Discover Our Collections
- Tag > Digital item (remove)
Limit your search
Tag- Digital item (3054)
- new2024-June (212)
- new2023-Oct (94)
- new2024-Mar (80)
- new2024-Dec (66)
- new2024-July (64)
- Johnson, Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines), 1908-1973 (296)
- Rostow, W. W. (Walt Whitman), 1916-2003 (286)
- President Johnson's secretarial staff (132)
- Bundy, McGeorge, 1919-1996 (120)
- Johnson, W. Thomas, 1941- (103)
- Johnson, Lady Bird, 1912-2007 (64)
- Friends of the LBJ Library (52)
- Califano, Joseph A., 1931- (43)
- O'Brien, Lawrence F. (Lawrence Francis), 1917-1990 (42)
- Federal Bureau of Investigation (38)
- McNamara, Robert Strange, 1916-2009 (33)
- Reedy, George E. (George Edward), 1917-1999 (24)
- Rusk, Dean, 1909-1994 (19)
- Christian, George E. (George Eastland), 1927-2002 (17)
- Jones, James R. (17)
- 1965-xx-xx (32)
- 1966-xx-xx (25)
- 1965-07-xx (24)
- 1967-xx-xx (24)
- 1964-08-xx (22)
- 1964-xx-xx (20)
- 1965-05-20 (20)
- 1968-02-xx (16)
- 1967-10-xx (15)
- 1967-11-xx (14)
- 1961-xx-xx (13)
- 1968-05-xx (13)
- 1967-09-xx (12)
- 1968-03-xx (12)
- 1968-11-xx (12)
- Vietnam (539)
- Congressional relations (174)
- Defense (163)
- Legislation (163)
- Johnson, Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines), 1908-1973 (159)
- Diplomacy (143)
- Press relations (131)
- Civil rights (92)
- Assassinations (87)
- Foreign aid (76)
- Public relations (73)
- Federal budget (68)
- Business (67)
- Latin America (65)
- National politics (65)
- Text (2818)
- Audio (244)
- Still image (7)
- LBJ Library Oral Histories (970)
- National Security Files (899)
- Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings (238)
- President's Daily Diary (141)
- Reference File (109)
- White House Central Files (108)
- Papers of Tom Johnson (99)
- Meeting Notes Files (90)
- Vice President Papers of Lyndon B. Johnson (58)
- Papers of Charles E. Marsh (50)
- Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission) (49)
- Administrative Histories (26)
- Legislative Background and Domestic Crises File (22)
- Aides Files of Mildred Stegall (20)
- White House Social Files (16)
- Transcripts of LBJ Library Oral Histories (951)
- Memos to the President (286)
- White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts (238)
- National Security Action Memorandums (221)
- Meeting Notes (189)
- President's Daily Diary (132)
- Country Files (80)
- National Security Council Histories Files (70)
- National Security Council Meetings Files (62)
- Papers of Charles E. Marsh (50)
- Vice Presidential Security File (45)
- Files of Charles E. Johnson (34)
- White House Name Files (32)
- Files of Robert Komer (30)
- Folder (1441)
- Oral history (970)
- Meeting notes (256)
- Telephone conversation (238)
- Daily Diary (137)
- Memorandum (106)
- Newsletter (52)
- Report (51)
- Histories (49)
- Speech (32)
- Folder listed on subject guide (21)
- Chronology (19)
- Personal diary (17)
- Correspondence (11)
3054 results
- / / THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON -.rj IZGHJ;if #QR:1vtfl!tLY iil:iii Ali!lf,11 !IQ I ¢ UBCl.ASSIHED August 14, 1°67 ,· NATIONAL SECURlTY ACTION MEMORANDUM NO, 3 64 SANITIZED E.O. 12356, Sec. 3.4 !'JLJ TO: 9 .3- 6S , NARA, Date
- National Security Action Memorandums
- HOUSE WASHINGTON June 19, 1964 .-SE!CltE I' NATIONAL SECURITY ACTION MEMORANDUM NO. 307 TO: The Secretary 0£ State The· Secretary of Defense The Chairman 0£ the Atomic Energy Commission The Direc~or of Central Intelligence The · Chairman of the Joint
- Folder, "NSAM # 307: Review of Underground Nuclear Tests, 6/19/1964," National Security Action Memorandums, NSF, Box 5
- National Security Action Memorandums
- on a village. Now, we killed a lot of VC in villages, but we didn't do any of the things that you hear about or read about; very effective. G: This is a disturbing problem. Time and again, you see after-action reports in which there are so many KIAs [killed
- ); the connection between political and military actions in Vietnam.
- you fol low · McNn.mRrn.' f! course. PRl
- as fast as we could. Added a group or two, expanded the groups that existed, and tried to have an element in the Pacific, an element in Central and Latin America, an element in Europe, the Tenth, an element in general reserve at Fort Bragg. I believe we
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 104: Nov. 5‑8, 1968 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 42
(Item)
- , 8Y CATERING HE HASACQUIRED TH£ AURAOF A COURAGEOUS PATRIOTVHOIS STANDING UP TO THEFOREIGNER. BY THESAME TOKEN,lF Hi IIOVESlfISELYAND A FREEDOII 01 ACTION AND FIRfll.YTKlEU.KASPERHAPS HOVACQUIRED - AH IIIABEo, lNDEP-EHDEHCE lH THE RATTER or 8VN
- L-A-oS Department of State UNCLASSIFIED PAGE 01 VIENT! 07271 ACTION CO ·y 171101Z 12 ACTION L 03 INFO EA 10,GPM 04,H 02,SY 03,MC 01,CIAE DODE 00,JUS 02,TRSV ~8,AID 796 00,INR 10,RSR 01,/052 --------------------P 1710402 JU 68 FM
- of the differences. I guess you are familiar with this English poet who said, "I live in a sea of words where the nouns and the adjectives flow. Where the verbs speak of action which never takes place and the sentences come and go." The division in the commission
Oral history transcript, Frederick Flott, interview 2 (II), 7/24/1984, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- under house arrest. They could just shove him off to a side and not give him copies of all the telegrams, and he was just as much out of action playing tennis in Saigon as he would have been under house arrest in Dalat. The other four were more active
- for two and a half years the organizer and chief of the Far East Division on the so-called action side, that is to say, political-psychologicalparamilitary side, with Indochina as one of my areas of responsibility. We had a very modest program with respect
- is im?ortant, although it may have only a relatively minor importance. But with all those qualifiers I gave her as much as I coulq. Z :z:ay have, however, referred to the President's action innnetl~~=ely upon coraing prestdent. I don't know if I told
- on the adoption of the agenda. But there was never any subsequent action taken, not because of any lack of initiative in this regard by President Johnson or the Johnson Administration, but rather because the Russians didn't want to have LBJ Presidential
- ·- . l 4/101a1> .,. . ! : ·. .·,:· .;, CG 105-13900 I APPE"fnI~ NATIO"fAL SOCIALI Sf WHITE PEOllLE' S PARTY, Aka. THE AMERICA~ VA2I · PARTY, CHICAGO, I _L LPlOI S : . ~" .~ A source advised on ~ovemJ1er 14, 1960 ,.. that on that date a meeting
- to the United States for firm · action before making serious decisions. By next January we should have a clear understanding of whether it is important enough to make a firm commitma:J.t in the Spring to warrant asking Congress to appropriate the funds in FY '68
- recreational area is to provide optimum recreational opportunities in a natural environment as contrasted with a national park, the objective of which is to preserve a vignette of early America. On the one hand you do this best by getting private, local
- the repo rts on that. MG: Mrs. Williams, didn't you go into action then? HW: Well, we waited at the ranch to see what was going to happen after that. I think we finally got the word that they had gone hack to Washington 1 so thetl we got a flight out
- speech in the U.N. which I had a central hand in drafting, but he came out with a big development program there which the Middle East governments didn't pick up. But in 1958 Vice President Nixon had a miserable time on a trip to Latin America. In Caracas
- of America, USIA, during the late 1940s and 1950s. Z: That is essentially correct. Is that correct? Let me summarize it very quickly. I was with the Voice of Arneri ca from 1948 through 1961 , and my final position there was as program manager, which
- antipersonnel weapons against harmless villagers. R: Where was that dropped, in the North or in the South? G: In the North. R: As I said, if he wanted to believe a North Vietnamese communist over Of course, this was later-- Americans, only in America
- out to be just poppycock, not even good rumors, and the other half would have some substantiation and some foundation in fact. And where we could substantiate it, why, we would take action against the LBJ Presidential Library http
- Elec':ronic s, Rochester, N. Y., for 293 radio teletyperwriters. Sen. R. Kennedy 6/29 6/29 6/29 Army Army $3. 8 million contract to Radio Corp. of America for 2,891 radio set in Camden, r Sen. H. Williams N. J. ------------ r -2- Date
- Administration was the Bureau of the Budget an important factor in government organization. It was just impossible to get action. The irony was that the Rockefeller Committee,* which was headed by Nelson Rockefeller, with Arthur Flemming, now President
Oral history transcript, Lady Bird Johnson, interview 8 (VIII), 1/23/1979, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , if not an intimate, at least a friend and of increasing intimacy, with some of the young people in the New Deal, some of those who kept the lights burning all night in those offices while they rolled up their sleeves to remake America, so to speak. It was a time
- -price developments--it was one of my concerns. The steel story really starts not in the spring of 1962, but back in the summer of 1961. There was a letter sent by President Kennedy to the heads of the, I think) twelve major steel companies in America
- COPY LBJ LIBRARY d e c ia s s if ie d ir'JCCMifJS TELESRAM Department of State \ ’ / //3 - " . r r - . I1 - - - S ^ X R E T '‘ ' ' Action • ^ \ ■ D ,0 -2 TP I PVV R. RUEK« Info M J A 2 6 1 JIA 2 3 9 D E R U M J I R 18 l A 0 3
- poor business man if th.e eradication of rats etc by the action of the Public Health i• keeping him from entering the poison business. Frankly, your Mr. M.J.Waldrof ,supervisor Gameron county Public Health unit is directly responsible· :tor ridding
- action on a cabinet department probably since the first Congress set up initial departments in 1787. M: Last time you gave some hint as to why this occurred, that being the people in the executive branch going up and to testify for it, people like
- shillelagh and take my proper place in the hard, cnlel world of action! That, I have done five ~imes since I've been at the University of Texas -- for periods varying from six months to six years. PAUl. BOlTON: Whi.'.t He are int·crested in of conrse
- don't know him intimately enough to have a close first-hand knowledge of Johnson, the man, as an individual. r~ost of my opinions are based on seeing him in action publicly or being in a group where he is the principal figure and that kind of thing
- , advised that neither he nor his staff knew of a three-day meeting of CORE in Detroit. Furthermore, Rev. Cleage had nothing to do with CORE: that Cleage had his own organization, the Citywide Citizens Action Committee (CCAC): that the Director of CORE
Oral history transcript, C.E. "Curley" Doyle, interview 1 (I), 11/14/1979, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- such an interest to me, and it didn't become apparent in any of his actions that I know of. G: Well, there's an indication that he may have participated in efforts to secure legislative appropriations for the college and that he worked with President [Cecil
- of articles that he apparently had scanned or had been brought to his attention and he was raising questions one right after the other. The scope of his scanning, if you will, was most impressive to someone who hadn't seen him in action. I think the other
- all." And he [changed]. for anyone. two minutes later, of course, But I mean I don't think he had very much good to say But, on the other hand, his actions belied this, I mean held keep on trusting people. M: Could you tell that he made a~y
Oral history transcript, William R. (Bob) Poage, interview 2 (II), 6/20/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- of that third term issue, the conventions, and Lyndon Johnson's role there? P: No, I didn't attend conventions in 1940, and I guess I wasn't taking too big a hand in things. No. I don't have any particular recollec- tion of Lyndon's actions there. He
- to stay only for a short period of time, was that I figured I was not going to be able to complete a Ph.D. anyway before the war engulfed the United States. All of us thought it was coming. Mr. Roosevelt was taking so many actions to aid the British
- be extremely exciting because I would be where the action was, that my skills would deteriorate unless I was involved in medical action. Whereas I thought so much of him and Bird as friends, I felt that my role as a physician would diminish and, except
Oral history transcript, Luther E. Jones, Jr., interview 2 (II), 10/14/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- to be solved, so he dropped everything and addressed himself to it. I don't think you should write any significance into his [actions], at least I wouldn't, other than that that would come from any politician adopting a position that has to be taken, ought
- LBJ’s speech class and debate team at Central High School in Houston; LBJ being action-oriented; LBJ’s work with, and loyalty to, Richard Kleberg; Roy Miller; Senator Alvin Wirtz; Little Congress; LBJ’s short time in law school; Maury Maverick
- that he bought a few hats and things for different ones, for what reason, I don't know. G: Senator Wirtz would? J: Yes. G: He was a good 1awyer, I suppose? J: He was an excellent lawyer. G: Did you ever see him in action in the courtroom? LBJ
- ] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Pike P: ~~ I ~~ 26 Self-immolation is an ancient gesture in the Buddhist religion as a protest against actions by the state seen as against religion. Buddhists did
- us out to his house , which , of course, will give us a chance to educate him on Mexico: and Ce ntral and south .America. Under the ci.rcums tanc es, I b al.ieve it would be better for me to be in .V'ashington on the 15th instead or on the 10th. I am