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  • at $15 million. You already approved Linc Gordon's request to negotiate a loan of $4 million to meet the Ecuadorean emergency financial crisis. The Yerovi Government declined the loan because the self-help conditions were too stiff, particularly
  • candidates and their families, and asking that the FBI afford cooperation where necessary. 5:4la t Hon. Clark Clifford. Secy of Defense 5:47a t The Attorney General, Hon. Ramsey Clark 6:00a f Tom Johnson *6:45a entr y - Georg e Christia n issue d
  • Luther Hodges, Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz, The Cabinet Secretary of HEW, Anthony J. Celebrezze. . . and Bill Moyers Dr. Glenn Seaborg David Bell Jack Valenti John S. Gleason Fred Dutton Kermit Gordon Robert Weaver Walter Heller Carl Rowan Dr. Don
  • , Banking & Volunteer Activities, US Svgs Bond Div. , Wash, DC Gordon Hanes, Pres. , Hanes Corp, Winston-Salem, N. C. John E. Harper, Pres., Aluminum Co of Americ a, Pitts burgh, Pa. .... "Robert E. Harper, PIO, US Svgs Bond Div, Wash, DC ....~~~ Wade N
  • cooperation. In order to t:lake such an objective realiz2..':>le:, so:::.e progress has to be cade in the meantime, nai:;:iely before t:he A.£-=ica.n end Portuguese positions become ·wholly unreconcilable and be=ore the orientation of the nationalists becomes
  • basketball, not so they would grow up to be seven foot giants-these were small. peasant-stock people They ere teachmg them how to get along together. They were the children of peasants; they knew only how to bump each other. not how to cooperate
  • Annex III r Cre_dits_ ~_xtended By the Senegal National Bank to Cooperatives, due at the end of 1966 1966 Farm Program Regions Thies Short term . · Medium term (2 years) Medium .term (S years) Pre~ious Farm Programs 1966 Food Supply Totals
  • and Mrs. Kennedy in greeting Democratic Women on WH lawn. Hosts luncheon at State Department for U.S.-Japan Science Cooperation Committee. Attends 6:45 reception concluding WH Economic Conference, and later addresses American Cancer Society at Shoreham
  • that he had. But he was the only one of them that I came across that was really unabashedly trying to make that kind of wheeling and dealing. For example, Wayne Morse, who was chairman of the subcommittee on education, I had very close and cooperative
  • as conservative or more conservative than Wilbur Mills, yet he was much more cooperative, a friend of the President's. Whether it was the friendship to the President or just his loyalty to the party and administration I don't know, but George was always trying
  • Angeles is that of (1) conciliation and (2) coordination, within the context of cooperation with all the constructive forces at work in the local community. 6. As one of several federal agencies concerned with resolving the problems of Los Angeles
  • , is bein g s u bjected to increasing verba l a t tack by the prime min­ iste r , and, like the two major part ies, suffers from in ternal fac ti onalism. While rejecting EDA bids for cooperation, Papandreou faces the continuing problem of keeping
  • outcry expected; poss i_b 1e increase in USSR/China cooperation"; and, with respect -to a proposal to mine a 11 major po,rt . ~pproaches, they say, 11 Po 1it i ca 1 r is~ is acceptab 1e -­ no direct military confrontation likely; no realignment
  • neutralism,, Japan: abrogation of the U.S. -Japan Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security and elimina­ tion of U.S. bases in Japan; withdrawal of U.S. forces from Okinawa and immediate re­ version of the Ryukyus to Japan; establish­ ment of diplomatic
  • quested. _ _ For your information. _ _ For comment. REMARKS: Description: X To: From: Date: Subject: Letter: Telegram: Other: The President Mra. Gordon B. ~eamond, Preaident, Federation of Homemaker•, 927 North 5/ 19/68 Stuart St, Arlington, Virgini
  • , President's Commission on White House Fellows Frank Ikard, Sr., Danzansky, Dickey, Tydings, Quint & Gordon J. J. Pickle, United States Representative, 10th District, Texas Charis Walker, Charis E. Walker Associates, Inr. system up for ransom." It represents
  • was adequate and he was aatia!ied. He said the only thins that Eisenhower propoaed to him wae the replacement ol. McGeorge Bundy with Gordon Gray. I said that I did not wiah to belabor the point: I thought he had probably forgotten the diecue1ioq
  • , and that the reinfestation that we have experi enced during the fall of 1963 was the result of fli.es migrating into the United States from the Republic of Mexico The attached joint statement of the cooperators in the program dated I F ebrua r y 1964 agrees
  • Memorandums, "NSAM 271, Cooperation with £ the USSR on Outer Space Matters" RESTRICTION CODES (A) Closed by Executive Order 12356'governing access to national security information. (B) Closed by statute or by the agency which originated the document. (C
  • Folder, "NSAM # 271: Cooperation with the USSR on Outer Space Matters, 11/12/1963," National Security Action Memorandums, NSF, Box 2
  • to restore representative government and civil liberties will determine the degree of our future cooperation. Our major problem here in the White House is domestic concern for the safety of Andreas Papandreou. You have had two telegrams and I have one
  • ,D. C. Dear tarry, liberty ot enclosiDg a selt­ I am ta~~ c:xplan,.toey letter which I have received traa tbe Vice President o! tbe~-tias1asipp1 Valley Aa1oc1at1on. this I u, o! course, aost s.nxioua to cooperate ill matter and 1tould appreciate
  • discrimi. natory ....• ::5 employment sub-contractors by Government and in Federally The DOT cooperates ing this practices with assisted the Secretary contractors and contruction contracts. of Labor in implement- policy. On July .5
  • this different impression, and we didn't cooperate with anyone really the first three or four years. That has all changed, and I pushed the change to the point where we now cooperate fully with AID, with United Nations, with the private and other organizations
  • for Washington and in 1963 came back here to see what was going on and ran into Kermit Gordon, who was then director of the Bureau of the Budget, and Elmer Staats, who was then deputy director. Respectively, Kermit Gordon is now president of Brookings and Elmer
  • on his election victory and state that we look :forward to continued close cooperation with his Government. b. Ex:press your regret over the cancellation of the Cabinet-level meetin~ in Japan and express your hope that it can shortly be rescheduled. c
  • that she made_ and the grades that she made on -·the papers which were submitted. Mrs. Cooper can tell you a little more detail on that. I don't know the details. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B
  • See all online interviews with Ellen Taylor Cooper
  • Mrs. Fischesser first encounters Lady Bird; Lady Bird's Aunt Effie; Lady Bird's love of reading; Mrs. Fischesser's first encounter with LBJ; Mrs. Cooper's first encounter with Lady Bird; Nettie Mason Patillo; Mrs. Cooper's first encounter with LBJ
  • Cooper, Ellen Taylor
  • Oral history transcript, Elaine Fischesser and Ellen Taylor Cooper, interview 1 (I), 12/9/1967, by Douglass Cater
  • Ellen Taylor Cooper
  • Go to Interviewee bio page (Fischesser)Go to Interviewee bio page (Cooper)
  • "The World F ood Problem: Private Investment and Government Cooperation" -­ is a good example of this awareness. The conference was privately sponsored by a group including H. J. Heinz, 11, David Rockefeller., Hal Dean, Pete Collado, the Agricultural Research
  • , with [Clark] Clifford, David Ginsburg, Kermit Gordon, Charlie Schultze, Gardner Ackley, McNamara, and [Henry "Joe"] Fowler. I'm sure this subject was the topic of discussion, as well as the economy generally, and off of that meeting Saturday night I wired
  • , the Department of Commerce, and the Agency for International Developrrent, have cooperated to assist Mr. Ball and Mr. Beplat in the forming of this Mission and these departments will · brief the members of the group on Thursday, March 16th. Korea. A welcome
  • • CONFIDEN'fIAL Three meetings were scheduled for Buenos Aires: 1. IA-ECOSOC This meeting was held from February 13 to 15 • . Lincoln Gordon represented the United States. Santamaria was re-elected Chairman of CIAP. Sanz de Romero of Bolivia, Sola of Argentina
  • City through one-time grants not to exceed $1,500 per family. This program is being carried out in cooperation vi th the local Jevish resettlement agencies. From the inception of the program, a total sum of $81,530 V8s spent; $11,550was disbursed
  • progmms provided for in existing law. A new subsection 4(f) was added which requires the Secretary of Transportation to cooperate and consult ,vith the Secretaries of the Interior; Health, Education, and Welfare; Agriculture and ,vith the ~ta.tes in all
  • , Steve Steiner , Pa t Nugent, Mrs. Ellen Califano Vicky McCammon Virpinia Thrift, Mr (decorator) Joe Laitin Governor John Connally Austin JV Jacobsen Cooper , To Bergstrom AFB. via Jetsta r w/ Mrs. Johnson. Mr. Kellam Virginia Thrift, Mrs. Ellen Cooper
  • ·. Foreign Ministers -~hose steps that and collective capacity and frustrate governments they may consider self-def~nse, to counteract Sino-Soviet also·urged ppwers. .INNERQUOTE to take appropriate for their and to cooperate continued
  • Presidents Kennedy and Johnson with a series of economists as budget directors - -and economists with an operational instinct which was true of all of us: myself, Kermit Gordon, Charlie Schultz and C h a r l i e Zwick- -again the bureau was typically
  • ,_.,d_.....,_ __ i_r_._c_a_te_r _____ Gordon M. Murr~ \:-' V I __ Mr. Gordon asked that -we prepare the atte"l.'""d.-3lote for use by the \olhi_te HouSEt,Ji~ _ • 0 uauwww Oil October 16, 1964 (Oor4a1 II. lluri-q) Task Poree \nmlp0rtat1CD X 'l'he
  • Allen Dulles, George V. Allen, and Gordon Gray among its public and private members. The assertion in the New York Times on February 24, 1967, pp . 1, 16, ("It was learned that an outside study group assigned in 1960 to review the agency ' s secret