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  • Telephone conversation # 13423, sound recording, LBJ and HENRY FORD II, 9/26/1968, 4:50PM
  • HENRY FORD II
  • ITEMS FOR PRESS BRIEFING: RESIGNATION OF JACK M. WHITNEY II FROM SEC; POLICY OF NOT ANNOUNCING RESIGNATIONS UNTIL SUCCESSOR NAMED; LBJ'S TRIP TO TEXAS THIS WEEKEND, SPEECH AT JOHNSON CITY HIGH SCHOOL, LBJ'S CONCERNS ABOUT TOO MANY REPORTERS
  • WEINBERG'S IDEAS FOR STATE DEPT POSTS: ELISHA GRAY II, FRANKLIN MURPHY, FRED EATON, TOM GATES, WALTER THAYER; ECONOMIC EFFECTS OF STEEL PRICE INCREASE, AIRLINE STRIKE; WEINBERG SUGGESTS SELECTIVE ECONOMIC CONTROLS AS USED IN KOREAN WAR; CHARLES
  • LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh INTERVI EW II DATE: December 21
  • Oral history transcript, Walter W. Heller, interview 2 (II), 12/21/1971, by David G. McComb
  • • LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh INTERVIEW II DATE: March 7
  • Oral history transcript, Hugh Gardner Ackley, interview 2 (II), 3/7/1974, by Joe B. Frantz
  • be somewhat greater t1ian tne peace-and: growth dividend: ALTERNATIVE USES OF. THE PEACE:AND~GROW1'H mvtDEND' The peace-and-growth dividend must be used in some fashion if the growth and employment targets are to be achieved. And· ii surely can 6e• used
  • and pessimistic side. The truth is that we are winning militarily, but t~{s story is not being told. The failure of the press accounts for som; of the d i sallusionment among t he p eopl e . I i I II / r1 1 ~MtSFtilG TO HANDWRITIN~ Ffll 3 The President
  • . II ' 'l In the Twentieth Century, it has I ' .J I I I controlled explosion. tak~n on the aspects of a Barbara Ward, the British social commentator and economist, noted that in the four years of the Second World War, "the ~ericans equ
  • in the paper that Ike didn't know what he really was, was he a Democrat or was he a Republican, because he had been taken out of the ranks of the army military as an obscure colonel and made into the most popular military leader of World War II by his mentor
  • ro p in th e o ffice an d s e e . I s u g g e s te d w e ii, A f te r a d r in k we w e n t to th e b o w lin g a lle y , an d she b e a t m e r o u n d ly tw o a n d a h a lf g a m e s ; ^S hooting 137 one tim e to m y 105 o r so/^^^ ^ - A nd
  • , but to the point where we had a pretty clear sketch of what in my area of interest we wanted to try to do before inauguration day. ... ~ II. [This is] a contrast that I won't draw" any further, but this certainly has not been imitated in 1969. Did you or do
  • with separate -in turn would sre~ial be allocated and detf:Tmined by composed of the governors a.nd same t-ime as later Buc;gE:~t budgets for Appalachia, whose II COlll!111SsioliS fedsy-al d com:lriss-ion P.t the l~er:'esentative. 'm=:re set up
  • g w o u ld b e c o m p le te w ith o u t h im ,- ii^ h e s ta ff, J im J o n e s , a n d M a rie , M a ry R a th e r , L a r r y T e m p le . D in n e r w a s a l l L y n d a B i r d 's f a v o r ite s - s te a k , a n d s p in a c h , h o m e m a d
  • is s a p ic tu re - A nd P a t r i c k lo o k e d a d o r a b le in h is A ir F o r c e u n ifo rm m ad e b y L y n d o n 's ta il o r to m e e t h is D addy in H a w a ii. A nd i t w as an a b s o lu te ly h e a v e n ly p ic tu r e o u t th e r e w
  • b e c a iis e y o u d o n 't h a v e th e fu e l to co n tin u e g e ttin g th e jo b d o n e w ith o u t th e m o m e n tu m o f s u c c e s s . M o re f ittin g s in th e a fte rn o o n a n d d e s k w o r k . ; ; W e is l to- a skthem opnd . I h
  • C. Beebe Secretary of Labor Wirtz James Cook James C. Gaither Clyde Skeen Howard Samuels Albert L. Nickerson Quentin Reynolds Harold S. Geneen Henry Ford II The meeting ended at 3:45 p. m. MEFING ;,~OTES CCPYR!GHlcD ME.ETING NOTES CQPYRIG~'CED .P
  • e r e h e r e b e c a u s e ii he h a d a s k e d L yndon on a b o a t tr i p on th e P o to m a c to co m e a n d d e d ic a te it. ■ He f e e ls th a t su c h s y s te m s w ill so o n b e a s m a t te r of c o u r s e a s R E A p r o je c ts
  • , working as hard as they can, I r to achieve some stability in it. f i And so with this mixture of problemsXnd blessings, my dear husband went to I:>ed about midnight, and I rem etnbered one amusing little vignette iI T~ts~ of the morning, at the T