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- . The voice of the White House has often been raised in behalf of freer trade, but President" John son provided the indispensable element, · not the profile, not the rhetoric, but a willingness to stand on principle when the political disadvantages hope
- in the events of our t i m e ~ ~ ---r:b--- · He was with President Wilson at the Versailles Peace Conference in l 918-19.Jf1,e was at the side of Herbert Hoover in his work in European relief in 1920-21. He then turned to journalism and teaching and to public
- along with the tax cut, where the tax cut was supposed to provide an incentive for business production expansion, and so on, which was therefore to have an effect of creating more jobs. So that the theory was that because of the tax cut you created
- journals. We I received informal presentations from all of the interested parties, including consumers groups, and based upon the investigation and the informal hearings that we had, I reached the conclusion and made the recommendation to Fred Vinson
- that such a program would be politically too risky, particularly the de facto devaluation (we don't agree). ..... . - What Valencia seems to prefer is that we provide substantial assistance (estimates vary from $ZOO million to $400 million), without taking
- . Maintenance crews installed signs at both ends of Queen Isabella Causeway alerting motorists to the presence of the endangered brown pelican. Crews also built a small tunnel under Fann to Market Road 510 in Cameron County to provide a safe crossing
- . Maintenance crews installed signs at both ends of Queen Isabella Causeway alerting motorists to the presence of the endangered brown pelican. Crews also built a small tunnel under Fann to Market Road 510 in Cameron County to provide a safe crossing
Oral history transcript, Sharon Francis, interview 3 (III), 6/27/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- discussing the Women's Speakers Bureau and the involvement of some members of the administration as far as nonpolitical activities in speechmaking around the country. I'd like to turn this back over to you with your journal and continue as we had, with you
- of all the UAR. We'd welcome restoration of relations, providing it can be done on the basis of mutual respect and dignity. Frankly, we feel the Egyptians have treated us badly and we 1 re bruised, but we're not going to wear our resentments on our
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 92: Aug. 22‑31, 1968 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 39
(Item)
- could guide us in the conduct of our own claim. O~r allies in the Group of Fourteen have meanwhile indicated a willingness to share a portion of our costs of relocating forces and facilities from France (up to a total of $96 million) provided we share
Oral history transcript, Sharon Francis, interview 2 (II), 6/4/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- questions on, I'll bring them out as we go along or I'll bring them up at the end. Would you like to continue from the point where we were? F: Yes. Now, I'm following through the journal notes that I kept intermittently at the time I was at the White
- to represent other employers, that was perfectly all right provided it did not conflict with my activities for Dallas and that I had the time to undertake them. F: So both of you have been somewhat mixed up in Washington life from Frankl in Roosevelt down
- the ''we can provide a better life, politically, and economically under a democracy than you are nOlr getting under Comrrrunism." 20 As is pretty treasury hefore fleeing Then, shoirtly after generally into asylum and Castillo thP revolution
- the subcommittee in its investigation of the operations of Billie Sol Estes. The subcom mittee appreciates their assistance. The subcommittee particular]y appreciates the invaluable help provided by the General Accounting Office. The excellent work of Mr. Edward
- , perhaps the delay has allowed informal inquiries into the Mexican ~"-""""+....-."""'rri'i'tiunity. NSF plans to initiate proceedinss to turn t11e Bruun over to GSA for surplus disposal o/a August 1, 1968• providing there is no expressed desire
- than three towns, and we'd stop at five to eight of them a day, that I didn't run into somebody working on a local paper, usually a weekly, that I'd been in journalism school with. I got from seeing those people whom I had known at university and seeing
- a Texan? H: I was born in San Antonio, and I grew up here in Austin. lJhen my family moved here, I was just a little fellow, about seven or eight years old. F: When did you join the Dallas News? H: 1916, on the old Dallas Journal, which
- : No. (Laughter) (Interruption) G: Did LBJ ever express an interest in setting up a school of journalism there at San Marcos? J: Not that I know of. G: Tell me about his work for President Evans. What did he do, in essence? J. Whatever President Evans
- How Jorden got into foreign policy government service from journalism; going to Vietnam to assess the situation in 1961 and the resulting white paper; Jorden’s Berlin Viability Plan and trip to Germany; Averell Harriman; working group
Oral history transcript, Ronald Goldfarb, interview 1 (I), 10/24/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- hoc things which I don't remember now: wrote an article for the ABA Journal, gave a speech to this group or that group. thing. There was a lot of that kind of In terms of projects, I remember one of them was to go through all of the government
Oral history transcript, Calvin Hazlewood, interview 1 (I), 2/14/1979, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- . I worked under Cecil Horne, who was head of the journalism department; that's what I studied in Tech. I enjoyed being at Texas Tech. I had been to four other schools before I got there, because during the Depression you would go to school until
- went back to the newspapering business, and I think it's probably the finest thing that ever happened to me. I've certainly enjoyed my fifty-plus years in journalism, and Mr. Johnson obviously enjoyed his many years that led eventually
Oral history transcript, Roy L. McWilliams, interview 1 (I), 8/15/1979, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- in that particular course, Journalism 312 or whatever. It got to the point where certain factions of the college, of the student group, didn't feel that the students were getting enough recognition or enough acknowledgement, and so there was a little turmoil
Oral history transcript, Florence Mahoney, interview 1 (I), 6/13/1989, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- he could ever do if he'd take this subcommittee. So I told him a story about how I'd been with Governor Cox in Atlanta after he'd had a readership test on the Atlanta Journal. He kept telling me it cost twenty five thousand dollars to have
Oral history transcript, Mary Rather, interview 5 (V), 9/9/1982-9/10/1982, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- thought it would be very nice to live in a small town--he didn't necessarily say live in Austin; I remember he said a smaller town one time--and own the newspaper, buy the newspaper. With Lady Bird's degree in journalism that would be right up her alley
- . either, five or ten dollars a week . We didn't pay very much Homer Olsen would work for us . We published a daily oil journal up there, a mimeographed oil company report that we had to have extra help for, for the mechanical work of getting it out
- knowledge and Stevenson's knowledge and you sort of bred them together, if maybe those two great minds might get us out of this abyss that we're in now. Because I recently read in the Wall Street Journal where that if you continue to spend--I'm talking
- Bird Johnson in the White House (The following is adapted rrom an article written by Senior An:hivist Clau
- of that I went out to California and was a free-lance writer for the Saturday Evening Post, Collier's, various other newspapers, St. Louis Post-Dispatch and so forth. Then I gradually got into electronic journalism and did a lot of radio work. 1 LBJ
Folder, "Whistle Stop [4 of 6]," Liz Carpenter Subject Files, White House Social Files, Box 11
(Item)
- of journalism degree in February I worked on the Austin American-Statescan, a full-time job while I was in the University. I was in Austin fifteen years old when the President won his first race, when President Johnson won his first race. ever knew him until
- the right course, and anxious to provide new ways and new opportunities for people that had been cut off from opportunities, this black movement that came along created in me more and more sympathy, and more and more involvement. and more and more
- ~needs .and will help"provide for its bas~cc:·securityJ We have yet, however., de'termined precisely what are .Israel's essential equipment needs. We believe there is no immediate threat to Israel--a belief which the ~sraelis also_share. The problem
- this afternoon)__so· far we have no precise information about how many amendments she will attempt tomorrow. She has been trying desperately to line up a c;:9-sponsor on a judicial review clause. We have provided Phil'~Landrum and Mann/ Geller with draft speeches
- Epst ino ___ . ... [2 of 3] NEW YORK JOURNAL-AMERICAN August 13 {Sunday) i961 Urges Congress Hold Session in W. I Berlin Although · he doubted ther~ By WALTE.R BAZAR A joint session of both Hpuses of the ·u. S. Congress will be a war, he said
- a truer truth. Tbe treaty we have ut on tb table a -pear that the a botJ:l.eftd hlm, Geneva even provides -1:at all nations would Most ln!urtattnc to the admln1siratlon'a Jurtsd.lcenemies waa Farley'• succes an~h!a habit have to submJt to th[compulsory
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 54: Dec. 11‑19, 1967 [2 of 4]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 26
(Item)
- not be read as the considered opiriion of this Agency. Although these papers provide a use ful and provocative preliminary analysis of a number of recently captured documents and intelligence reports, they omit reference to other important materials bearing
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 48, October 25-31, 1967 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 24
(Item)
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 53: Dec. 1‑10, 1967 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 26
(Item)
- ) 1949-1950 National Chairman, Volunteers for Stevenson-Kefauver Active Duty, USNR, 1941-1945, EuJ,""opean Theater of Operations and Pacific Fleet Editor·, Publisher,· Louisville (Kentucky) Courier Journal I· I ,; (· I' I I • r