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  • into con- flict with Lyndon there trying to elect Bob Slagle, who was the county judge of Grayson County and Sam Rayburn's campaign manager for years and years. Lyndon had a different candidate. G: Ray Roberts? S: Ray Roberts, the state senator, yes
  • of that group and came to the University for, I hoped, a full-time basis. It turned out to be part-time. G: How did you come into contact with Lyndon Johnson? L: He put out the word that he wanted an information officer. A friend pointed out
  • on Katzenbach's various official ~ppointment§]" K: Well, I certainly hope that President Johnson would say of me that I've never been cowed into not giving him advice of what I felt on any occasion. I don't give them. I made an absolute point in this department
  • er for his alma mater. where hi~ friends have endowed a $500.000 professorship in his name. He was vice chairman of the Bob Bullock State Museum Foundation, and served on the boards of the Vice Chairman,Passes Away PhOlos hy Yoiclti Okw11010
  • . And then it didn't say, "So we shouldn't bomb," which I hoped the next sentence would be, but what the next sentence was was, "So I think you should get a good lawyer like [Cyrus] Vance to build the case before we do it." So the mindset was still LBJ Presidential
  • e the G o ld e n A g e G le e Club w as re'h e a r s in g a song. When the Red, R e d R o b in C o m e s ^ Bob,Bob, Bobbing A lo n g . And then, they b ro u g h t out a b ig b ir th d a y cake, w h ich w as f o r a l l the p eo p le h avin g b ir
  • enclosed one of his phott>graphs signe·d earlier during a free moment. I hope it will please you. With the President's cordial good wishes, Sincerely yours, Juanita D. Roberts Personal Secretary to the P1·esident ____ , Mr . James D.~Steveris, Jr. A ss
  • File unit description: Material on delegation to inauguration of President Raul Leoni; 2/20/65 shooting of Peace Corps Associate Director Bob Rupley and wounding of a Peace Corps volunteer; OAS; AID project; and settlement of dispute between
  • and economy, the tidelands controversy, and veterans legislation. 1/12 Monday. Austin American-Statesman editorial: “Your Capital City; Looks like the Senator is Going to Do It Again”: “We hope, and seriously doubt, that our yammering about the quality
  • valuable time. I sincerely hope that a meeting - if even very brief - can be arranged sometime during the night of 17 August. As an American citizen I wo~d also like to meet the Leader of our great Nation. Thank you for the time given to this Cordially
  • mentioned including Mr. Truman, Senator Truman, and Lou [William 0.] Douglas, and there were several others. But those two were the ones who seemed to--names seemed to be mentioned most and apparently Bob Hannigan, state and national chairman, and Flynn
  • together to get this big job over with. I hope that after you have a very, very happy birthday that you will feel as good about it all as I do." "I had a great time in the district this summer."--this is a pretty good summary of how he feels about coming
  • of NSAM 294 to permit export to France of two advanced computers. I have also read Bob McNamara's letter of December 4, arguing against such interpretation. I understand State has not yet sent you its views on these computer cases •. The policy question
  • Slayton. Slayton did not, however, clear it with his boss, HHFA [Housing and Home Finance Agency] Administrator Bob Weaver, with whom his relations were tense. Hackett and Boone once asked: "If we asked Bob Weaver to assign someone to work with us, would
  • could, but she found she couldn't do very much with him because he was the type of person that he was. You know, he was a driver. that she could cope with it. somewhere along . . . If it I She just hoped She thanked me particularly. S It's
  • in the Vandenburg period. On a number of issues it seemed to me that Johnson had no particular feeling one way or the other. But he wanted to hold the party together in the Senate and he wanted to be, as he often said, "responsible opposition"--not the Bob Taft
  • in tomorrow," and I did. letter was there. All right, my Russ Blandford who was afterwards executive of the Armed Services Committee--Bob Smart was at that time--worked on our committee; Russ is a retired Marine Corps major general now. The old man went
  • which he had nothing to do with and cited it as an instance of Lyndonls astuteness. I donlt know. Just what the occasion was It was either before or after the President wi.thdrew, but Pearson said, "My one-tirne partner Bob Allen and I wrote this. " I
  • the disability and death rate from heart dlseaae. cancer and s troke. I hope you will a g ree to head this commlaalon. Lyndon B. Johnson MF/mu .. 1-..­ - J( BALTIMORE COLLEGE OF DENTAL SURGERY / DENTAL SCHOOL UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND DEPARTMENT OF ORAL
  • days· wnve.i of rumors was no short-wave radlo, not even when the um~ comt:'S lo n,ake j had been sweeping the district, re- any electrk currl!'!nt. and the farm known the people's mtnd on ~lect ion l porting that Oerman Bob's farm t,hough fertile a nd
  • was attorney general of Texas then. Oh, Bill Douglas and Fred Vinson were often there. Judge Marvin Jones and Bob Hannegan and Ed Clark and dear Albert Jackson from the Dallas Times Herald, and Bill Kittrell, who could tell some of the best stories of anybody I
  • that he wanted eventually to leave the job. I found, by the way, that in the meantime other people were being considered. For example, Ray Sherer, of NBC; Bob Fleming of ABC; Carroll Kilpatrick of the Washington~. Just before Christmas, Carroll
  • Biographical information; first association with LBJ; Estes Kefauver; Douglas Dillon; Pierce Salinger; Joseph Laitin; Horace Busby; George Reedy; Henry Fowler; Bill Moyers; Bob McCloskey; Frederick Deming; George Christian; relations with the White
  • was honored that he asked me, in part at the suggestion of his son George, who had been the assistant secretary of labor and with whom I'd worked. Ambassador Lodge knew that I'd traveled in the Soviet Union with Bob Kennedy, who of course had defeated his
  • issues. And that whole Bob Hardesty effort, which was one you probably heard of, was a major piece of work which we geared up our people to support. Vietnam was, of course, a constant factor and generally it was not a discussion of pros and cons
  • -of-the-Court argument. Attorney General Tom Clark had been contacted ahead of time by his brother Bob Clark at my request. I asked Bob to ask the Attorney General if he thought it would in any way prejudice Texas for me to represent the National Association
  • Include Export-Import Guarantees ---- Include OECD Speak to me ------ c, CONFIDENTJA J, MEMBERS OF DISTINGUISHED AUSTRIAN DELEGATION, etc: This is a proud occasion for all Americans. It is also an occasion for hwnility and for hope
  • taste. So you must be concerned with the meaning of your life, as it may be interrupted in its unformed but nevertheless real hopes fo.r dignity and importance. dawn You ma.y,as sleep oomes or as breaks, have a flash of war as it may affect the inner
  • fertile and disillusion­ the seeds of hope and promise into the ot plenty and prosp_eri ty. soil Today we recognize . have contributed the roots of despair a new mood'of the Negro. to bring this ~bout: World War II, of mass ~ommunication which
  • tie. •o o emphasize both aelf-help and I dia' ed to co • up ltb 100d oll.lti n to th P proble . If Ayub sets ere fir t (which la in the lap of th aode), it' rucial that ha.tri neith r pout n.or isunder tan . c an 1.hope you'll rive Chi• b t L. K. Jha
  • inforntati0i--i indicates that Belau.nde is tcyin.s to postpone signing the measure until late this month,, in the hope that meanwhile h.a can work out an acceptable solution to this problem.. We believe that the best such solution would be for Belaunde
  • it. Although Cabot Lodge, DeanRusk and Bob Md~amarahave a11 made it clear they would be very happy if I would decide to stay here with Lodge, they have not asked me to do so, and I have not offered to do so because I just feel that it would not be possible
  • ■ he• bb ■ trength within the ■ o•called bi1 •ix and promote• controver•J• Thi• point• up the importance of the Pre•ldent meetln1 with thl• 1roup •o that the matter can be thra•hed out in private and all of them •peak a• one. I hope that you will pu•h
  • on the morale and confidence of the people of South Vietnam. Although far from achieving the success for which the enemy hoped, there is no question that it did have significant impact on the countryside as a whole, producing considerable fear of the power
  • atateanelll lafermallr wltb the 1re.p. W. W. Jloatow Attaclameat• Tait A - Li.a ol. tlaoM preMat at c•remoay. Tait B ~ Slatameat wJalcll Pr••• Olfice to l••• at time ol ceremoaJ. Tab C - Draft •c:eaario. cc - Geor1e Christian aad Bob .Fai•• PAN AMElllCAN
  • . Employment Service office to be opened in Belton and financed by the Texas Relief Comm"ission. I was to be the employment officer, so to speak, because we had hopes that we would be getting projects into the area that would be suitable for hiring some
  • to be on if he could have been? J: I think he kind of always nourished the hope of someday being on Foreign Relations, but he felt a very lack of preparedness for it. He always felt that he was less well prepared to be on Foreign Relations than any field. G
  • going to be a continuing project, and I hope that every first lady will be equally interested in it. You may have one marvelous table, but that doesn't mean that sometime in the future one that's better isn't going to come along. B: Actually it's
  • " will in long run prevail. 11 Senator Edward Kennedy "The entry of Russian troops in Cze c hoslovakia is a retrogression into an age we had all hope d was passed. I will not comment in detail, but these events are an affront to decency and especially
  • the meeting! You know the usual milling around on a platform after a meeting suddenly adjourns. Al Thomas came up to me and said, "I hope you don't mind what Roger and I had to say, that's the way we hold our people." I thought it was a very, very