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  • .) Barr ett (Pa .) B l n~ham (N.Y.) Blat ni k (Minn .) Boland (Mass .) Boll ing (Mo .) Bradema s ( Ind .) Bra sco (N.Y.) Brook s (Tex .) Brown (Cal if. ) Burke (Ma ss .) Burt on (Cali f. ) Byrne (Pa .) Carey (N.Y.) Clark (Pa .) Coh elan (Cal.i f. ) Corman
  • oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Johnson -- XXIX -- 8 But back at home, oh, life was just full of interesting things going on. I'd go to the ballet and we went to dinner at Altavene Clark's. She was an old friend of Lyndon's
  • turned the freezer. His place was a mecca, a gathering place, for Texans It was a place where you were likely to see Sam Rayburn, where people were likely to bring their kids, where if there was anybody interesting in town--Ed Clark or anybody--he'd
  • C 7 !'1 OAK, ~:~;:: ~~~~;.~~~.N;LA. COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN RELATIONS frr JO SCPH 8. CLARK, ,.A, CLAIUORNC Pl!:LL, II.I. CARL MARCY , CH I&,. OP' 8TA,.P" OARACLL 8T. CLAIRC, CL.ERK March 11, 1965 The President The White House Washington, D. c
  • with Mr. Johnson--people like Clark Clifford and Averell Harriman. Do you know if Mr. Johnson became acquainted with them in those days? M: I don't have any actual personal knowledge. I am quite certain LBJ Presidential Library http
  • of the House of Repre­ sentatives . He didn't work hard at his job . He was .getting a lot of publicity from his glamour [as a] senator . bloc . He was in the liberal-­ He voted with Senator [Joseph S .] Clark, Paul Douglas and what Johnson considered
  • , understood that the Court fight was only the rationalization for a general revolt against what was considered by [Farley?] Wheeler and Garner and [Joseph] O'Mahoney to be a threat to their own power. F: This was the first thing you could get a grip
  • , OHIO ,-RA NK CHURCH , IOAHO STUART aYMINOTON , MO, THOMA SJ.000 0 , CONN. G EOR GE A , &MATHER&, l"LA , JOSEPH 8 , CLARK , PA . CLA180RN C PELL , R , I , DOUR KE U . HICKEN LOOPER , IOW,\ GEORGE D , AIK EN, VT , rRANK CA RLSON, KAN.a, JOHN J. WILLIAMS
  • Attorney General. 11 of t l. I . , General; Ramsey • Clark f. March 2: Special Message to the Congress on the Nation's Cities: asks Congress to establish Department 0£ Housing and Urb_an Development, proposes • ••. • . : I • ' •• • . "rent
  • Technical Department, Pedro Ira.aeta Cowiael Joae R.. ChlrllK»aa Operation• ExeeuUve• Dlrector•deslgnate Departmeat. Jame• Edward A. Clark A. Lyrm. 3. World Baak aad MoAetary Fuad PrealdeAt llobert E.tecaUH Vice Bank Director, McNamara . Pre
  • , Charles, Chicago, Ill. FELD, Bernard T., Cambridge, Mass. HIGGINS, George G., U.S.Catholic Con£. HIRSCH, Richard, Union of Ame. Hebrew Congregations JOHNSON, Joseph Carnegie Endowment of International Peace LARSEN, Arthur, Durham, N.Car. McVITTY, Edward
  • through, I think, Wisconsin, up in that area, that certainly did fuel Speaker Rayburn's anger. He endorsed [Joseph] McCarthy, and said they were engaged in the same purpose, seeking to purge the subversives and the disloyal from the government, and he
  • bother him, do you think? J: To some extent, yes. I remember that his relations with [Senator Joseph] Clark were not close. I do not think it disturbed his relations with [Senator Albert] Gore. Of course, he did run the Senate with a pretty dictatorial
  • , Mr. Joseph Dodge, whom I had known at the Pentagon through his assistance to the Army in connection with the Japanese and Korean financial matters. As a result of that, we had been professionally associated. He called me, asked me to come over
  • had·,a telephone call in my office in Pittsburgh, and my secretary came in and said, "Mr. Joseph Califano wants to speak to you." said, "I think he's in Washington. I said, "Who is he?" And she It's a long distance call." I said, "Well, I guess I
  • : During that period somewhere there was a long memo from George Ball that got leaked to Joseph Alsop as I recall, where he expressed grave reservations about the whole business. Was there a clear strategic dissent in the Department as early as that period
  • .' - Not available, but his staff reports he is okay on highway sa!cty, :i,)cluding financing from the Trust Fund. , Kluczyno1d Wright - Okay, including ' Gray • safety standards for. vehicles •. ' Okay. Z/17 Clark - Okay. Edmondson - Okay _on safety
  • Intelligence, and a very famous name happened to be my boss, Bruce Clark, Jr., the son of General Bruce Clark, who's a well known figure in the army and I believe his last position was head of army ground forces at Fort Monroe, something of that nature. Bruce
  • Hagerty’s military and intelligence background; 6/17/53 uprisings in East Germany; Joseph Stalin’s death and replacement by Nikita Khrushchev; the Russian Foreign Area Specialist Training program; estimating Russian intentions and capabilities while
  • up my wife and children and drive them cross-country to bring them back to Washington. When we were going through the city of Rapid City, South Dakota, Thursday, the 24th of August, and we stopped at a signal on St. Joseph Street. M: You must have
  • was a great friend of Ed Clark's, a great friend of Jake Pickle's and many other people, I got to know Mr. Johnson. He was looking for help then and he would take on most anybody. In my particular town of Longview, we had a newspaper that was edited by a man
  • , and [Joseph] Clark took over chairmanship of the committee. G: Was he sympathetic? M: Yes, Clark was a patrician, you know. He was sympathetic as a part of his duty. Can I describe it that way? G: Who else on the Senate side? M: Oh, God, the Senate
  • the Department of Justice; why the bureaus were separate; whose idea it was to merge the bureaus under Justice; HEW's, Treasury's, and Justice's response to the proposal; why the bureaus were not merged under the FBI; Joseph Califano's expectation of support
  • role, in addition, that had started on February 10, 1967. On that day, I was called to [Joseph] Califano's office along with Wilfred Rommel, the assistant director of the Bureau of the Budget in charge of legislative reference. And we were told
  • Senators Sparkman the negotiation o! the Japanese and Hlckenloopcr treaty. were associated W. W. Rostow WWRostow:rln with J.. ---Friday, Mr. October Z0, 1967 -- 6:50 p. m. President: Clark Clifford and I now make the following joint and agreed
  • to do this." At that time it was Ramsey Clark--the 'bull butterfly,' as Mr. Hoover used to call him. Ramsey next sent around a memorandum instructing us to put a wiretap on the South Vietnamese Embassy, and we did, following the President's instructions
  • regular Sunday radio broadcast, LBJ hosts five Texas congressmen and gives them an opportunity to discuss specialized issues: Clark Fisher of San Angelo spoke on the new defense program; Wingate Lucas of Fort Worth on the outlook for labor legislation
  • • in common and that they had joined in the fight for reasons of their own. Lieutenant Joseph Mc Cartby, Middletown Township, New Jersey, Police Department, on September 4, 1964, pointed out that with respect to Thomas Share, be would describe Share
  • Canmittee including Joe Clark and Bob Kennedy and their visit to Mississippi and subsequent demands that we declare an emergency in the denies that there is anyone who doesn't have $2.00 in Mississippi for food. We sent him names, as I thi.nk I've relat~d
  • 33 INFORMATION Tueaday. November 7:00 p. m. 12, 1968 Mr. Pre•ldent: Clark Herewith, a• reqae •ted, a copy of Clifford'• pre•• conference today. W. W. Ro•tow rln ----- .3.S~ ----- NEWS CONFERENCE OF SECRETARY CLARK OF DEFENSE M
  • . His name was Herald R. Clark, and he was dean of the College of Business. The first name is like the herald of the morn, and I think this is appropriate also, because he was that type of an influence in my life. Herald R. Clark was a very interesting
  • Califano, Joseph A., Jr., 1931-
  • Bice Thoma• Book Jimmy Davis eon Donald Dean Wilbur Durrence Richard Falt Fredric Froyd DonaJd Harris William Holt Gerald Hunter Joseph Maida Clyde Miller Howard Moore Robert Overbey and my secretary, Gary Papson Alan Perkinson Michael Rusnak Steven
  • Jersey hadn't committed at that time? RH: No. That was in 1959, and there was a great pull for Kennedy here through Ambassador Joseph Kennedy, who was very friendly with Mayor John V. Kenny. There was a sentimental attachment to John F. Kennedy
  • Meeting LBJ in 1959; Governor of New Jersey, 1961; LBJ and Kosygin held a meeting at Glassboro State College; Kosygin’s daughter, Dr. Gvishiana, joined Lady Bird, Lynda and Mrs. Hughes for lunch at Island Beach; Ramsey Clark; candidates, 1966-1968
  • Hughes, Richard J. (Richard Joseph), 1909-
  • with the Senator when we were sweating out who was going to be the vice president that morning after the presidential nomination. Of course, we didn't get it. M: Did the Senator think that he was a possible choice? Z: Yes. I think he did. I mean, Clark
  • MOBILE, ALA. -- Has commendable fashion. praiseworthy person. recently begun school desegregation Its present Mayor, Joseph Langan, in a very is a THE LADY BIRD SPECIAL October 6-9, 1964 ROUTE: The train covered eight otatec -- Virginia, North
  • Monday, Feb. 6. 1967 12 :45 p. m. MR. PRESIDENT: Clark Clifford reports : 1. He felt the lunch was most helpful to bis people and be hopes it was for you. Z. He has seen Stu Symington, who now says: -- he's for the Consular Convention; -- he