PRINCE,SANTODOMINGO ANDCA POSTS
  • to the post a tew weeks before the n.ai'\ ·and Nt.U"Ded a tw days in advance ot the Special Mission to be on hand 'thraagbout tbe activities. Messrs. Cox and Sherman also arrived in advance ot tba Special Mission. These officers, ably supported by Mias Ivonne
  • a military funeral should normally pattern their ·ceremony after the most simple form of the mili­ tary . funeral, as described in paragraph 16. If, however, large numbers of veteran personnel are available and the local veteran post or· unit has
  • -rightist political organization that seeks to unite right-wingers Wlder one banner and win na·t!onal election posts by 1968, has been founded under the aegis of the para-military Minutemen organization. · The acting chairma.n of' the new political par·ty
  • reliable information in the past recently supplied the following information. Martin Lutger Kin,. Jr, 4 head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference ~17', and some of his representatives have been negotiating with "The Saturday Evening Post
  • to handle any such problems if they should arise. I will, of course, be talking with Thieu and Ky about their immediate post-election moves, assuming they are elected, as these will be very important in terms of the atmosphere which will prevail at that time
  • histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Desautels -- I -- 4 went to the Post Office, that would be 1964, 1965. But the first one to come on board was Dave Bunn in the Johnson years. G: Did these people handle both House and Senate matters
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • was not a leader in foreign affairs. It is important to remember that, although he almost always supported post-war administration programs, I do not remember his discussing foreign policy very often. I do remember how proudly he talked about his support
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • before the coup; an offer to move Diem out of the country to safety; visiting the Presidential palace the day after the coup; flying with the Nhu children to Rome; JFK assassination; post-Diem conditions in Saigon; Georges Perruche; an explosion
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • beyond just those that were related to the presidency, particularly in the area of Mrs. Johnson's work with the beautification program. B: In 1966 you were offered one of the posts of commissioners on the old D.C. Commission, that is, before
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • for the Saturday Evening Post. He went to see Lyndon and Lyndon turned to him [and] said, "Now, don't be like those boys Halberstam and [Neil] Sheehan. country." They're traitors to their When I heard about it later, I thought well, Lyndon, that's the kind
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Ackley -- II -- 18 press, the Times and the Washington Post, were against a tax increase all
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • come in and .out of that particular room. Mr. Wild was up in 1602. F: f NoH as a co-ngressman he rated an office here in Austin, I presume in the Post Office Building. 15 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org More on LBJ Library oral
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • .···. • ···:: .. •. ·t.:. "\ .'.The Pre~ldent reached .the. ! I .of_ the ~ational Securitr
  • the ground. This photograph was taken on a clear day. Arrows indicate Angels. IT WAS publicly mentioned only briefly March 6, 1948, in the Saturday Evening Post, the re­ cording of unidentified entities as Official Photograph Arrows indicate four RADAR AN­
  • ), a Parsee lawyer, was prominent in the left wing of the Congress Parliamentary Party -- the so-called "Ginger Group." He died in 1960. Several years prior to his de;=ith, however, he was more or less estranged from his wife. post-independence Shastri She
  • ; in particular they may be indicative of the tone of the post-Nenru leadership. Neverthe­ less, the room for Indian maneuver will rem2 ~.n limited and dramatic shifts remain improbable. A forward Indian ~olicy against Communist China is rendered unlikely
  • intention of submitting a bid to meet the electrical requirements of the Arll\Y' posts in the vicinity of Fort Sam Houston at the expiration of the current electric service contract, if future developments permit. The War Department is, of course, highly
  • spent eight months in Tokyo as an adviser to the Korean delegation at the ROK-Japan normalization talks. In July 1952, he was appqinted Counselor of the Korean Embassy in Taipei, and from December of that year he also held the post of purchasing officer