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  • there were eighteen new Democratic senators and he [LBJ] had looked in the paper and none of us had realized it, but at breakfast Sunday morning he announced that twelve of them were Catholics and that he wanted to find out something about the Catholic
  • editors at was America's Public Enemy No. 1, the infamous John Dillinger. From this serendipitous begin­ ning, Duncan went on the become one of the world's great wartime photog­ raphers. Of his combat photography, Duncan himself wrote, '·I wanted to show
  • memorating Revolutionary War victories. Metal buttons imprinted with eagles were manufactured in America for Washington's inauguration. President Jefferson's medal was the first produced in time for an inauguration. In time. as the parades and balls became
  • much concerned with the fact-finding that culminated in the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. After the law was passed, I decided I would go where the action would be, and that was with one of the departments that would be enforcing the act. I
  • of India's democratic institutions. He also spoke about the possibility of the us·and the USSR combining to help bring about some political solution, saying Shastri would favor this. Ambassador Hare pointed out the difficulties and hazards we
  • aade a strong apMch denoanchlg tbe So:viet action. Malik intenened nftl'&l.t1Ma 1n remarke that al■oat approached a tillbuter in length and irrel.nllnG7. The French repreNDtative, Bernard, apoke atraighttorvardq against the Son.et inftaion. The Canadian
  • in America. that prosperity For and justice -- high or low -- white the Great must s dream Society reach or colored, every Indian or oriental. But it recognizes family and friends Progress that the human and the individual at the price
  • acquaintance with Mr. Johnson? P: Oh, I had seen Mr. Johnson at various places when he was in the United States Senate. I'd seen him at the 1960 Democratic Convention, for instance, when he had sought the nomination that John F. Kennedy ultimately won
  • - --., - - ·------ .. -----------· ·------ -- - ... ME:MORA DUM ACTION THE WHITE HOUSE WASHlHOTOK Tuesday, May 14, 1968 7 :30 p. m. MR. PRESIDENT: Attached at Tab A is Harriman's At Tab Bis Sect. Rusk's the end in which we identify I have been working draft is an improvement. proposed statement
  • . Today's Economist assessment, 11 Were the Americans wrong?" ~d Ouardlan editorial, "Whose Side Are We On?" take to task Labor backbencher• who are protesting the U.S. action. z. Economist commentary does not wholly absolve U.S. but, on examination, finds
  • to To TSG DA, To OCS, To State / (Gp 4) lp. Embtef'from ADMINOCINCPACto AmEmbassy Tokyo; Reischauer condition ·OfState OUTGOING TELEGRAM Department INDICATE: 0 □ CHARGE TO COLLECT I 207 I ~ Iii &:iiSi ' I Origin FE Info, ss G SP L H ACTION
  • was the quality of the bills. And Russell didn't think that you got quality out of hasty action. He thought it was better to let some of these things simmer for awhile and let the rough edges rub off. That's about all I know about it, Joe, aside from
  • for any office goes down there and files on that day. Anyhow 9 the leaders of the Democratic Party came down and persuaded me that I should not file for the state senate but should file for secretary of state--over my best judgment! I did 9 I had never
  • the urgency of a comprehensive and effective attack up~n the problems of urban America. He emphasized that as far as the rioting in Los Angeles is concerned: . .••we cannot let the .actions of three or four thousand rioters stay our compassion
  • ACTION Mr. Pre•W.at: You caa•t ab.oee a man for try1Dc -- or maJN yo• caa. Kel Wabbllml au hla Tokyo editor aak If two to tbe B.uk i..r.a.w: tblai• are po••Dtle a• backSl" .... wlth -- a plctve -- a •tat.meet Iran yoa tllat J011 an ''plea
  • : How did you get to know Nr. Roosevelt? T: r worked in the Democratic National Committee in 1928, when Al Smith ran for the presidency. And President Roosevelt was active as--the Business- men's group, I think, is what he had. He and Louis Howe ran
  • FDR’s death and coming to work for LBJ in 1955; Democratic Policy committee procedures and how members were chosen; comparison of how the Policy Committee ran under Senator Johnson and then Senator Mansfield; LBJ’s work on civil rights legislation
  • . the 1944 campaign. That was in And I served in the Senate until I retired voluntarily in January 1967. F: Now, in 1944, when you first ran, the country went Democratic. You bucked a national trend there. s: I did. I got a good majority vote in both
  • as secretary never seriously departed from this doctrine. One of the first actions of Secretary Volpe as secre- tary on January 27, seven days after he took office, was to send out a memorandum strongly affirming the principle of decentralization
  • as he was president. Well, that night I was in Baltimore with the ex-Governor of Maryland, a Democrat, Governor [John] Tawes, and the Democratic Speaker of the [Maryland] House [of Delegates], Marvin Mandel, who is now governor of Maryland
  • .: the Presidents of both Houses of the Assen1bly to lay out an action plan of relief and recovery for the civil population. In the afternoon., he !"ecorded a speech to the nation which was delivere·d on TV· and radio the. same ever.ing
  • one of the best nominees that the Democratic party could have. I had never heard much about Stevenson. I think I'm a one-speech convert. I had never heard him speak. I had been at Chicago at the convention trying to build up a bonfire for Speaker
  • castigation of Chiang Kai-Shek and on the plan to send a N_,-vy to Formosa. Knowland had inserted in the record Madam Chiang Kai-Shek 1 s '\farewell address to America. ") , Madam Chiang ' s spe ech contained a l ot of fulsome twaddle, as for instance
  • issues while con­ tinuing collaboration with conservative parties on foreign policy issues. An indication of Krag' s political astuteness has been his ability thus far to manage both collaborations at no apparent cost to either his own Social Democratic
  • in 1961 and 1962, sought to find some common solutions to the problems. It might be use- ful to briefly describe what those problems are. Appalachia as a region is afflicted with the same set of problems as rural America at large. BaSically
  • at Valparaiso University today. Brown is an outspoken militant who in the past has advocated the use of dynamite to bomb the Democratic National Convention to be held in Chicago du in the Sun.1~r.of 1968. The Valparaiso Police Departmen and the Indiana State
  • Monday.- August 8, 1966 - 1?:00 noon LIMITED OFFICIAL USE MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJ'ECT: ... ACTION Appointment for· Ambassador J .o nes Our Ambassador to P-eru, John Wesle_y Jones. returns to Li.ma on Thursday. Tomorro,w is hls last
  • ••lon• in Lati.A America of the iact• a.a we bow them. State baa given •pec1al briellngs tu the Venezuelan and Bra.dliaD Embaadea here since theae are the two countries en whlch ~.-e would n1ost depend for aupi,ort ln the event collective action
  • ' . .. . . "I • /, .... • ' • • ._ ., I -- . . .... ' .-. ·: • • ... , ' +-~ J / '· - • ..,~ ~ - .. • . . > . . . .~ ' ...... .... - ACTION Wedae•clay, Jaauary 2-4, 1968 5:00 p. m. Mr. Prealdeat: ha•• I am acbeduled to 10
  • • ~ . -; ACTION VITH FAVOR•., - -UNABLE·.TO CONTACT DIRE.CTI.Y.... INJ"ONMATION WILL AA. AA RAISED •· BE PASSED TO CONGRES~AN THROUGH· , THE QUEST-ION OF VHETHER-.THERF.· IS A DEFINITE ,TIii! ~Ri O T_HAt;VihVILL.STAN~OOVN---:THF.. B011BI.NG. \I
  • that their donations were large and real enough to fulfill the matching criterion established by the Congress -- the United States agreed to send half this wheat -- 1. 5 milli(?n tons. That action was taken in the light of more thai-.. S 96 million in contributions
  • not be anticipated. lb traced development of the democratic process in Vietnam, said when Geno Ky took second-place on the Thieu­ 1
  • of State OUT-GOING TELEGRAM., Depilrtment INDICATE:0 0 CHARGETO COLLECT UNCLASSIFIED 1· 48 Origin NEA ACTION: AmembassyNEWDE!BI 510 lnfo1 -;, f ss G p 'Following message from President /'t.::.:.,:,;:.l'...,~/tl,I
  • . The reception entering ot bureaucracy. It is not that the other masters have simple anil democratic fices, in and ~sp in the capital, tor breath inner sancttll will be sending esthetic an4 when the landscapers even in th• in the humid look out upon
  • , why they did them - and what was necessary to do the same in America. I not only discovered what I wanted to know to reproduce new things but found gifted people as well to bring to America. I spent the next six months persuading American producers
  • --------------------------------------------------Other Senato1·s:. DEMOCRATS --··----Inouye Okay n..,.nc1olph No commitment· - 2/18 R SPU DLIC/.1'\S Cc,op.:·r - ~o:1-co~nrniltal y. P, ~.r zo11 - c1~o~ 2/ 28 ?,/l3 2/ 18 Di'.:PART.MENT OF TRANSPOR HOUSE GOVERN11E:\''f T.ATION OPERA TIO~S
  • on me last night to congratulate the Committee on th e success of its efforts to help bring about genuinely democratic elections in the Dominican Republico He fo und nothing to criticize in the electoral process and claimed that he and Thomas had
  • in advance, it should be easier to hold the agencies requests in line -- they will know that any further request for new nioney will require special action and cannot be tacked on to a routine request for an issue to meet a coming maturity. I i ,t i Ir I
  • ACTION ~xx Moaday, June 10, 1968 - 11:30 am Mr. Prealdent: reque ■ ted, a· draft memoraadum from you to the Secretary of Defen ■ e reque ■ tlna our ae.nlor mllltary leader• to ■peak re1'1larly on the ■ tate of the war ln South Vletaam