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39 results
Folder, "Travel – Foreign – Berlin (Pro) [August] [2 of 2]," 1961 Subject Files, VP Papers, Box 109
(Item)
- not the words to describe what the presence of the Vice President here means to ·us. You saw the so happy crowds •. - I think it was most everybody in West Berlin who was lining the streets and West Berlin is 2,000,000 and more big. 5. On the press bus
- to others, and by criticism from our friends and Allies who were not doing as much as they reasonably should. It was made clear to the Chancellor that we viewed the Berlin situation as a common cause £or free people and that, along with the U.S., addi
- .. I . .. TU .Pnaidant (A) to ••, (:S) Bli•• A '• ' £ ' . ', •: .. ·:.. J"' ''t ~~ . ,,. - ~ ., · 1a;o4b Aapat 10:30& U. 19'7 We're tryiq to do wllal . . caa to lanre fair ud free dectioll• ia Vi.a&Nua. Aad ...•re
- Press relations
- LBJ ASKS BLISS TO BE ON US DELEGATION TO OBSERVE SOUTH VIETNAMESE ELECTIONS; MAKEUP OF DELEGATION; BLISS DISCUSSES HIS OTHER COMMITMENTS, ASKS IF HE CAN LET LBJ KNOW LATER TODAY; LBJ SAYS HE WANTS TO ANNOUNCE DELEGATION AT TODAY'S PRESS BRIEFING
Folder, "Berlin, Germany Berlin Papers for the Vice President," VP Papers, VP Security Files, Box 2
(Item)
- to drive home the unforget table contrast between despotism and a free society. All of the Soviet Union's years of efforts in East Berlin have led to barbed wire and sealed borders, to empty stre ets and haggard stores, to tanks of oppression and fear
- FROM THE 0FFXCE OF THE V CE PRESIDENT 1 PRESS lNJrC.>RMA TION F OR IM~M ED TE ~LEASE 0 April 12, 1961 THE PROGRAM Th Aden uer Visit Sunday, April 16 1 9:30 a. m. (EST) -- Leave Washington 12 Noon (CS'l') -- Arrive B rgstrom Air Force Ba
- can do for the time being, unless you feel the matter is worth the President's attention • Perkins is not pressing for this, and only you will know whether it might be a wise thing to do. Samuel E" Belk By ...........-CO~tFIDEf~TIAL v (').S H
- arrived in NewYork, one of the--! don't remember--officials came on the plane and called out my nameand asked me to comeout and, as I came out, there was a big crowd of photographers and they thronged all around me. I was hustled into the press room
- , entitlea I The Chapter That Keynes ever Wrote. " (You are pe:rfectly free to reprint 1t in Korea if you judge lt relevant to your problems.) f ' As you ga"the::r momenturn and begin to see posatbllitlea ahead, it i s obviou,s ly of the greateot i m
- the Presidential Unit Citation forjth Company,.)st Cavalry Regiment, Republic of Korea Army. Therefore, the n&essary White House press release is in order. The Korean Minister of Defense Choi will be visiting Korean units in Vietnam during the period of 7-14
- was in the first car and I was about three or four cars-because whenever there was an official ceremony like this the press people had to be up forward. Liz Carpenter was up forward, etc., and I always stayed out of the way. Oh, about eight miles out we began
Oral history transcript, Lucius D. Battle, interview 1 (I), 11/14/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- it, and it looked as though we were home free. And in the ninth week, or tenth week, of this particular--what was for me an ordeal, because I was very much afraid it was going to pop out in the press and be a really embarrassing thing for the Secretary
- as executive agreements, before the Senate Foreign Relations Corrmittee, which was insistent that they should be entered into as treaties. Also during this period,continued efforts I was making to keep Radio I Free Europe, RFE,and Radio Liberty, Radio RL
- by the press stories and the kind of questions I'd get from people on working for Mr. Johnson, hard taskmaster, all kins of strange personal extremes. I never encountered that. I had a great deal of respect for the President both as a person and as President
- of LBJ as a strong advocate of free trade; hearings on the Quota Bills.
Folder, "Travel – Foreign – Berlin (Pro) [August] [1 of 2]," 1961 Subject Files, VP Papers, Box 109
(Item)
- , but his friend is still being held and all his efforts to free him have so far been unsuccessful. He gives no details as to the exact time, place, or circumstances of the arrest. GPO 8113!115 [2 of 4] Jiirgen Eelser Berlin-Dahlem, den 5'tarstra.Be 2
Telephone conversation # 12822, transcript, MARVIN WATSON and RICHARD DALEY, 3/18/1968, 5:15PM
(Item)
- Sorensen, he then called Mankiewicz, who is Senator Kennedy's Press Secretary to ask him cbout it and he confirmed it and then the Press just descended upon the White Ho use and the President was in Texas. They, then descended on the Pentagon
- Press relations
- WATSON ASKS FOR DALEY'S EVALUATION OF BEN HEINEMAN AS POSSIBLE APPOINTEE TO CABINET OR SUBCABINET POSITION; DALEY RECOMMENDS HEINEMAN; WATSON DISCUSSES PRESS STORIES ABOUT RFK'S CALL FOR COMMISSION TO REAPPRAISE VIETNAM POLICY
- Press relations
- DISCUSSION OF PRESS REPORTS OF MEETING BETWEEN LBJ AND PRIME MINISTER PEARSON IN CANADA YESTERDAY
- Press relations
- DISCUSSION OF TIMING OF PRESS ANNOUNCEMENT OF GOLDBERG'S RESIGNATION AS US AMBASSADOR TO UN
- Press relations
- DISCUSSION OF PRESS ANNOUNCEMENT OF GOLDBERG'S RESIGNATION AS US AMBASSADOR TO UN
- of transcript: 2 pages plus I-page note Barbara Cline Archivist SERVICE SET J.;l 51'-/ THE WHITE HOUSE WASH I NG"fON 6:17 p.m. - Dec. 6 Mr. President : Leonard Marks called and said that Ambassador Goldberg's press secretary has just told him
- Press relations
- will be discussing this matter further this morning. The matter is urgent. I was puzzled, Mr. Chairman, by what has been said by the Soviet Press and Radio since our exchange of messages yesterday morning. It does not help to charge the United States as a participant
- and the Far East in 1966, I guess it was. M: This is the only time you traveled actually in the press party. A: Right. M: Did you get the impression on that occasion, this was when he was meeting with. the chiefs of state of all the Asian states
- LBJ’s personal style and diplomacy in interviews and in informal public appearances; reactions of reporters to LBJ’s unpredictable schedules; Cuban Missile Crisis involvement; role as VP; personal enmity with Robert Kennedy; relations with press
Oral history transcript, William J. Jorden, interview 1 (I), 3/22/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- in February or March, and I think I was made deputy assistant secretary in May. M: Right. In that position, where you were dealing with the press--this, of course, is before Mr. Johnson's, I guess, really bad trouble with the press began, so you had
- ; goals for South Vietnam; reasons for LBJ’s unpopularity; flaws in LBJ’s handling of the press; inept press corps handling Vietnamese War; incorrect editing of press dispatches; LBJ’s abilities as a diplomat; peace negotiations 1966-1968; 1968 Paris peace
- for immediate purposes. - -- -·-- liaison ... . . __ _______ Mr. Nixon said that, despite observations in the press, he had made no decisions on his Cabinet. He hopes to have his Cabinet appointed by December 5. He would naturally like to have someone keep
- : That was when Chancellor Erhard was here at that time. I think that was about the last it surfaced in the press. L: Yes, I think that's right. The Chancellor was here also in 1966--Chancellor Erhard was, I recall. M: That's one of the issues on which
Oral history transcript, Lucius D. Battle, interview 2 (II), 12/5/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- really had something to say or whether it was going to be a case in which I simply restated what has been said to them repeatedly, but we felt that it was worth taking a chance. I tried here to keep the press from building up my trip out there, and I
- of imagery. P: And according a certain respect to women in general. A: Yes. Public image is important today in communications. For instance, when I went to Denmark, I think that the photographers, the press photographers, were far more interested
- Govern ment can be expected, as a minimum, to press for ~~;r_ly.-~r.al.e:a:a: b-."their~e1\U1""1.nfng re ·t:atm1 E.O. 12356t Sec.3.4 NLJ ~£Gii8t-- By-4,4.~· l""-1 /- ;)D N.ARA.,Date IP-JS- 9~ 1 .I! i.. r. .#lJ/J;{!~/-~ THE WHITE HOUSE C!tJ
- Press relations
- __ ________________________________________ 4 White House Press Briefing with General Maxwell D. Taylor, Rpecial Consultant to the President and U. Alexis Johnson, Deputy Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, March 4, 1966_ ___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __ __ 7 "Opportunity
- , as we called them, is Ambassador John Bartlow Martin. He did this for Kennedy in 1960 and on a smaller scale for Johnson in '64--to go in and advance for the President, to meet with the local leaders and the press and the opinion makers to find out
- Press relations
- Press relations
- »MEMORANDUM THE W HITE HOUSE WASHINGTON S u n d a y , J u n e 2 5, 1967 F’a g e 3 e v e r y t h i n g th a t concerned press coverage. A nd t h is w a s s o m e t h i n g th at I h a d never faced b efore. M r s . B u r g c a m e a t 8 :0 0 a n d c o m b
- Press relations
- Marine guards or some sort of uniformed people standing along the aisle keeping the people back. But the people wanted to press forward and we had to move very swiftly to get through and into the other ballroom and back again. As I recall then we danced
- ? A: No, at that time he was not well known, of course, and I should say that the image that had been projected of him by the Communist press was an unfavorable one. P: What was it? A: I think they had tried to depict him as an old-line politician of Texas
- coordinator do? J: We had something in Vietnam called the mission council. In other countries, it's known as the country team. It consists of the ambassador, people at the embassy--the political counselor, the press counselor, the economic counselor