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  • "PORTIONS OF 2 BS"; "AT THE UN IN NYC (RE PRES'S VISIT WITH CY VANCE---THE POST ARTICLES BY KRAFT, MURRAY MARDER AND EVANS-NOVAK ON THE VP'S VIETNAM SPEECH
  • Studies Enclosure ,, MEMORANDUM June "TO: The Vice FROM: Joe Pechman SUBJECT: Elbow Room for Social Vietnam Economy 14, 1968 President Programs in the Post] It is becoming fashionable to argue that there will be very ·little_ fiscal elbow
  • See all scanned items from file unit "ECONOMIC PLANNING FOR THE END OF HOSTILITIES (POST WAR PLANNING) (BE 5‑7)"
  • This folder is from the WHCF category for BUSINESS - ECONOMICS, subcategory ECONOMIC PLANNING FOR THE END OF HOSTILITIES (POST WAR PLANNING).
  • Folder, "Gen BE 5-7 Economic Planning for the End of Hostilities (Post War Planning)," WHCF BE, Box 41
  • was at wit~ end on how to get people to report the war the way it is. He said he took Johnny Apple of the New York Times with him on one all-day excursion. He said they got out of the chopper at one RF post, the re was a province chief and American adviser
  • are taping this interview in the Deputy Postmaster General's Office, at the Post Office Department, in Washington, D . C . Mr . Belen, you were appointed Deputy Postmaster General by President Johnson and confirmed by Congress in February 1964 . From 1961
  • ); LBJ's problems about pulling his dog's ears (resolved by Life membership in Vanderburgh County Humane Society); reminiscences of Postmasters General (Farley, Summerfield, Day, Gronouski, O'Brien, Watson, Donaldson); analysis of post office operations
  • of leaving ·the Ambassador's post open after he went to the NATO meeting. He would not raise the matter directly with ·willy Brandt, but he would get a feel for the risk of leaving the post open for several months. Mr. Nixon said he planned to appoint
  • that could be considered for this post because they would either have to be widows, or single women, or women whose husbands would be able to go with them. And not very many women fall into that category. has quite a bit to do with it. So I'm sure
  • lV 'Q_,_ (' ~/ THE CHAIRMAN OF THE COUNCIL OF ECONOMIC ADVISERS ~ WASHINGTON , !lfiVi: - .Bs-0-=-7' December MEMORANDUM FOR Joseph 31, 1968 /-z,: //- Califano Attached is the revised draft of the Post-Vietnam Report to the President
  • See all scanned items from file unit "ECONOMIC PLANNING FOR THE END OF HOSTILITIES (POST WAR PLANNING) (BE 5‑7)"
  • This folder is from the WHCF category for BUSINESS - ECONOMICS, subcategory ECONOMIC PLANNING FOR THE END OF HOSTILITIES (POST WAR PLANNING).
  • Folder, "Ex BE 5-7 Economic Planning for the End of Hostilities (Post War Planning)," WHCF BE, Box 40
  • even greater use of him in soliciting people for jobs and scouting around the country for abilities. Mc We've been talking about the post office--you instituted what is called the air taxi service which became a very successful development in postal
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • the deep depreSSion days), and I had only had that position a short time; about a post office. I I was satisfied and didn't know anything told him that, but he said I'd make a good one and insisted that I accept it, which I did. ?: Have you been
  • ; changes in Post Office in the last 35 years; Equal Opportunity Employment Act; Vietnam War veterans; LBJ Ranch visit; Dr. Frantz's additional notes
  • people will be cut 153, 000 from DOD 5 5, 000 from Post Office For every four who leave, three can be hired. MfETlf>'~G f~OTES CSPYRIGH-TED "Pt181iee1tioA Req~r~s ?er"'i11ieA ef Ce~. i. ;r~ht Hotder; W Thomru..k;~n~on D .. ~ •. :. . .£.JHl"IC
  • of it in the Washington Post this morning. He said it is inconceivable on how this could happen. The President said that General Westmoreland never submitted any letter to me recommending General Walt to be Commandant of the Marine Corps. General Wheeler said it would
  • of flight of three went erratic. It landed in the command post area and killed the men who directed the operation. This was an accident. It was unfortunate. Secretary Clifford: The President may want to show great concern. One of the men killed was Ky's
  • .. .; (Sec• . Clifford) 19) .• (Tab B) ', 10. Lederer Article in Saturday Eve'ning Post. '. (Sec. Clifford; Under Sec. Katzenbach
  • Thieu is a stabilizing force. He prefers to sit in the back ­ ground, consequently, he will not take the post of Prime Minister. The present Saigon Government framework is solid but the members of the new government are not yet well - known to us
  • hours. Mainly questions of the approval. ' i ' CHRISTIAN: Keep 1'e posted if anything develops so that we can keep this thing on an even keeL I. T~e press here seems to be satisfied that there is not a great conflict on this thing. Several
  • FORCLASSIFIED MATERIAL PLIASI SIGII AIID UTUIIII "';_BER TO OSD IIIIIDUTILJ LASSIFICATION Ors De [js ~• 80397 DATEOF TRANSFER 17 • 41. CO,llS ORIGINAL cc DATE RECEI YEO RECEIVEDBY (Sj.,.oru,o) w11ite copy - Custodi1t11. Pink copy - Recipient. Post
  • was a member, first, of the President's Air Policy Commission, and then served as a special assistant to Secretary Forrestal before the National Defense Act of 1947 provided for a Deputy Secretary of Defense. I occupied that post as Secretary Forrestal's
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • that Then switched in he was spring, early summer . the late summer I was hired by the Washington Post . I from the Knight newspapers to the Post and covered Nixon's presidential campaign in 1968 . Then when he won the election, I became one of the two
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • that the Congressional presentation should be a DOD responsibility and that Mr. Rusk should participate in the follow-up presentation to the public. Mr. Ball pointed out the need to paint "a sombre picture" and to dispel any idea that the post-monsoon period would see us
  • immediately launched an investigation. this cable. He never could find Now this is just a sidelight, except for one circumstance. You'll find in the book which the Washington Post correspondent and the Los Angeles Times correspondent wrote about Marigold
  • in Hanoi; meeting with Bill Bundy and Dean Rusk to give them his impressions of his Hanoi visit; Bill Bundy; trying to see LBJ to tell him about Hanoi; Art Sylvester; speaking publicly about his book; LBJ’s relationship with the New York Times; the Post
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • ranging from six to seven o'clock. could make the very early morning shows here. They used The wire services And even the dailies, the specials, the New York Times or the Washington Post, could make a late edition, you .see. And every other period
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • the post. TOP 8ECRET"tE!E::3 ONLY ---. Mi&Tr~'O '~OT!! COP R P..,b,.ICU r101) ReqoiFe=st IGH I ED a.. ERVICESET . f&F rnfss fa1t Ho'~ v '· vY · of c . °P>: •glit 1norr.10> "J u I'. 1, hen- [4 of 4] COPY LBJ LIBRARY
  • ." CII«:tni: ( Commcrnder UN Forces Korea) took following 12:30 am actions: a. b. Briefed Korean Mllli.s:try of Def'ense on incident. U. s. subordinate Ca?mlallders Yere directed to. bring Command Posts to operating strellooth, appropriately staffed
  • on the basis of our discussions." I agree with Clark, and Dean. I would not let negotiations fail on that point. General Abrams 1 executitft order could be printed on the front page of the Washington Post. If they come across the DMZ, he destroys them
  • for the danger of leaving the Ambassador's post open after he went to the NATO meeting. He would not raise the matter directly with Willy Brandt, but he would get a feel for the risk of leaving the post open for several months. Mr. Nixon said he planned
  • Hannegan, who was also head of the Democratic National Committee. At then- Attorney General Tom Clark's suggestion,Bob Hannegan took me in to administratively run the Post Office, because he had other responsibilities. He had a considerable closeness
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Vietnam policy; post-presidency contacts and work with LBJ and Lady Bird Johnson and LBJ State Park; Hubert Humphrey's 1968 Texas campaign; LBJ's role in politics in post-presidency period
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , I was a candidate for judicial office, having already submitted all of my papers and having filled out the American Bar Association questionnaire. M: For a judicial-- R: For a judicial post, and I was being considered for a judicial post
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • on the promotion boards and so forth. Because to assign a class-one officer just like that is very difficult. a long time. It takes You just can't find a position of his rank and his background and capabilities like that. they could find Cairo as a post. So
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • stories out just for mechanical reasons, also censorship--not censorship but post-censorship. Tape 1 of 2, Side 2 They didn't use that story, and I suspect one of the reasons they didn't use it was that Time magazine was beginning to get vibrations from
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • for the Charlotte Observer and in the Washington bureau of the Knight newspapers, K-N-I-G-H-T newspapers . In 1961 I left the Observer and was a magazine writer years with the Saturday Evening Post . for four In 1965, at the time of the start of my Vietnam
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • ] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Graham -- I -- 19 I remember after Tet, about a few weeks after, not the New York Times, not the Washington Post, but the Stars and Stripes came out with an issue. I went
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • the problem. But the guys in MACV were even then, I think,leaning to a very conventional point of view of the war. G: There was a common complaint, I think, heard, that the VC would knock off a local force post and then ambush the relieving force
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • in Saigon in 1964 was awful. This in effect was the immediate post-Diem period. If you remember, the Diem government was overthrown in November of 1963; the death came a few days afterwards. 1964. I arrived there in February of The country was still
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • so, even if it ends up critically, based on accurate information than done in a vacuum or on only partial information. Let me suggest, also, that a very sharp distinction be drawn between information and publicity. A post newspaper, an instrument
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • knew that I was a friend of Vice President Humphrey's because the Vice President frankly had really hoped that when I returned from Bulgaria in early-1965, that I could go on to another diplomatic post abroad. He had talked with the President about
  • : And [Creighton] Abrams was being given responsibility to oversee that process? LG: Yes, but it started very slowly. It was one of the decisions that came out of the post-Tet review. G: Were you involved in that post-Tet review or were you up to your ears
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , some historical significance. Its essential importance, in my judg- ment, is that it fundamentally reversed the post-war priorities of the United States and Europe. Until that speech, it was a central tenet of American foreign policy
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • : "! sleep better when I know you are at your post. " The President: Who runs things when you are away? General Abrams: General Goodpaster. He, Ambassador Berger, Ambassador Bunker and I are lockstep on this all the way. Secretary Clifford: I do not think
  • I MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON NOTES ON INFORMAL COFFEE IN THE FAMILY DINING ROOM - JANUARY 31, 1968 Present: The President George Christian ~ Hugh Sidey - Time Carroll Kilpatrick - Washington Post Merriman Smith - UPI Frank