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  • by the President became law. I did receive a telegraphic invitation from Mr. Lawrence O'Brien, who was then on the President's staff, inviting me to the signing ceremony at the White House, but I did not attend. G: Before we get back to the legislative history
  • correct it to that extent. The communications workers had concluded a contract with the American Telephone and Telegraph Company in the East. It was a satisfactory settlement. Mr. Joe Byrne, the president of the union, had blessed it, the employees had
  • the request by telephone. But And of course, bolstered it, came through with the telegraph request, too. And it was all done and I had no problems. As I say, thare were no blocks in the way any place. F: Did the Justice Department send someone out here
  • , and he would talk about something that was coming up. He knew in advance about my thinking. That was easy to telegraph. He had adventitious aides to help him. I have no recollection of the subject matter. But he was on the ball all the time. As whip, I
  • /exhibits/show/loh/oh Weber -- I -- 19 Senator except I would predict every day at least. When the Senator got back to Texas, telephone calls, of course long distance calls, were very, very common, but they would telegraph each other as to when they were
  • was 10 go on the offensive - to look at his emergence from rhe Checker.- speech as a triumph: the people rcsf.X11ldedto him, they had tdegraphed Eisenhower. 1hc} had telegraphed the National Committee. So he looked at that as a tn­ umph. But for my mother
  • the methods of financing the 1972 Republican National Convention raise a serious cloud over the recent out-of-court settlement by the Department of Justice of three anti-trust cases involving International Telephone and Telegraph Corporation, ITT. The reports
  • ; the International Telephone and Telegraph Corporation (ITT) case; O'Brien's June 1972 request that the Federal Bureau of Investigation look into the Watergate break-in and the response from Assistant Attorney General Henry E. Petersen; O'Brien's correspondence
  • govto in 1963., he has efforts to dominate form.so to say that USOis concerned about Telegraphic transmission k to reveal of politic-al by his or course Opposition of power under new constitutional 2o You are authorized Drafted by, • easing
  • and the establishment. And I went to some of his speeches around the area with my father. And once, I recall--I could not have been more than fourteen, maybe thirteen--there had appeared an editorial or a letter attacking Governor Russell in the Macon Telegraph, which
  • Telegraphic t1onsmiss.fo11 and classifiution approved by1 The Secretar \ .~ . '1 Clearances 1 l, . ,l REPRODUCTION FROM THIS COPY IS PROHIBITED u uu:~~" -· '' - _· ' 1 ,. . 1· · 1... .,· ;. :·.· - Page__ 2 _of telegram
  • Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh DUTTON -- I -- 13 anything like that he telegraphed the punch through the papers, which you know is not uncommon
  • them in or--there was a telegraph office right across the street--one or the other, and turned those deals in to the Texas Election Bureau. Then next week when the [County] Democratic [Executive] Committee met to canvass the returns, it was 765 to 60
  • Mr. Johnson telling us that one of the main things he said was, "Just don't telegraph your blows. you're going to do." Congress. Don't let them knm'/ everything But I cannot say that he consulted with the Of course, we passed the Gulf of Tonkin
  • with Mr. Stevenson? C: Nothing, really. Stevenson, obviously, was a very bitter man. He not only went into political retirement, he almost went into hermitage. He went back out to Telegraph, near Junction, and he wouldn't come out for anything
  • ' ; , ' • ~ ·.. • 1, to the Indians to set the priorities among the competing needs of their own · . •' ·• J • _. ·• 1-' • ~ l . l ' - { • • ' Telegraphic NEA:SOA:FJCrawford: fah.:2/11/6 ~namlalon ~ , ~ · ., 0 • • . r
  • for service between North America and Europe. This satellite has a capa~ity of 240 tele­ phone channels which are used to provide normal telecommunica­ tion services including telephone, telegraph and the exchange of TV programs. INTELSAT II. Two satellites
  • , a telegram to each of the fifty state presidents of our Federation. Federations in all our states. We have It was a two-page telegram; it was the largest telegraph bill that the Hopkinsville Western Union office had had up to that date. I asked each state
  • reforms; McGovern's 1972 campaign financing; O'Brien's efforts to attack Richard Nixon; the International Telephone and Telegraph Corporation (ITT) scandal; how O'Brien became chairman of the 1972 Democratic National Convention; Daley's reaction to his
  • really S. mtoroated. a. CQNflD1'NTIAL W. Kmner .. / ~ Mac - July 29, 1964 Jim Greenfield called me too about matter of Commerce sending six US business­ men in Iraq, etc. and fact that Friedman 0£ Jewish Telegraph Agency preparing to make a stink
  • got one or two telegrams or telegraphic messages from him, one of which asked what he was running for. He didn't even know. D: (Laughter) There you are all those thousands of miles away. C: We got word to him down in Australia or New Guinea
  • information. A couple of times when they closed down the telegraph machine, I'd let the press file limited copy through embassy channels to Washington. There's no way you can gild that lily and there's no sense in trying. In fact, if anything
  • . And we met very seldom, and the reason we met very seldom was that everything that transpired was immediately telegraphed to Drew Pearson, and people like Estes Kefauver who were beholden to Drew Pearson for their support, they not only told their side
  • no @bjection ~f GOSwishes to do so. .& .Q11b'L bv: • - END • • J•I lat- ••• • Telegraphic ·tranamillion end 4831 . •12/28 6C> .• .• . Ar.'ftW8tdPollt:jml ' ' . ,._., • .Joseph Palmer 2nd ... clauiflcalion approved by, O..,ance1, S/S "".Mro
  • ___'.:···-·- (l.) the placing of United States ei.trus f'NI.~ products· on an equal tooting iibt,he b-uit. and ci , products from sources , United: K~ng~-nth other-~.~ • ,;.:~ ·, ·~. -1 I Wot •~!J)k•\'f~r>t;:..., . Telegraphic tran,misaion and Drahad
  • ~ Telecommunications The Republic of Senegal has a postal service comparable to those in the countries of Europe or America, an urban and interurban telephone system, a large station for sending and receiving radio messages at Cape Verde and long distance telegraph
  • MESSAGES TAKEN BY THIS COMPANY ARE SUBJECT TO THE F'OLLOWING TERMS: To 1t1ard aitalnllt mistake& or Belays, the sender or a mCMage ahonld order it repeatea, that ta, telegraphed back to the originating ofllce for comD&rl!lon. For tbi., onHialf