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2388 results
- - - - Draft reply for: - - - - President's siqnature. - - - - Undersigned's siqnature. NOTE - - Memorandum · for use aa enclosure to reply. Prompt action is essential. If more than 48 hours' delay is encountered, please telephone the undersigned immediately
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 48, October 25-31, 1967 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 24
(Item)
- strenuous schedule, 1 want you to know how delighted been that you were able to make this visit. conversation, throughout after what must have 1 profitted and I know that you have been a strong greatly from our and articulate the country for your
- , Date 8- JS - J> t./ Authority McG. B. CJ j1 '41 ~' ~ I ; ) .. 9 December 1965 .~ MEMORANDUM OF TELEPHONE CONVERSATIONS WITH MEMBERS OF CONGRESS RELATING VIETNAM TO SOUTH I called but was unable to talk to the following men: Senator Lister
- 0 M 13,,z MAR67 FM AfllENBASSY KAMPALA TO SECSTATE VASHDCIMMEDIATE STATEGRNC BT -- S I C: R £ -i- KAMPALA 1292 004459 E XD I S REFz KAMPALA 1291, 1288 t. TELEPHONE CALLEARLYTHIS ~ORNING FRONPRESIDENTIAL LODGE atEFTEL 1291> VASMADE BY ROBERT
- I was getting out of the service along with thousands of others, going through the processing, when I was paged to come to the telephone, which scared me because I didn't think anybody knew where I was. It was Congressman Johnson say ing that he
- or telephone bill or a purchase of furniture going back to heavens knows when, at least I had them until not long ago. G: So you managed the finances, in other words? J: Indeed I did, all of that, the income and the outgo, and around time for the income tax
- to be offered the vice presidency. Anyhow, we talked. Now who made the [call]-F: This was in Los Angeles? T: Yes, this is in Los Angeles, and we talked. F: Personally or on the phone? T: On the telephone. morning. I was staying at another hotel
- there, while the President and Mrs. Johnson toured the ambassadors, introducing them to the local folk who had been invited to help be hosts and hostesses. grey-haired couple. And I picked up a conversation with this nice The man turned out to be a friend
- was talking to you about last night. This is the fellow I want for my pilot." That was the first I knew that there had been any conversation about me. And I just was flabbergasted, you might say, because I had been selected for quite an honor, at least
- . . ... . ... ......... . ·.:. ··· • :._~_., ..._.,:,. · ~·:· ;··-~:· Dll • •••:.'· • ~Secretirry ~neral Foreign Minister telephoned invite· • Vice President:> Amba:1sador Stevenson and Senator· lCuchel .. • eo:ditmer by .-Pr.ime·Minister ._8:30 p.m. dark lom1ge suit .• • ··.:·::,·-.. ·~ptember. 2~. in Stockholm. I rec
- . D'Orlandi, reflecting our conversation before he lelt, asked Sihanouk whether he had told Peking and Hanoi that if they had accepted President Johnson• s offer of April 7, 1965, negotiations would have started with obly 30, 000 Americanaivi8er _s in Viet-Nam
- . Rayburn had gone to Bonham. The telephone rang, and he was on the line. He said he just wanted to let me know in case anybody up at the press gallery might be interested that he had just called the Bonham Daily Favorite and had announced that he
- was able to devote to this was very limited. The best that I can recall is that we had conversations over the phone, and that he may have sat in two conferences at the White House where a variety of people from over 1 LBJ Presidential Library http
- Safe Streets Bill; use of electronic surveillance (telephone wire taps) for national security; federal aid to local law enforcement; assessment of LBJ
- before it started. F: He did. C: My own idea was, and I think I may have mentioned it before he left, then I think it may have come up in a telephone conversation, I rather favored his appearing at the convention. He was the President; he
- know it was Jimmy Allred that called me on the telephone and asked me if I wouldn't come to Austin one day and meet with Lyndon and him, and the Brown brothers, in an effort to help Lyndon. F: Now this is after the election, but when the contest
- it." Mr. Johnson was there the next morning, and, as I recall, the Senator had a little conversation with him and then sent him down to someone in the department. The outcome of it was, with other help that may have been registered, Mr. Johnson
Oral history transcript, Richard R. Brown, interview 1 (I), 7/25/1978, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- was going [to happen] . Well, a few days later I had a telephone call from my good friend Josephine Roche, who was the under secretary of the treasury . She told me that Aubrey was most anxious that I take this job and was I willing to do it . I said
- Americans for Johnson-Humphrey, and I was presumed to rally rural consumers for President Johnson. In this capacity I made quite a number of telephone calls asking for support and for membership, asking individuals to join the committee, to allow
- questions about broadcasting he would give me a call, and I made trips down to Washington to see him and ultimately met Lady Bird, and then [we] picked up again, of course, after the war years. Throughout that period, there were numerous telephone calls
- and to the delight of the civil rights forces in areas that we didn't expect him to be active as a Vice President. For example, he took a very personal concern on the fair employment business. He used the inevitable telephone, without which he is never seen or heard
- for Civil Airport. 09-55 Arrive Airport. 10-00 Leave Pakistan. and (M. RABB), Chief .. ' of Protocol, ., , Government of Pakistan. TELEPHONE NUMBERS H.E. The Ambassador Office Residence of the United States of America 55081 55081/403 American Embassy
- for service between North America and Europe. This satellite has a capa~ity of 240 tele phone channels which are used to provide normal telecommunica tion services including telephone, telegraph and the exchange of TV programs. INTELSAT II. Two satellites
Folder, "South Vietnam and U.S. Policies [X-File] [1 of 2], Files of Walt Rostow, NSF, Box 19
(Item)
- Gardiner did allegedly make himself at home in an unoccupied office and was overheard telephoning the Attorney General's Office. Gardiner also claimed on the above occasion that he had a plan for restaffing the White House and requested an undercover
Oral history transcript, Joseph A. Califano, interview 24 (XXIV), 3/16/1988, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- submitting the domestic section. And then in the ideal world he'd have Goodwin write it and he'd edit it. The message went through I cannot remember how many drafts. In various conversations LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
- about the Academy and the essence of what was said immediately follows: Perkins said he had had several telephone calls from Senator Symington who is "frothing" at the White House, Secretary Rusk, et al, for letting him down by not standing firmly behind
- on Tuesdays and Fridays. fonnal. in our office and The meetings are usually fairly Wemake a statement to each other to get things in the record and then, after the meeting, we break up into private conversations;and these conversations have been going ~n
- - - -·'•.. . ~ KUZNETS OV AGREED THIS MAJOR QUESTION, BUT CLAIMED IT MERELY DEMONSTRATED US PURSUING POLICY OF GROSS VIOLATION SOVERE IGNTY OTHER STATES. REITERATED THtS ANO SI MILAR ARGUMENTS WH ICH HE HAD USED IN CONVERSATION ON TH IS SUBJECT WI TH MCCLOY LAST \.JEEK
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 12, September 1-14, 1966 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 10
(Item)
- -- and if you thin~· i:: makes sense -~ that the Vice President host a small lunch for E1·hard on the Hill. Obviously, Senators Mansfield and Fulbright mus t b e invited. However. the Vice President could manage the conversation if the lunch wer~ kept reasonably
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 39, August 18-31, 1967 [2 of 5]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 21
(Item)
- , and that \/as included in the speech. sa" the draft of the speech. to rr:e. I I It obviously came as a good deal of surprise irr:mediately rClr.cmbercd the conversation I had had with John Connally the:. previc s tem:K:r ",hen he told me that was a possibility
- always thought that he was one of the most fascinating talkers in a small group I've ever met. conversation totally. It's a monologue. F: It's high class monologue. W: ·It's high class monologue. mimics. Of course, he dominates the It's superb
- . It turned out it was the telephone man who had put that on there and it stood for president of the United States. But everybody used to refer to it as POTUS and when somebody wanted to talk about the President, if they wanted to say LBJ or the President
Folder, "Travel, Far East - May, 1961 - Pakistan, Related Correspondence," VP Travel Files, Box 5
(Item)
- of Pakistan. TELEPHONE NUMBERS ·Residence Office H.E. The Ambassador of the United States 55081/403 55081 of America American Embassy, ... 55081 50201 50201 President's House State Comptroller. Guest House, Kutc50101 50101 • hery Road Comptroller. 10, Vic
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 50, November 8-15, 1967 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 25
(Item)
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 50, November 8-15, 1967 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 25
(Item)
- . -=-(). i:'z.~ . St. . 3 A~ Wvi ,+~ I +c:,.,. s~c;~Jtl, s N4U If ' • b. 7.4,19 bate (,2_;!_--i( DEPARTMENT . Washiniiton, l ·i OF STATE O.C. -8'.l!!CrcET 20520 November 13, 1967 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT At the end of our conversation
Oral history transcript, Lady Bird Johnson, interview 17 (XVII), 9/20/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , the Big Inch pipeline that went all the way from my own East Texas way up somewhere into Illinois was completed. It was a lot of topic of conversation in our house. G: We really don't have much on the President's attitude toward the Big Inch. I know
- . In giving this history of Wilson County to my niece, I pointed out that Charles Deason, my daddy's older brother, was quite a community leader. I guess today we would call him an activist but he was instrumental in getting the first rural telephone line
- vividly because I had a terrible cold. I got a telephone call, as I remember, from Alvin Wirtz asking me to come over to a lawyers' meeting in a hotel at Fort Worth. I told him that I was busy taking depositions, so he arranged for me to come over at night
- again last night, October Twenty Seven, at home at about midnight. He reported that he had been con tacted by Drew Pearson and queried about his conversation with me on the Jenkins case. John is convinced that my telephone here at the office is "bugged