Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

3358 results

  • there be in Latin America without tho AlfanA? If India foll apart and succumbed to Communism like China did because it wasn't able to sustain a free aocloty, wouldn't this be an immense loas to us? Foreign aid la cheap at the price in that it helps build tho kind o
  • by a man named Maxie Izen [?] in Chicago or the famous Umbrella Mike Boyle [?]. See, racketeering is not the sort of thing that crops up in the great big mass industrial unions. Nobody ever heard of racketeering in the United Automobile Workers
  • Strauss, Special Representative for Trade egotiations Jack T. Conway, Senior Vice President, United Way of America William K. Coors, Chairman and Executive Officer, Adolph Coors Company 2 from page 1 John E. Swearingen, Chairman of lhe Board, Standard
  • had been with the rank of Ambassador. job. the United States representati~e I had to ClAP Of course, Ellsworth Bunker had held the OAS And I said I really didn't know. I didn't know any Spanish; my expertise was not in Latin America; and I
  • for the Performing Arts; relationship with the Kennedys; Bill Moyers; Tommy Thompson; Lincoln Gordon; the Dominican Republic crisis; Castro and Cuba; Free Trade Association meets in Montevideo; Central America foreign ministers meet in San José; Fernando Eleta
  • . For security and other reasons, the Department does not reconnnend that you make a general tour of Latin America. We believe that the major desired political advantages for both the United States and Latin s-EC~E'f-EXDIS ■--------~ ~ ~~----,-~-- - - - DJ
  • Details of restriction(s) may be found on the withdrawal sheet in the first folder of the file unit. Withdrawal sheets refer to file units and are not necessarily applicable to all individual folders.
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Walt Rostow, Vol. 2, May 1 - 15, 1966"
  • marches on Washington and there would be no end to it. And he wouldn't be able to control it. So that I told him, I said, "Well, Mr. President, we are not here because we just simply want to march. We're here because the great masses of Negro workers
  • after shift, every worker catalogued, eve-r y worker driven, 30 per cent of the total energies of the nation--energy units, not money units--working every moment, every yeari for arms, arms, arms, the French trade unions were demanding shorter days
  • Department, would be raising all this hell, because they weren't touched by Landrum-Griffin. Landrum-Griffin basically only caused trouble for the Teamsters, for the United Mine Workers--which were not even in the AFL-CIO at that point--for, oh, some
  • surprise he opened up the initial interview with a suggestion that the Mine Workers International Union and he needed a new general counsel, and would I consider it? It was a long far cry from anything, that I'd ever anticipated up to that time. F: You
  • Early personal history in Texas; Justice Department experience; Texas Legislature service; Mine Workers International Union background; LBJ and John L. Lewis; first contacts with LBJ; recollection of Sam Ealy Johnson; LBJ’s job with Kleburg and NYA
  • crisis since the pre sent Administra­ tion took office, ' they said in a three -page statement. 'The Principal victims to date have been the Negroes of America whose cause is betrayed by a few false leaders, 1 the Committee said. It also claimed
  • I. A SHORT NARRATIVE HISTORY INTRODUCTION In 1954, ~he United States Supreme Court, in the case of Brown vs Board of Education of Topeka, et. al. had ruled that separate but equal facilities are inherently unequal, and that schools would have
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Robert Conot - Miscellaneous"
  • the health of the President of the United States of America. END (AT 11:00 that PM EST) I DEPARTMENT OF STATE Washington, D. C. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF PROTOCOL VISIT TO THE UNITED STATES OF THE RIGHT HONORABLE HAROLDWILSON, O.B.E. M.P., PRIME MINISTER
  • Folder, "United Kingdom - Visit of PM Wilson, 2/7 - 9/68," Country Files, NSF, Box 216
  • reliable information, has advised following claims have been made by Robert M.· Shelton, Wizard, United Klans of America, Inc., Knights of the Klan: in a that the Imperial Ku Klux According to Shelton, Martin Luther King, Jr., and his organization
  • Details of restriction(s) may be found on the withdrawal sheet in the first folder of the file unit. Withdrawal sheets refer to file units and are not necessarily applicable to all individual folders.
  • See all scanned items from file unit "King, Martin Luther"
  • War II, and the Great Depression, and the fact that we got through both of those things successfully, and emerged even stronger. The United States was never more the undisputed and admirable country in the eyes of the international community
  • ; the G.I. Bill; McGovern's first impressions of LBJ; utilizing farm surpluses to reduce hunger in the U.S.; John F. Kennedy's visit to South Dakota to announce Food for Peace; JFK as president; the day JFK was assassinated; McGovern's relationship with JFK
  • not aware of a dollar that Billie Sol Estes had gotten illegally, if that's the proper word, from the federal government . He had used farm programs to some degree, but he had not misused them in any of his alleged illegal activities . Ba : Of course
  • , hereby give, donate, and convey to the United States of America for eventual deposit in the proposed Lyndon Baines Johnson Library, and for administration therein by the authorities thereof, a tape and transcript of a personal statement approved by me
  • by "the Administration" against the looters in Washington, D. c., will serve as another lesson to all of the countries of Central and South America that the United States has degenerated into a country run by weaklings who are afraid to make decisions because
  • responded . Inspection^ of the troop s an d the n to th e Diplomatic Receptio n Roo m to greet guest s gathere d there. Prio r t o entering the Diplomati c Receptio n Roo m th e Presiden t steere d Presiden t Par k t o a smal l g ] oup of worker s fro m
  • America Gordon M . Freeman , Int l President , Int l Brotherhoo d o f Electrical Worker s Edward J . Leonard , Genera l President , Operativ e Plasterer s an d Cement Masons Int l Assoc . Russell K . Berg , Int l President , Int l Brotherhoo d
  • to the United States of America for eventual deposit in the proposed Lyndon Baines Johnson Library, and for administration therein by the authorities thereof, a tape and transcript of a personal statement approved by me and prepared for the purpose of deposit
  • set forth, I, Beth Jenkins, of~fexas, Executrix of the Estate of Walter Jenkins, do hereby give, donate and convey to the United States of America all my rights, title, and interest in the tape recordings and transcripts of the personal interviews
  • for this day BM says it is accurate info from his notes. — To Movements & calls checked - VM the Conference Room in CINCPAC Headquarters for a, plenary session w/ the officials of the Republic of Viet-Nam and the United States of America
  • n Latin America. And I will steadilyenlargeour commitmentto - the Alliancefor Progressasthe instrument of our war against povertyand injustice in the hemisphere. In the Atlantic communitywecontinueto pursueour goalof twentyyears
  • to the United States of America for eventual deposit in the proposed Lyndon Baines Johnson Library, and for administration therein by the authorities thereof, a tape and transcript of a personal statement approved by me and prepared for the purpose of deposit
  • 21 of Title 44, United States Code, and subject to the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth, I, Kittie Clyde Leonard of Johnson City, Texas, do hereby give, donate and convey to the United States of America all my rights, title and interest
  • of that? B: I think that's a perfect example of a man wanting to hedge so he can retain power . I mean, if Kennedy fell flat on his face, well, he's got a job in the United States Senate where he has always been and where he has been able to enjoy prestige
  • of tbe statement would be: " The United States ia pre-pared to enter into s e rious diacuaaions at an international forum audl aa the Eighteen Nation Di•armame'Jlt Conference ill order to achieve an appropriate international agreement pursuant to which ea
  • Details of restriction(s) may be found on the withdrawal sheet in the first folder of the file unit. Withdrawal sheets refer to file units and are not necessarily applicable to all individual folders.
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Walt Rostow, Vol. 81: June 7‑12, 1968"
  • President Johnson would give more time to Europe or to the Middle East or to Latin America than he did to Viet Nam. I once met with a group of European correspondents who complained that Viet Nam was diverting us from interest in Europe; and I asked them
  • ) and regulations issued thereunder (41 CFR 101-10), I, Courtney A. Evans , hereinafter referred to as the donor, hereby give, donate, and convey to the United States of America for eventual deposit in the proposed Lyndon Baines Johnson Library
  • TO PAKISTAN OF MR.LYNDON B. JOHNSON VICE PRESIDENTOF THE UNITED STATESOF AMERICA (20th and 21st May, 1961) SKETCH OF ARRANGEMENTS AT KARA.CID AIRPORT ON THE 20TH MAY. 1961 AJRCRAFf ------Steps l p~ l Service 0 Chiefs 0 0 1-;:-1 -· 0000000000000000
  • entering Parliament House to the Social Hall. As the party entered, the Announcer proclaimed —! the President went into an anteroom "The President of the United States of America and the Right Honourable the and 1)))HHHH* freshened up with Prime Minister
  • memoir. On ep­ temb r 27 he came to th LBJ Li­ brary Auditorium to comment on his career as Secretary of the Trea­ sury, Secretary of State, and White House Chief of Staff, which includ­ ed dealing with the Iraqi crisi , the conflicts in Central America
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Deployment of Major U.S. Forces to Vietnam, July 1965: Volume 5"
  • of this material into the physical custody of the Archivist of the United States. 2. It is the donor's wish to make the material donated to the United States of America by terms of this instrument available for research as soon as it has been deposited
  • • apent lor new plant and equipment. la one of America'• largeet employer,. Tranaportatlon 737,000 railroad employee• •• 270,000 local and inter-urban almoat a mllllon ln motor transport tran•port. There are worker a •• and atorage •• 230, 000 i
  • See all scanned items from file unit "The Message - Vol. I"
  • . LUNDSTEDT United States Rubber Company LUDWIG MUELLER Ludwis Mueller Co., Inc. S. J. PIKE S. J. Pike Company CLIFFORD R. ROHRBERG Morpn Guaranry Trust Company of New York WILLIAM B. ROTHSCHILD M. Rothschild & Co., Inc. JAMES W. SCHLESINGER Drake America
  • Presiden t W . A . Boyl e , President , Unite d Mine Worker s o f America, Washington , D . C. cover two topics : Henr y Ford II , Chairman , For d Moto r Co. , Th e American Road , Dearborn , Mich . - » th e ne w departmen t o f Georg e M . Harrison , Chie
  • , if this transmittal form becomes Sincerely yours, ~1~d~ ~Directo Enc. CONFIDENTIAL CONFIDENTIAL UNITED STATES FEDERAL DEPARTMENT BUREAU WASHINGTON, In Reply, Please Refer to File No. OF JUSTICE OF INVESTIGATION D,C. 20535 January 30, 1968
  • See all scanned items from file unit "E1-Office of Investigations - General Subject Files, 1967-68"
  • : This counterinsurgency business was a very fashionable sort of topic, as I recall, around the early sixties. Do you remember when this first began to surface and demand attention? L: Yes, it was in 1960-61, and we organized a counterinsurgency unit down at Fort Bragg