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  • Easley was the Associated Press correspondent covering the House of Representatives for years and years. And he later worked for Bob Poage, but Tex Easley was a very prominent associate, AP writer. H: Okay, Bill and Judy Mickey, M-I-C-K-E-Y. Anything
  • was with the Associated Press. He was Kleberg's secretary then. By that time he had become very well known. He was the only employee in Congress I ever knew who was widely known. I mean beyond the employees, because the other members saw him and they knew he had something
  • thousand, and the President carried by over a million. F: The people never associated the two? W: Never identified. They were anti-Goldwater. There was just no way Goldwater could carry California. I was concerned--the "big lie" technique--if we kept
  • and 3/31/68 speech; socializing with Ben Barnes; Jack Valenti becoming head of the Motion Picture Association of America; Robert Redford and Paul Newman; LBJ’s driving.
  • COURT/75 E.55 ST .• N.Y.C. IAN & SYLVIA i'Ul International Talent Associates, Inc. 75 E. 55th St., NYC Plaza 1-33•4-4 9538 Brighton Way, Beverly Hills, Calif. Crestview 5-4562 tRAt4Sf ERRED to STILLflOTO COLtECTmtl TRAHSffRil L Ian Md s
  • press for flBENflAl ~--- 3 substantive rather than token cooperation. (3) Cooperation with the Soviet Union should be well defined and the obligations of both sides made clear and comparable. (This will facilitate implementation as well as clarify
  • was strong. The report he got was that when President Kennedy was ki 11 ed i.t might have been done by those connected with, or associ ated with, or in sympathy with the far right movement. Some reporter gave him that ~ LBJ Presidential Library http
  • CULVERCITY CALIF 24 THE PRESIDENT THE WHITEHOUSE STRONGLY URGEWITHDRAWAL COLEMAN APPOINTMENT FIFTH CIRCUIT INCOMPATIBLE VITHFREEDOM IN SOUTH JUDGESHIPSUCHNOMINATIONS PARENTSMISSISSIPPI FREEDOM ASSOCIATION OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA 11169 BRADDOCK DR CULVERCITY
  • parties, the press, and the formation of the Inspectorate and the .Supreme Court. It says it will set up a committee for "Foreign Affairs and Information", and it has sent a delegation to Quang Tri Province to investigate reported incursions of Communist
  • are not going to run out on South Vi etnam. We are not g oing to break Ameria' s word. ·.· However long it takes , · we will persist until the Communists end the fighting or until we negotiate· an honorable peace. REMARKS TO THE PRESS, LBJRANCH August 14, 1966
  • that some of the four-digit serials may be associated with rear service work and can reasonably expect an unknown number of men to be assigned to these tasks. I. Using the same movement factors, we have estimated the time required for the serials to arrive
  • a regional fertilizer trade association. This topic }Till be f'Urther discussed at a follow-up seminar to be held in Ie.tin America. A report will be made available to participants of the fertilizer work group of CIAP within the next two months which
  • ," and prior to his appointment as Ambassador in August, 1967 Mantilla served as Executive Director of that newspaper. He has been active in Ecuadorean and inter-American press organizations and was President of the inter-American Press Association from 1949
  • Marshall D. Shulman Russian Institute, Columbia University Donald B. Straus American Arbitration Association Kenneth W. Thompson The Rockefeller Foundation James C. Thomson Department of History r Harvard University Stephen J. Wright United Negro College
  • to let 15 trapped ships out. The UN is now pressing Israel to let the Egyptians begin surveying the northern half. This could lead to re-opening the whole Canal. Eban has warned \ U Thant that Israel will oppose that, and this morning's firing along
  • Ka.shmir is still his- chief concern,. and he will be him infor1:1ed. The attached watching sharnly for signs that we are favoring India. letter assures him that you presa,ed Mrs. Gandhi 011 this subject as hard as you pressed him. '\Tbil we cannot report
  • National Intelligence Estimate (SNIE) to study the technical capa­ bilities and incentives for the Soviet Union to deploy weapons and associated delivery systems on the seabed, and the corresponding capabilities of the U.S. to detect and identify
  • years that we had worked together. Mrs. Johnson made a little speech. And She said she had hoped the President would come; she was sure he had pressing business and couldn't get there. Just about three minutes later, in he walked. And I could tell
  • of HHH; JFK, LBJ and press attitudes; anti-Johnson campaign 1960-1969; contacts with President LBJ and Lady Bird;
  • of respect for the military, but he really came from that old-time school that wanted the civilian to be looking down the throats of [the military]. G: Anything on his association with David Lilienthal? Did he have much contact with Lilienthal during
  • - Discussion on Vietnam, Robert Kennedy, Eisenhower, Alliance for Progress, role of ror. 42. 9 December 1963 - Briefing. General revi·ew. Press, McNamara, Vietnam. I 43. 13 December 1963 - Introduced DDCI, Peer de Silva., reviewed checklist. Discussed
  • baa fel~ for 1SG to be helpf•lo tbroughcut tiuat vidiout • - dear• of c®®p®rati@n ancl reapoulveaeea frcm both •diatioll efforto partie•~ tbe~e WOQild be p©>i111t in pressing We have no deaf.re elbow our•elvea into attattica in absence deaire
  • . He disclosure referred specifically to the report in Newsweek about the Berlin proposals which had appeared in the press before they had even reached his desk. He expressed the hope that the individual guilty of this particular disclosure could
  • November Z2, 1965 MEMORANDUM FOR RECOAD I invited myaelf to lunch. with B. K. Nehru today &ad made clear to him the ri•k• 111 such 001-inapired, press atoriea a• the ~ria-on article in Monday'• Poat ( 'Shastri Objec:t1 to New US Military Aid to PaldatanPJ
  • INTERVIEWEE: ROBERT N. GINSBURGH INTERVIEWER: Ted Gittinger PLACE: General Ginsburgh's residence, Chevy Chase, Maryland Tape 1 of 2 G: General Ginsburgh, would you begin by telling us how you came to be associated with the Policy Planning Council
  • . And then it goes on to prescribe corrective measures, but they don't really make much sense. before. They are what they'd been saying For example, instead of, "We're going to win the war in the shortest possible time," which were the buzz words associated
  • activity through computer capability; CIA; Robert Komer and pacification; the Tet Offensive; Westmoreland press briefing after Tet; the media; infiltration; the importance of Cambodia; Sihanouk; problem of interpretation of intelligence; body counts; Sam
  • attorney, your own county judge, your own constables, school boards-F: He was a prisoner of the place, in a sense. .__ D: As much as he was di ctator and tyrant. F: Do you get the feeling from your long association with Texas He could be a tyrant
  • that even though they opposed, they had already known so many things, more or less by courtesy, that they didn't have quite the sting to attack. And I think that President Johnson was always-- of course he had quite a lot of association with Uncle Carl
  • , and it was a most satisfying joy to me that they liked, appreciated, respected each other so much. G: When Aunt Effie would visit for these extended periods, would she become part of the working family, the household? Would she be pressed into service to help
  • Taylor; LBJ's view of minorities in the 1930s and 1940s and some of his unpopular actions; LBJ's association with African-American education leaders; Bill Deason and the Johnsons' first victory garden; guests and friends; the changing morale regarding
  • technical inconvenience. In political terms, on the other hand, the consequences of denial could be very serious. we do have an agreement, made in 1959 in good faith. we are already publicly associated with this particular program, by virtue of the agreement
  • of the kk ghetto. Upon arrival at Cit¥ llall, the state and city officials attempted to devise a sxx statement ~ c for the press. At this point one of the leaders of the Plainfield Negro community came into the room aaax in which they were meeting
  • associations with Governor Price Daniel and with President Johnson. In the spring of 1965 you joined the White House staff as Special Counsel to the President and served in that position until the spring of 1967. Could we begin by your telling me a little
  • Biographical information; working for Price Daniel; Jacobsen’s personal political philosophy; 1940’s and 1950’s political climate in Texas; LBJ’s reputation as a congressman; LBJ’s early advisers and associates; law suit involving the 1948 election
  • of March 8, 1962. Reports from United States diplomatic missions in the countries which they visited, as well as coverage by the press, indicate that the Steinbecks and Mr. Albee enjoyed singular success as cultural envoys of the United States
  • in 1858, when there was apprehension of an attack by the United States army. There was a general migration south from Salt Lake City, and Cannon was appointed by Brigham Young to take the press and printing materials of the Deseret News to Fillmore
  • in development. -- -describes supplemental and supportive programs aimed at meeting our most pressing urban needs, proposed for the immediate study of the new Secretary and including demo:q.stration projects in metropolitan planning. These programs are predicated
  • and (2) the Rusk press conference. We ::.·eplied tnat there-'.cou°id-be·.-no ·que·stion a11d assured him that what we had proposed wa~ fully authorized ·and still stands. We added that Lau misconstrued the Honolulu communique. We said the U. S. does
  • personality. In fact, he gives the impression of a man who has been picked as a figurehead, and used by activists in the backgroundo However, he firmly states the Alg~rian Government position, but without fervor. I pressed him hard I. 1 • DECLASSIFIED
  • the accident about Our records 1 s reaction sensitive Public the press during in deciding was the attitude and the presence of Defense the President• in effect One of the factors was accutely 5: the President It Rusk and Secre­ do