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  • . Author; Mbr., Nat'l Council on the Arts, NYC Karl F. Feller Pres., Int'l Union U:r,.ited Brewery, Flour, Cereal, Soft Drink /i & Distillery Workers of America, Cincinnati, Ohio {/\... Mr. George P. Garrett, Jr. Poet, Univ. of Virginia, Char~ottesville, Va
  • ·t:o\·iards"·'a · return .-to ·-'c 6nstituti6nal{sm·; . without at the same time undermining .his own relationship with the government leaders or provoking them to a final confrontation . ... . bo . :-: . . · . : .· c·•.. . The 'Amer.ic.a n
  • INTERVIEWEE: BARRY GOLDWATER INTERVIEWER: Joe B. Frantz PLACE: Senator Goldwater's office in the old Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 F: Senator, you came to the Senate the same time as Lyndon Johnson, in 1948. G: No, I-- F: You
  • Goldwater's senate experience with LBJ; lawyers in Congress; the Taft-Hartley Act and labor unions' influence on Congress; Joe McCarthy and censure; LBJ as Senate Majority Leader; LBJ not wanting to be vice president; LBJ's first heart attack; LBJ's
  • EMBASSY OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA New Delhi, India, December 2 2, Dear Bob: I am enclosing a photostat of a. recent essay by Harrison Salisbury of the New York Times in which he analyzes the forces which are shaping Asia and comes up
  • . , American Football Coaches Assoc. Mr. William D. Murray, Duke University Mr. Charles Bud Wilkinson, Life Time Sports Association Mr. A. S. (Jake) Gaither, Florida A&M University Mr. Frank Broyles, University of Arkansas Darrell Royal, University of Texas
  • separation plants for this purpose., preferring to have the 'WOrk done by the U:3, uc, France or the Soviet Union under bilateral agreements. In fact, Indtl.a is the onq non-veaponG power with such a :facility, if' one ex~tJSthe multilatera.J..·European
  • ........ D. C. 4, 1966 NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL .Sli:CRET-- 23 December 1965 lilEMO FOR McG B SUBJECT: China War Game In order to eliminate the conflict between the war game schedule and the ACDA Committee of Principals meetings, game time
  • month for $25, .and then it would coat j6.00 a month thereatter. l havn't heard •'• ,,, a.. from her yet end em xtremely anxious to. I sent a tracer on\ ;?. _ wir• to make- sure she got 1t bu1:i ie,tern Union told me t'li.lt it th•y had not been able
  • a question and answer type pamphlet to the public entitled "Dr. King Speaks on the War in Vietnam." It was also agreed that a full-page advertisement would be run in "The New York Times" on April 16, 1967, defending King's stand on Vietnam. • n / Later
  • there . variance . There's just one little For awhile I was Counsel and not the Staff Director, for a period of about two years, but the rest of the time I was the principal staff person for the Post Office and Civil Service Committee of the House . P: When did
  • went to my first located pastorate in a college town, Chickasha, Oklahoma, and was there for nearly twelve years. In addition to my own academic work in our school, I did a good deal of summer work at Chicago University and Union Theological Seminary
  • , relatively, for me to raise hell about it, because what the hell! Dean was deeply involved with Vietnam, an Arab-Israeli war, and with Pueblo , and things like that, and why should I take up his time with things which, in the long run, were not truly
  • or the length of the training had no rational connection, weld attack them. The other thing that happened, and this isn't all unions--some obviously tried to move with the times--but the other thing that some unions would do would be to set up a whole new
  • for the Kansas Association as its first employee; my title was assistant And I was also editor of l"iidwest r'junicipa1 Ut"ilities, the six-times-a-year publication. Then I worked also for a brief period of time, less than two years, for the U.S. Department
  • --the road was full of us in those days going to Washington--and went as far as Roanoke. This again is sort of typical of that time. We spent the night in a tourist home. There were lots of rather nice-looking old homes, usually Victorian with white
  • II; attending a dinner honoring Sam Rayburn and his sister, Miss Lou; the State of the Union address in 1941; listening to Franklin Roosevelt's Fireside Chats; LBJ's exposure to culture and music by the Marshes; LBJ's desire
  • with him, would say, "Well, they're bound to be admitted some time in the Union; it's inescapable, and why not admit them now while the Democrats are in control? And while the late Speaker didn't change his position on contiguous territory, he did state
  • very, very much. It hurt that it took so long for people in the unions, for instance, to really get moving, although they were there, they were there. The confusion that reigned, though, was so great, and the time shortage was so great
  • over the years, he would have known that the machinists were a totally different type of union than the railroad brotherhoods, operated under different rules, had different traditions, and this got him in trouble many times in his life, many times. 13
  • . President: I received with much happiness your historic letter of August 13, 1965 pictures of the planet Mars taken to which were attached the first televised by the spaceship Mariner Von July 14, 1965. At this time I present to Your Excellency
  • , Michigan Talked w/ Senator Phil Hart on who should ride in the President's car in the motorcade -- according to seniority, etc... The President talked from the microphone welcomed the guests aboard. . . . . telling them the arrival time in Detroit and when
  • and assistance. 11 Attorney General Ramsey Clark said there were indications that the situation had been substantially exaggerated. He said he was aware that at this time we do not know how extensive the damage is. The Attorney General said there were pros
  • attached hereto. !, v - 5 - ' j .~ DE 157-1025 I ) APPENDIX AMERICA~ NAZI PARTY OF THE WORLD UNION OF FREE ENTERPRISE NATIONAL SOCTALISTS, ALSO KNOWN AS THE GEORGE LINCOLN ROCKWELL PARTY In his book "This..., Time The World", copyrighted in 1961
  • keep NAC fully and proq,tly informed of developments at Geneva • • You should express readiness consider any points 3. by allies and offer such further clarm.cations raised as may be posoible in next two weeks; at same time you should make
  • of Guatemala in Matters Affecting Business, Wash­ ington, D.C., Pan American Union, 1959 (Supple­ ments available dated 1961 and 196 5). GPO: Kelsey, Vera, and Osborne, Lilly de Jongh, Four Keys to Guatemala, New York and London, Funk and Wagnalls, 1939
  • at that time who was helping put the State of the Union Message together. M: He was still Deputy Attorney General then, wasn't he? B: Yes. Or I think this may have been when he was working down at the White House. [He was] a staff member there for a while
  • senior and action level teams, each rep­ resenting one of the following: the United States, the Soviet Union, ~he Viet Cong, North Vietnam, Red China, and the Govern­ ment ot South Vietnam. Action level players analyzed the sce­ nario situation
  • in attendance time of the shooting are is continuing in an effort to account for Sirhan 's to the shooting of Senator Kennedy. Individuals at the ballroom in the Ambassador Hotel at the being located and interviewed in detail. Two ASSASSINATIONOF SENATOR
  • ; 3.) bring about a "true revolution" by utilizing the private sector of Vietnam such as the Tenant Farmers Union. Robert Murphy and Justice .A.be Fortas agrees with Lodge. sho?ld expl~re Fortas believes we the greater use of smaller military units
  • • of fial ■ hed weapoaa, aad at ladla and Paki ■ taa to d~lop their own the ■ame time -coura1• w•poaa-mekt•1 facillti••• He wW al■ o ar111e that we ahould pall om all the •top■ oa the Hill to 1•t ladla excepted from the Come Arn•ndmeat (wlaldl reqalr•• ua
  • : Yes, that's correct. He had been the White House correspondent for many years and he was in his sixties and they wanted two people there. So I went down for the first time in 1961, although I had covered the White House some before, but just filling
  • ARCHIVES PROCESSING NOTE You will find two versions of the document withdrawal sheets in this file. The original document withdrawal sheets were completed in the 1970s and early 1980s. Since that time, many of the documents have been declassified
  • administrator this agency has ever had. W: That's right. M: You began with it. Is that correct? Prior to that, you were the chief of the National Weather Bureau. W: United States Weather Bureau. M: United States Weather Bureau--from what time, sir? W
  • . That was his favorite alcoholic beverage. fifth, of course. He'd buy it by the Many a time, back when he was governor, and even after he was out of the governor's office and in that short period of time before he started actively campaigning for the Senate
  • to the most serious. On the other hand, he was much less organized than McNamara was. Part of that may have been Johnson himself; part of it may have been the presidency, I don't know. But he'd tend to deal with four or five problems at the same time
  • Post Karl Star ABC Hess ; Louis Post Dispatch CBS Times Milton BS Erwin Knoll Newhouse Nsprs John Dean Schoelkopf USI A NBC John Morton ; Western Union Bill Chuck Roberts Newsweek NBC j Dan Thursday Ray Scherer NBC Bob Pierpoint CB Rather CBS Sid
  • was sub-chartered by B-r itisb Petroleum; - - from the Pacific Coast Transport Co. , reportedly holding a time charter; -- from the Barracuda Tanker Co.• the owner, a Liberian corporation. with a Bermuda address; -- with the Union Oil Co. of California
  • with Mr. Johnson prior to the time you came over here, either in your capacity with the Defense Department or any other capacity? Mc: No. I'd never talked with him directly. I had seen him from a dis- tance and that's all. M: And you carne over here
  • gratitude for your eloquent address at the Rose 1 Garden last August 2. You did us honor, not only by your eloquent talk, but by the spirit which prompted you to take the time to meet us personally after­ ward. I want to thank you personally for gre~ng our
  • of West Pakistan, and there have been sug­ gestions that the new state would ultimately find its destiny in a union or an affiliation with Afghanistan. At other times, the Af­ ghan rulers have hinted that they would be satisfied merely with some kind
  • of strength on the part of the Soviet Union, an impression that was not justified. were both about on a par at that point. by it. Actually, I believe we Of course, we were deceived We, meaning the committee staff and the conmittee members, didn't quite