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24 results
- the ranch country; Gwen Gibson of the New Y ork H erald Tribune; and M ary Packinham of the Chicago Tribune; and M u riel Dobbins of the B altim ore Sun, Karen K le in felter, the best thing that happene d to the Dallas N ew s in years; and Norm a Ekdahl
- at Harvard and joined-- M: That was 1948 by that time? C: Yes. Joined, in the fall of '48, the staff that was planning a new magazine which subsequently in '49 was The Reporter magazine. Sent in 1950 to Washington as the Washington editor of The Reporter
- Reference No. 13114 August 13, 2008 Processing Note Transcript only of this conversation; there is no recording. DATE: 6/6/68 TIME: 12:30 PM CALLER: James McCrocklin Pages ofTranscript: 1 page Barbara Cline Archivist
- *TRANSCRIPT ONLY OF THIS CONVERSATION; THERE IS NO RECORDING; WILBUR COHEN IS MEETING WITH LBJ AT TIME OF CALL
- . Graham Sullivan, who has served as Deputy Commissioner of &iucation since July 1966. MR. SULLIVAN: As I present my remarks, probably I will be shifting hats from time to time, for I will be reporting reactions as a local education agency officer
- the Johnson Yea rs? Perhaps you could start with a brief summary .I of the situation before 1963. ! ' I! • L . DR 0 REED: to test my memory Well, Jack, you certainly are going i j. a bit this morning. I joined the Of £ice in 1951. :. At that time
Folder, "[Papers for] November 14, 1968 Special Cabinet Room Meeting," Meeting Notes Files, Box 3
(Item)
- THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON November 13, 1968 TO: Mr. Jim Jones FROM: Ruth McCawley (per Harry McPherson) I called each person's secretary listed below to alert them that a meeting will be held in the Cabinet Room some time tomorrow after noon
- will be t~=:.il ~d to b~ar ci.bm.:.t. the program. There is now a wav all o: t~em can help either i n encoaraging a child to attend or in giving volunteer time at foe p r ojects. Hea.d Start is the pr~gram organized and adminis tered by tb.e waich will gi·1e
- , Massachusetts Tape 1 of 3 H: During the period of the President's Task Force on Poverty I was an assistant commissioner of urban renewal, but I was working some substantial amount of my time on the development of the poverty program. My first meeting
- . It shows that Head Start tackles the problem at the most crucial age - when the difference for good or ill can be made, when the most can be done, when the investment in time and money brings the most telling results. ldeally, we would hope that Head Start
- and tli~e ~h~y-verb .'.' ..BU.t I ''· creative, • ,\ • the time tha t . t l. il - the int.erus cing thing to me has al'\1ays bee;; at ·) 12 l : 13 \. I 'j ~ I or -ga ni~i::a t._~tcnal strt..ctnre wn.s done before . .) I I e ; 1
- . They had more understanding of what the government was doing at the time than other academics. Many of them had been in government eith~r ., LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral
- THE W H IT E HOUSE W A S H I N G T ON Tuesday, A p r i l 28, 1964 P a ge 3 president of the National Bu s iness and P r o f e s sional Womens Club s . I always like^ to have one G o v e r n o r ’ s w ife to these luncheon s , and this time it was M r
- than I had thought that man of iro n would. He mentioned they would have had their thirtieth a n n iversa ry in a few months. A ft e r eve ryb od y le ft, I took the time to do some reading and som e w ork, and then clo se to seven, J e s s e and I
- the publicity is ugly and it w ill be used abundantly by the Republican party fo r the next five months I expect. A t any rate, it was Abe*s opinion to do nothing, at least fo r the time being. I asked Elaine to go down and tel l Charlie Cutler I thought he
- een appropriated for supp;.;rt of the s e pr ograms - . are by no mean s ade quate to do the job, nor h a.s there been ade quate time to complete that job. But a ver-.r effective start has b e en made, and it seems to me that th ere is need noi..1
- . l in your \\'Ork with , t .he 18.u d grc:mt college s, ,.;e hrrvc I I - I I c;l o. ~; r rsc.. , has b e8n \'lith us for quite· a long time. ' 1. sig-1 £ l·\ :·, j: 1 m~st ' I wOuld be inclined to think the most signific a nt
- services, such as student loan fellm,:ship i i ( programs , foreign langu~g e 1 programs, foreign language research, .· . . I, 11~ there Has practically nothing in th e way of , at this time, 1 fi of fin ancial assistance for construction
- for.. th e first t:me 25 I. ·i I ~I :1 ;time · that ~ and triyin g out pro g r a:n s th a t would bring H-.; l:S ro sta.f f cq. meDb ~:: . f ji ( . I' . 1< I ;' .. I ! ' ' ' ·1 k~.ndi " :I . ·to work :t i . . '· I ! .. :f
- ; LBJ takes nap; upcoming trip to Texas; Lady Bird does office work & records her diary; Eugene McCarthy showing surge in 1968 race; Hubert Humphrey joins Johnsons for dinner; styes on LBJ's eyes return; Lady Bird has massage and reads Time magazine
- ~. years Tiith the variJu s chang es in the oreani z a tion and your I variou s duties , up to perhap s the presen t time. :· I ? I !I I ; : ·1 :B 11 '\ lg I have served in the Off ice MR. FLY.NT: :j fo~ more than one-th ird of its total lifeo
- . .. rr6Uld be at the time of budget review, irhen ·b udgets ' .~re bein3 put i j ! togather C-.r ifa.. tional Science Fou.nd.::tion, Office of F.ducation) t I i Jratioc2l Institutes of Haalth, NASA, and so forth. But tnat involved very co~plez proble
- Angeles Times reporter; Lady Bird mentions LBJ's schedule; the Johnsons fly to Texas to LBJ Ranch
- LBJ & Lady Bird breakfast; coffee with houseguests; Lady Bird to New York City to Carnegie Hall for Stokowski concert for International Ladies' Garment Workers Union; article about event in New York Times; David Dubinsky & Louis Stulberg give
- LBJ Library meeting; office work; two-hour interview with Henry Branden of the London Sunday Times; lunch; Lady Bird to Shady Grove Music Theatre; Laurance Rockefeller and Project Trailblazers; Lady Bird greets cast of "King Arthur" & gives short