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7231 results
Oral history transcript, Anna Rosenberg Hoffman, interview 1 (I), 11/2/1973, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- . This was a fact. So did Mary Lasker. And so Mrs. Roosevelt said, "Dorothy Schiff should never have attacked him on civil rights." Because she understood also -- she knew enough about it -- that he was doing his level best. F: But the liberal press
- report did provide estimates of what the cost would be under various circumstances. And these costs, the Farmers Home Administration, Lee Fryer, who was an associate administrator, I believe was his title at the time, worked as a task force
- a press conference down at the Driskill Hotel and became a candidate for the Senate. And, of course, all of us were working full time but we found several hours a day ..... some of the boys went into the campaign full time. I didn't, but that reminds me
- have got such a majority it really doesn't matter. But in those days, it was so close. It was so close. Do you have any Let's talk about LBJ's relations with other senators. recollections of his association with Walter George, for example, who
- --and may still believe--that Swiss law requires him to buy gold whenever it's offered at his buying price by anybody, or at least by any Swiss resident private or public. So he couldn't associate himself with the communique that made him obligated
- autographed, of course, and they appeared in the offices of all of our people around the world . Many of them were reproduced in the local travel press and sometimes in the public press of the countries in which they operated . This kind of a thing adds
- . But he got over that hump. Then Weaver held a press conference in which somebody asked him, "Do you want to be secretary of housing and urban development?" and Weaver said, "Yes," which created a whole raft of stories sometime in December. F: Did he? C
- debated it for one entir e week, besides the prelim i narie s and the buildups and the inser tions in the Record and the debates in the public press . We starte d on Monday and I don't believ e we finish ed that bill until late Frida y night . I
- •.l-4) will depend gtieatly~ we think, on• how C\J+X"&-p~ •• t~ty problem with Panama lulndled. ·Velarde, Prestcte.t¢1a1 press secre.ry, ~s informed us t1-t during his r«efde,p.t . ~~ to Washington'he urged in talks with various ofticials Ille -•ttber
Oral history transcript, William G. Phillips, interview 1 (I), 4/16/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , he and others tried to persuade the Democratic leadership, without success, that it should propose a Democratic alternative legislative program. So in late January 1957, eighty liberal House members--most of whom later were DSG leaders-associated
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 101: Oct. 23‑28, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 41
(Item)
- A THREAT AGAINST TH£ ROCK PILE. :-ns COl'!MUNICATIONS INDICATED tNCREASINa PREPARATIONS FOij . ATTACX. ON 24 AUGUST wE INTERCEPTED A i".ZSSAGE FROt'I AN ~.,TILLERY ELE:l".ENT ASSOCIATED WITH THE 320Tli _DIV WHICH ·osoo HRS,.. '~5 AUGUST• (~E :-.JEVER SAW
- BY THE ASSOCI~TION• 7° FI~EAR~S MAYBE IMPO~T~D BY LICENSED D~A~ERS OR BY PERSONS WITH VALID LICENSES, MAIL ORD~R PURCHASE is N0°T POSSIBLE, •s 1NcE NO, ONE Is PERMI TTE6 TO SEl.:l A••GUN OR ANY OTHER FIREARM !O A'JO!HER PERSON ~N~ESS THAT PERSON PRODUCES HIS
- ·of. t7.~c area against the ovmer of the Foremost Liquor Store, one :,7.:.chF.elLa Pot a, who is of the white race.. He has been · _ closc:.y associated \'Iith the hoodlu~1 element of the Chicago area. Local au.thori ties -as we],1 .as leaders
- WITH KING CONSTANTINE THIS AFTERNOON, HE INTENDS TO PRESS FOR FULL GREEK SUPPORT FOR SPEEDY· SETTLEMENT. HE WILL THEN FLY TO ANKARA FOR MEETINGS WITH FONMIN AND PRESIDENT SUNAY. HE INTENDS TAKE LINE WITH TURKS THAT FRAMEWORK OF ACCORD NOW EXISTS TH.~T
- the same kind of John got it from talking to the press; he'd talk to Halberstam and Sheehan. I didn't make complaints. I was complaining--not complaining, I was telling him what was a fact, and he was shouting back at me so loud that they could hear him
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 83: June 20‑25, 1968 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 36
(Item)
- ~OA ANO AUSTRIA, lN PARTICULAR, PRESSED US ON ABSENCE.OF ANY STATEMENT'REGAROlNG .• ,PEACEFUL USES IN DRArT'OECLARATlON o; PRINCIP.LES, CONStNSUs . SEMKEO TO BE THAT IT' WAS: lMPERAT'lVE rOR WEST' TO HAVE ITS OWN FORMULAON QUESTION OF. PEACEF'UL USES
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 94: Sept. 12‑18, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 39
(Item)
- Prealdent: Herewith Clark ClWord'• pre•• lnterYiew today followln1 hla appearance before the Subcommittee on Defenae appropri atlon•. W. W. Ro•tow rln Secretary of Defense Clark M. Clifford Interviewed by Press Following appearance before Subcommittee
- the White Hou$e prevented my having the time to call on yo~ pe:roonally to let you know how greatly I ap preciated your guidance, help and support during my tenure as Press Sec:r.etary. Tho association we developed over the years mean.a a great deal to me
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 58: Jan. 25‑31, 1968 [1 of 3]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 28
(Item)
- , by the National Association of Manufacturers. It was a puff, gut labor bill. They were trying to take advantage of the scandals in the Teamsters and other things that the McClellan Committee had dug up to really land some body blows on organized labor
- . - There should be no question of the sentiments of the American people. I submit for appropriate reference a con current resolution to express the sense of Congress on this vital issue. Mr. McCARRAN. Mr. President, I should like to associate myself in every
- . On reflection, we need three things to make it move: Westnioreland must allocate more of his own military resources to pacification as well as press the ARVN forward into this task; and he should work up a plan for the military side of pacification for 1967. We
- believe in a third term, and I appointed a campaign manager named Vincent Daley, and he was campaign manager--ostensibly the campaign manager. He was the front man, and he was the one who used to hold the press conferences every day, but I used to see
Oral history transcript, James C. Gaither, interview 5 (V), 5/12/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- that is really productive long term but the effect is enormous. MG: You mentioned the whole range of projects. In some of your memos there is a theme there that you ought to present more of the successful programs to the President's attention and the press
Oral history transcript, Stanley R. Resor, interview 1 (I), 11/16/1968, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- on Saturday morning with the other appointees and Mrs. Johnson. As we arrived the President was holding a press conference at which he announced our appointments and we spent the rest of the morning with the President, had lunch with him and Mrs. Johnson
- belonged to the Press Club. this column, "El Toro." that'd stack up. ~- 17 I was associate editor and I wrote You know they couldn't get rid of the newspapers Nobody wanted that College Star. Some of us got to writing things like that, you know
- . M: Somebody picked up the information that you are associated with a firm called Peabody, Kaufman and Brewer. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781
- . Sincerely, Luke c. iHester Press Aide to Senator Paul H.~ LCH:mfd 0A. JACIC MILLER, toWA LDt a. .IORDAN, IDAHO Apl'U 19, 19'6 Dear S.Mlol'I Tbl• 18 ID reapoue to ,... letter of Apl'U 11, 1966, eaclo•taa a lelter from Mre. RONn& R. Oro••• r• ... etlaa
- to press the Japanese through in£onnal channels for asGiatanc:e; and at tt-.r.e an.nae tlrae it would put the High Cantsstoner in be is in now .. 4 u:uch bt!tt~x· poaH ton to mgtr.ai.n sud1 pressures than Fine.Uy, vH.hln tht?. would be poardble
- -------- . ,... ..,.. • . •\ .... . , . . : . • . .. . ' • . .. .. ' .i .. . . 8-i'A'l'Ji?mft BY ROBERTc. . wmvm,ADMDlIS'l'RATOR HOUSIHOAND HOMEFnfAl.JCE AGENCY t AT"A PRESS CO~"'FEREMOB, 3:00 PM . • . XOBDAY, NO\rmram ... a, 1962 • \ . .' . . . - .. 4 ----- 11J;;~~; ---- ------- L .. ~ .... ~ J
- npy;_, that might facilitate ultimate creation of a new Department of Transportation and meanwhile produce better solutions for some current pressing problems. - - -2 National Transportation Council We have serious reservations concerning Mr
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 104: Nov. 5‑8, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 42
(Item)
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 61: Feb. 10‑13, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 29
(Item)
- the French alone. In this war, the Thieu-Ky government shares with the U nitecl States and its other allies the status of the designated enemy. To raid provincial capitals and to kill senior officials and to press the attack into the capital and major cities
- ? Was it evident at this point? J: I usually was pretty aware of who he knew beforehand. His letters, his stream of letters, were almost daily, and if I needed to do something, he could and did give me advice on how to do it. One of the most pressing things
- with the press, specifically newspapers; LBJ's interest in Lady Bird Johnson's appearance; Lady Bird Johnson's efforts to get Tom Miller, Jr., into Officer Candidates School; time LBJ spent with Ed Weisl while in California in the navy; Lady Bird Johnson's
Folder, "McGeorge Bundy, Vol. 21, March, 1966 [1 of 3]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 6 [2 of 2]
(Item)
- #7lb cable 03/18/66 t6, the P1 1esident from Dean Rusk S-ee;r;iQ:t; ~ 1--
Oral history transcript, William P. Bundy, interview 2 (II), 5/29/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- , then know it was going to be surface-to-air missiles and all that it turned out to be . And we associated Kosygin's visit in early February, with sort of refo rmalizing good relations, good Communist-bloc relations, between Moscow and Hanoi . So
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 83: June 20‑25, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 36
(Item)
- , I believe the approach most likely to be effective with the Israelis will of the Phantoms they be to go forward promptly with delivery are pressing for and the equipment Israel seeks for its proposed anti-infiltration line. I foresee three ppsitive