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  • for a Lyndon B Johnson Library and Institute of Public affairs calls carded 1965 February 12 , 196 5 Friday White Hous e Secy Wirt z Secy Conno r Senator Wayn e Mors e George Reed y Press and To mansion President's Panel in the Longsher Dispute
  • Cleveland Ohio Marshall Jackson associate of NY Wyoming Editor Times OFF RECORD appt requeste d by Mr. Mark< 1 in preparationfor a n ariicle tha t h e wil l write o n publi c opinion both here an d abroad- -how i t come s int o being . ho w 7- O/2 O/2
  • of finagling going on and Son'le of those counties. 0 There was ver just south of us in San Augustine I\;one of the press has ever printed that to ITly knowledge. G: Other Johnson caITlpaign workers in that cam.paign have indicated that they were counted
  • Biographical information; initial association with LBJ; 1948 Senate campaign; Carl Estes; 1952 campaign and Texas Democrats; Texas delegation to Chicago Democratic National Convention, 1956; Lady Bird; racism and civil rights; Democratic State
  • happened in 1959 will not be comprehensible. The Republicans associated the whole thing with Walter Reuther. He was the black beast as far as the thinking of the House and Senate Labor Committees went in 1947-48. When they passed the closed shop
  • Mateos; LBJ’s presidential leanings in 1959; LBJ’s ambivalence during this period; western swing trip; the Washington campaign office; Senate’s interest in LBJ candidacy; comparison of LBJ’s and JFK’s voting records; LBJ and the press; liberals
  • , President, Reed Roller Bit Company, Houston, Texas Robert S. Stevenson, President, Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Co. , Milwaukee, Wisc. Hudson G. Stoddard, Associate, Earl Newsom & Co., New Yor, N. Y. Fla~ger F. Tannery, President, Frito-Lay, Inc., Dallas
  • __ ________________________________________ 4 White House Press Briefing with General Maxwell D. Taylor, Rpecial Consultant to the President and U. Alexis Johnson, Deputy Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, March 4, 1966_ ___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __ __ 7 "Opportunity
  • case, because Ford has tended to be ignored by historians. . .To some extent he has somewhat the opposite effect on his reputation that Nixon has, in that he has been involved with things not particularly related to the press or scholarship
  • Yarrington escorts Pierre Salinger, press secretary in the Kennedy and the early part of the Johnson administration, and the Honorable Rene Garrec, Governor of Normandy, through the Library's new permanent exhibition. Vice President I Gore speaks
  • : Gordon M. Murray, Exe//it:1}..Ja~ret.a.ry SubJ: Transmittal. No. 2 1. 2. f Attached 1s a copy ot the report ot th~ Interagency Conmittee··on Transport Mergers and covering White House Press Release ot March 6, 1963. .• 'Ihe next meeting ot the task
  • flew to Fort Worth with him to be with Amon Carter, and then he met with Sarah Hughes and spoke to the Texas Bar Association. This was right around the time of Sarah Hughes' nomination as a federal judge. R: Again, I mean this was just a routine
  • as to put it into effect next year. This should handle the international credit problem at least for the immediate future. 2. We should press forward on the studies now under way on ways to supplement the present reserve system of gold and reserve currencies
  • of these things. Mrs. Kennedy, on the other hand, had a very, almost a biting sense of humor, which saved her and I think saved a lot of the staff sometimes when the press would zero in on some of the programs that Mrs. Kennedy was involved in, especially the so
  • have to look at the consumer message to get it all, but one particularly intricate problem back in the 1967 task force was that there were several securities-law things that the Securities and Exchange Commission was pressing. The SEC is not technically
  • Association's review of legal problems of the landlord-tenant relationship, building codes, housing codes, and the like; lack of action within HUD and Department of Health, Education, and Welfare following the conference report; the value of working in groups
  • the results were much bettP.r than I expected. I'wanted to congratulate • • on a good job. you and your associates Sincerely, Rob~tner Secretary to the Cabinet and Special Assistant to the President r j. . Governor Farris~r The White House Washington, D
  • to remember the helicopter over the years and associate it with him. J: Yes, it became a kind of a trademark. He called it the Johnson City Windmill. G: There have been stories told about him pitching his hat to the crowd from the helicopter when
  • ; how the campaign stops and speeches were planned; LBJ's ability to mimic Coke Stevenson; press coverage of LBJ's campaign; LBJ's strengths and advantages over Coke Stevenson; Mrs. Johnson's life as a political wife; cities and towns LBJ visited in June
  • congressmen and things of this nature in behalf of that bill. As it finally turned out, as it was passed, when it came down to the compromising and getting it finally through, was Mr. Johnson as tough on that bill as you and your associates wanted him
  • be an observable-to-the-press presence in the White House on a regular basis. That's first and foremost. Then there's an understanding that the chairman of the party does have access to the president. He is a spokesman for the president in the political area
  • and Television Committee, "'Friendsof Dewey." New York Hospital, removal of ulcer. Third published book: "Ulcers-Fact of Fiction?" (Yorkville Press, N. Y .) Milto~ Berle Scholarship at N. B. C. (New Brooklyn College) for ad­ vanced studies in videodynamics
  • colony of Aden. !Wlofor the la,t four years~ ot poisonous gas, the Associated' Recently, the important tribe bettlretdltinlthe Republlcan,Press reported. The committee of Usaimat, making up one:-third· Nlfmbein Sanaaacl • ~.oc»-i said that it urgently
  • since that memorable day in 1947 - -when President Harry Truman set forth the historic doctrine that bears his name. 2­ Freedom, liberty, justice ---since his school days, every associates American~ these with the name of Greece. In the final
  • , in this case, in problems that were not Tenth Di~trict problems, but wider scope than that, in helping you with such problems? W: Yes, definitely. It was partly because of his own early association wi.th the NYA program, which was part of the WPA program
  • . I did have the impression that the relationship between Stevenson and Johnson was a good one. I think that Stevenson was a little more warmly associated with Sam Rayburn than he was with Lyndon Johnson; that's the impression I retain; I may
  • Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 5 to the Secretary, and I came in as an associate
  • as to affect planning for next year by corporations and banks. Fowler proposes to do so at a press conference he would hold on FridayJ November 17, with Trowbridge and Governor Robertson of the Fed. At the same time he will release the third quarter balance
  • as to affect planning for next year by corporations and banks. Fowler proposes to do so at a press conference he would hold on FridayJ November 17, with Trowbridge and Governor Robertson of the Fed. At the same time he will release the third quarter balance
  • before that. J: Well, we just didn't have anybody then, kind of passed it around. G: Was it primarily to write speeches or deal with the press? J: Both. G: Was Woodward supposed to do something different? J: He was sort of to be my assistant
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Cronin -- IV -- 12 changed now. I think the ABA [American Bar Association] does a lot of ranking and rating now that's a little different from the way it used to be. But we had some at the time with a judgeship bill
  • and Mr. Johnson as Vice President. So Mr. Wilkins said to his associates, "Suppose we go over on the Hill." He did not spell out to them just what he had in mind. over there, they go to the office of the Vice President. very late in the afternoon
  • publicity because it had drawn the support and attention of Dr. Martin Luther King and his associate, Dr. [Ralph] Abernathy. It had ceased to be strictly a labor dispute, but emerged as a matter of the dignity of minority people in Memphis. i~volved
  • . The Associated Press carried it all over I can still tell you the lead. The lead was, "The fate of 250,000 Texas schoolchildren rested today in the hands of veteran educator Pat Bullock and youthful Lyndon Baines Johnson." That was the lead on my story
  • ~ conference 700 outstanding would 1,e e;ues ts associates, consultants would be guests invitation& woµl~ be by invitation or the journalism, and heaqs of diplomatic of the relig:.on, and other misr ions 1 to leaders education, and foreigners
  • was abroad in Europe and Asia--the trip in which he stopped off in Paris and had some discussions there with some French authorities. F: Is this the one that the press played up so? K: That's right. F: It's earlier, but it's worth having. K
  • .._. sectors of_our society and _with the invaluable 1 ..'..·&f:--theUnited Nations Association . .-; . Thus it·pleases .of that and me that committee. 1 cooper~tion waa an Urban Development Committee . a fellow Texan is one or·the cha1r:::en
  • did. I worked on it with Tom Whitehead, who later left our paper and bought the Brenham Banner Press and was publisher of it and for all I know may still be. But any- way, we conducted the poll and we went all over the district--smaller towns
  • an associate editor of the college newspaper, but I liked to write and that sort of thing. And then there was an opening at the New York Herald Tribune. A colleague of mine had gotten on the New York Herald Tribune and said, "Well, you can come on here, and we
  • in returning a large part of the West Bank to Jordan in return for an otherwise sat·isfactory set-tlemen t. Eban-, went 011 to say that even this section of the "politicians" were not ready to pay a high price for such a settlement. The Amman Press reports
  • Press Association meeting in College Station March 4. I wreaked my car, just four miles from home, and tore up my leg pretty bad. Just getting out of the hospital last week, I am doing fine. I look forward to meeting you at a future date' when I am able
  • appropriated in fiscal '65, but he does not insist on it, and if I understood you correctly on the phone, the quieter way would be simply to refer to the Texas press conference. ~I\, McG. B. PRESS CONFERENCE of HON. ROBERT S. McNA.MARA SECRETARY OF DEFENSE
  • were due to address the House of Delegates of the American Nedical Association in Dallas. tape) (Gap in But H. G. Dulaney, who runs the Rayburn Library, was going to drive us down, and Mr. Rayburn, for some reason, just couldn't get it together
  • press about such conferences, and whether or· not we have had a QUOTEsign, ,UNQUOTE ' The following • . I are comments on points made you/~~ with Zorin • which might ~ome:up in· your .Su11~ay ..meeting. 1) I~ any effort 01; the , could