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  • INTERVIEWEE: RAMSEY CLARK INTERVIEWER: HARRI BAKER PLACE: His home in Falls Church, Virginia Tape 1 of 1 B: This is a continuation of the interview with Ramsey Clark. Sir, last time, we carried the story up to the summer of 1966, which was another
  • . JOHNSON: There is no date on it. The President is expected to depart from Dulles Airport at 11 P.M. Monday, arriving approximately 11 A.M. Tuesday, Montevideo. Q That is Montevideo time? MR. JOHNSON: Q It is minus two hours. It is about
  • ..~ ~n direct procurement, but it wou l d lay the foundation in ~srae: · -=.or the r.~-equipment progr.am required sorr.e ·y e.ars 1:2nce.'.and, · at the · sa~e ·.time, , h·e l? ~-p;,:t-"' 'l.:::rer:ip·Ioyed ·· wit'h­ i.::.: _Isra.e.1 back to work
  • . 3/19/2009 ---- Initials - THE NEW YORK TIMES, 'Pf[URSDAY, JANUARY 4, 1968 China', Late,t At~m.. Teat I• -Believed a Failure . ~ IIY JORNW. FINNEY -.i .. '1'1111..., Tenll'lmle WASRINGTON,Jan. :f-Pre- '· ,. UJ. lfetn • Ducr,,-c1 off
  • ~pper, who had been a vice - consul in Beirut and came I \ back to Sioux City. This too inspire d me. I would go · to call on him from time to time and talk to him about the Servic e and his experi ences. So, in this relativ ely remote ~rea from
  • time. « ^ In February 19^7, the Soviets gave them the following draft declaration: In connection with the desire commended by the non - nuclear states the Soviet Union declares that in case there takes place an attack by a nuclear power with the use
  • ,, ss Wo, FOR AMBASSADOR X)JQQOJCXX .,J,. ~ .....:....- LIMIT DISTRIBUTION S/S As you know President is having press conference on Cuba November 20 at 6 p.m. Washington time. You are requested to make date with Chief of State or Foreign Minister
  • , and many other places. We in the Bureau had been working with our friends in the Amalgamated Clothing Workers Union during this period. The Joint Regional Board of the Union in Baltimore decided some time ago that it would see whether day-care services
  • or three times who seems to be a very intelligent young man, even though he does not appear to have anything to do with the Government and its activities. First of all, I do not believe Ydigoras Fuentes is a dictator and it appears to me that he has given
  • this session let is a111 F~ civil than sessions as history. . session - lllbblllm session rights session us work year's & known as the eaoaamw,z and our agenda Congressional was the longest 11 our time long. Last the -- for combined
  • Reading copy, 1964 State of the Union Message, 1/8/64
  • F I ./KITE HOUS E Dat ^x e Jun e 10 , 196 8 DENT LYNDO N B . JOHNSO N the Whit e House President bega n hi s da y a t (Place ) Day Time Te 11 In Ou tL fePrh°ne Activit oL Georg 8: 56a f Harr 9:20a t Hon 10:05a f Wal 10:42a t 11
  • on the Union side in the Civil War and was Acting Governor of Mrs. Fay joined ^S the territory of Montana at the time of his death. **"*^^>*M^"> ^^*^^^ The vase stands 2 4 inches high. On one side is an engraved portrait j' of Meagher and an inscription
  • of the time--Kennedy and Humphrey because Johnson eliminated one and selected ,theother as his vice presidential running mate, Goldwater because he would be the Republican candi­ date in the election. "An Evening With .... " Frank Vandiver, President
  • , weapons, uniforms, paintings, car­ toons and memorabilia lent by a dozen institutions and individuals across the country. Also shown are some newsreels of the time. The exhibition will run until January 8, 1989. TO G i'ERAL A catalogue of the exhibition
  • INTERVIEWEE: CHARLES S. MURPHY INTERVIEWER: THOMAS H. BAKER PLACE: Mr. Murphy's office in Washington, D.C., Tape 1 of 1 B: Sir, last time you were talking about briefing former President Truman on the behalf of President Johnson, and after the tape
  • . for the Union Force~ The Union, Linooln 1 s one great ..... I . 131 ) purposeJwas at the.breaking point city over a period of days.of a riot brought and here in the largest a dimension that ~eath tQ more than 10 times the number ~:f' people
  • motivated. We want to thank them in advance for what they were going to do. The bottom line was we ought to try to at least informally organize them rather than be totally dependent on brief telephone conversations that had taken place over a period of time
  • to be at a particular place to pick up some people who belonged to one of the unions who were having a meeting but would be finished with their meeting about the time the Larry O'Brien meeting was going to start. These people were going to get in these two b u s e s
  • Accra, Ghana -. January 3 Kinshasa, Congo - January 4 Addis Ababa, Ethiopia - January 5-6 Mogadiscio, Somalia - January 7 Nairobi, Kenya - January 8-9 Tunis, Tunisia - January 10 Since time is short in which to proceed with arrangements, I would
  • ://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 9 Mc Let me ask you about a point in time. Is this before the State of the Union
  • for Justice: The Passion and Politics of Phillip Burton. The $1,000 award was created from a bequest left to the Library in 1981 by D. B. Hardeman, long-time aide to Speaker of the House Sam Rayburn and, later, House Majority Whip Hale Boggs. Hardeman wanted
  • were waiting the way. comfort the American bombers the timing At the little even gr eater September that of with increasing any such action. feelings am the Wilson, in terms vt..,,oy the month was mixed on the American jet
  • do things. If you have a family planning program, you've got to worry about the Catholics, the fundamentalists. At the same time you've got to keep Planned Parenthood from going too far. Even when I was secretary [of HEW] they had a terrific anti
  • did; the chap who handled Western Europe and the Soviet Union did. I was in a somewhat strange situation because Vietnam became so operational that Bundy spent a very substantial proportion of his time on Vietnam and much less on other hunks
  • of South Vietnam--I never could say that man's name--again hoping that that was going to move the whole process forward. I think the amount of time he put into like the briefing with Nixon and briefings 1 LBJ Presidential Library http
  • Humphrey; LBJ's desire to be liked and needed; cancelled plans to go to the Soviet Union for negotiations; mistake regarding letters to Congress members following the signing of the Nonproliferation Treaty; the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia; LBJ
  • of having a lot of younger, liberal men, most of them not accustomed to being even congressmen or senators for a very long time, not accustomed to "going along in order to get along," coming from governors' offices, lieutenant governors' offices, in some
  • mention, for the sake of the tape, that you and Lyndon Johnson are contemporaries, that you grew up in the same period of time in Johnson City. So, can you tell me a little bit about life in Johnson City? L: Well, life in Johnson City then was so
  • TO BE SERVED ON BOARD ''THE LADY BIRD SPECIAL" Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson's whistle-atop train, "The Lady Bird Special", will also fe3.ture another "special" -- special LBJ Ranch and Southern diahea to be served on the train at "snack time" all four days between
  • America'• aympathy for CncboalovaJda in a D.Clll-political and American ■ ettiag. W. W. Roatow ---- Speak to Jim Jones tentati•ely about a time No ---- Speak to me _ _ __ -· ·•:i~" . ·· • ,. • , ~ T0 B~ :'\}.! f..Dt
  • is marching 3 abreast at thiS time. I • 'Marcli 17. 1965 , Beat regards. Sincerely. Bill Moyera Special Aasistant to the Preaident r . Duncan Howlett '1- :All Soub cJ?urch Sixteenth and Harvard Street. Waahinaton, D. c. f J [1 of 4] ­ ,. All
  • - j jj e y Henr y Fowle r (Pres . ha d calle d hi m earlier a t 10:14 a bu t unable to reac h him) _ ir Day_ WEDNESDAY Activity (includ e visite d by ) tur D Cod Sec .J \ ..... e Hous e • e E^di Time Telephon In Ou Date FEBRUAR Y 1, 1967
  • , 1986 INTERVIEWEE: LAWRENCE F. O'BRIEN INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. O'Brien's office, New York City Tape 1 of 2, Side 1 O: [The Higher Education Act of 1965] considerably broadened the areas of the involvement. For the first time
  • to the Senate? I wouldn't say that I knew him well. However, while I served on the House side, I would get over to the Senate side from time to time to see the Senate in action. Of course, Lyndon Johnson was very prominent in those days as the Senate's
  • . And he said what followed from that was a--what he called a loud six- or eight-hour meeting with Califano and Schultze and some others in an attempt to salvage key elements of the program, the President’s program, in time to adjust the State of the Union
  • the Bureau of the Budget and HEW; John Gardner; dispute resolution between HEW and the Bureau of the Budget; lack of funding for domestic programs; credibility gap between State of the Union and the published budget; events leading up to the tax increase
  • by the Government for expenses incurred in traveling and time lost from work. Industry, too, planning. The of the costs to duction for tax is e::ncouraging workers to participate in family Union Government compensates companies for much their employees: the'-b
  • of that Doctrine as well as the terms of the Monroe Doctri.1e. Caracas Conference resolution is embodied in this resolution. But we must recognize changing times and changing conditions which call for a reaffirmation of that doctrine. We must bring it into line
  • RESULT IN RESIGNATION OF GOVERNMENT. . FESTEJltING POLITICAL S-ITUATION . WHICH HAS DEVELOPED AS RESULT OF PALACE AND ERE ALARM AT .. ALLEGED': .EFFORTS OF PAPANDREOUS AND CERTAIN. OTHER CENTER UNION ··ELEMENTS TO ESTABLISH POLITICAL. CONTROL OVER
  • and other reform s were initiated. ~ Dissention between Czechoslovakia and the S o viet Union rose rapidly. The summer maneuvers 1\'r;'r"J 1.,• .... .i J;il\) ~· . i'' I -.q:._ 11 .1 • Gy Ch I \..-~ ,- .~ - I ' . ,,, ~-, , ·· ...._... c q
  • what they cost in those days--and proceeded to learn how to drive in a week's time, and I was out on the road. I stayed on the road until 1945. At that time, 1945, I had worked myself up to where I had made fifty thousand dollars a year. I was thirty
  • "60 New York• ~ugu t 10. illion J obe" tor the New Tork Time s . Arrang 4 to write aane articl ea for North American Newspap r All1uoe to help pa~ JAJ e xpense• whioh I am P•Yin& myaelt . Luncheon with r1oan ot1on P1ot'1l'e ;produ.oera. Talke4