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  • . ':~r have given Bob your message and he will name no figures. D CLASSIFIED Authori y By Y,;'...S< ku /Jp~/?'7 ---~ A@t? , NARS, Date_?/r/-77 _ __ ~ h. .) . ,.. ..........- ., \- ·-- ·~TTEwDANCE LIST -FOR -THE· 5-32nd ,;-,c MltE·T lNO \ ~y
  • , when he first came to the government, was referred to by Bob McNamara as about the best man in the Ford Motor Company, and our experience with him certainly proved that out. But anyway, the President had launched the National Alliance of Businessmen
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh McCarthy -- I -- 6 talk about that. Or Public Works, there was nothing on Public Works that I was interested in or that he was interested in, I don't think. G: Or that Bob Kerr, who was on there, was concerned. With your
  • . G: How about BOB? What was their position throughout this . . . ? Y: Well, there wasn't a BOB position, there was a [Charles] Schultze[William] Capron position, and I think they were more inclined to be sympathetic with our notion of a program
  • day coming back from the airplane from Los Angeles, "You know, Tom Kuchel is going to run for governor someday." He said, "Fine!" I thought he'd say, "The hell with him! He can't have my job!" But no. He said, "Gee, I hope he does. He'd make a fine
  • (Bonanza Vice Edwards ( Ben Casey) Sam Jaffee & Rayniond Massey Richard Chamberlin * Jack Benny George Burns Red Skelton (Dr. Kildare) Comedians John Winters Shelly Berman Mort Saul Bill Cosby * Bob Hope Bob Newhard - - - HALE BOGGS, LA. :Z,011
  • to Senator Kennedy, "Jack, you're awfully I'm sure you will be President some day, but I think you are too young to run now and I hope you don't." President Kennedy said, "Well, Phil, I'm sorry, but I'm running, and LBJ Presidential Library http
  • minute named Gibson, from Amarillo I believe, who was a member of the Committee. He'd gone out to the restroom. M: Yes. S: At that time Bob Calvert, who is nOw Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Texas, was the Chairman of the State Democratic
  • force that the administration hoped for, would require more super grades. Each agency had around three hundred agents, maybe a little less than that. The total would have been somewhat less than six hundred, and the administration wanted to increase
  • recOlllllended. Only in1titutional 1 educational maa1age1 without reque1t1 for funda will be used in the future. However, Mr. Haider hopes to obtain continued solicitations from corporationa--the1e would not be in conflict with our recent policy deciaiona
  • comments yesterday, sets had found the men in on the Chinese. 3. A Norwegian report that the Vugoslav Foreign Minister believes ''that Hanoi had decided to await U.S. elections ln hope situation would shift favorably for North Vietnam. 11 Sec. Rusk, Sec
  • to t_erms despite Vietnam. Nevertheless, because of Vietnam they may have been reluctant to move too quickly. At the same time, Moscow may be stalling in hopes of obtaining US concessions in the remaining issues -- in particular on the principle
  • out, sheer, private, dreaming malice, which cuts across everyone's hopes and cuts them down." I Charles Frankel, an SR editor-at-large, served until recently as Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural M~ fairs. He is on leave from
  • , and not re_ally a Communist one. He thought the state­ ment was encouraging. Rostow said that of course his views would be . carefully examined. We hoped that the recent election in .South Vietnam would help prepare the way for some kind of ·political solution
  • will promise have not been established. About the best that can be reasonably hoped for in the short run is the maintenance of sufficient public order and levels of nutrition to get the distribution system operating and maintain the flow of grain imports until
  • of state is confirmed by the Senate. LBJ and CTJ attend the Truman-Barkley dinner at the Mayflower Hotel as guests of Bob Clark. 1/19 LBJ and CTJ attend electoral dinner as of Bob Clark. 1/20 Inauguration Day; Truman and Barkley are sworn into office
  • remtnd-.d aat the lines &o tlae teRouaeue opes. ad ewllltrytolead ycu a haa4 ~ you call on ••• I hope to be • e you MGII. Smc rely, Bem-yH. U.•. J• . .AdmiDl.atratlve A•aataat to tlle Praideat HoGor Ho eol HHW:aar ( Gs THE TIMES-PICAYUN
  • --Okamoto being the boss--and one secretary. MG: Who were the others? Frank Wolfe, I suppose. G: Frank Wolfe, Bob Knudsen. At that time there was a specialist fourth class from the army, Kevin Smith was there, and myself. until I don't know exactly
  • us 1n Ule w-e tb ahead. I hope you fdt-•a• 1 dld••that a,uieral Westmoreland. ha• acquitted hlrnaelf in .New York.and \:faahlagtoa In the hlgheat tradltions ot o•r mltlta.r1 •ervlce,. I tnly rec.rot yo·a could no& be wUh u• on the aolema but memorable
  • , one of the things we hoped the most for, was to get some unit of the armed forces stationed in Austin, because it would build the city then and later. What we seemed to have a chance for was an army air support 8 LBJ Presidential Library http
  • absence; Lady Bird Johnson's interest in buying a house in Washington, D.C.; dinner with Congressman and Mrs. Bob Poage; why Sam Rayburn wanted LBJ and other congressmen to return from military duty; Senator Alvin Wirtz's help with settling Uncle Claud
  • HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Ginsburgh --I --3 RG: Yes. Vietnam was the official responsibility, as I recall, of Bob [Robert
  • ; influential national security staff members; Bob Komer; General Maxwell Taylor; the effect of U.S. involvement in Vietnam on the rest of the world; controversy over the order of battle in Vietnam; inaccurate body counts; intelligence regarding the Tet
  • \'ias very good at accentuating the positive, and my wife and I had us off. ~aken our ten year old son, Bob, out there to see And when Johnson saw Bob, he met him and he says, IIBob, have you ever been to Texas?" "Ever ridden on a horse?" Bobby said
  • ter mee t ing of the minds t han we appear to have reached so far . In t he meantime , I hope we may continue to work together on the assumption that our f r iendship and alliance relationship r emain unaltered by our present disagreements . I shall
  • be appo · i.·:1 ;J sistant solicitor ot th, Department •• , Job,~ is. being boomed: to • Bob O'Brien a& dirf SEC's Public Utilit vision ••• Burton Pal.i resign as executive ~ J basic cause of the .disaster, merely tervene. _Th;it, .no doub
  • in 1955 and return to his position as majority leader, then on to the vice presidency and then to the presidency would, he hoped, be encouraging to many people who also had coronary disease. And I'm sure it was, because not only Eisenhower but Johnson's
  • . However, he is embarrassed to approach either the President or Marvin about the matter and hopes that you would intercede in his behalf. : a-c«rnvi DEPARTMENT OF STATE On1cs ov THI: CH11:v OF PROTOCOL u)ff /~-;: 3 e,tJ /- 'I r°&/05-? July 5, 1966
  • has · the guest list in hand. We have a suggested toast which we will be sending to you through Bob Kintner- by the we ekend.). Mrs. McNamara is giving a luncheon for Mrs. Holt {Established custom is that the wife of a Prime Minister visiting
  • raised a question that has to be asked. Why would you not join the ADA? G: Because when I was here in those days, Bob Nathan, who was one of the founders, and I were working on an organization called the American Veterans' Committee-"citizens first
  • clung to that hope, and I clung to that hope for a long time, as my public statements will reveal. Even as late as 1966, I probably still thought there was a chance. And increasingly, I became more and more pessimistic and visited Vietnam in late
  • Connally and among the other stockholders were, and the active workers at the station, were Bob Phinney, now Director of Internal Revenue, and J. J. "Jake" Pickle, who is now Congressman from the lOth District, and Ed Syers who was later head of the famous
  • then in running for president? 0: No, I don't think that there was any . I suppose that his acceptance of the idea that a good voting record would be in his own best interest might reflect, you know, the hope . hope, but he had no expectation . I He probably
  • can still make it." Then I went to Lady Bird and she wasn't so sure that she wanted to do it. She still hoped but she also had this feeling that she didn't want him to leave Texas. She was terribly surrounded by the feeling of the Texans
  • and of the sort we hoped for. What he said, in effect, as I recall, was that there was no serious obstacle holding it up, that it was time, he agreed, to get on with the job. He would proceed to appoint a committee to begin the study of the problem. Well, that's
  • said, "lId like that job." And he told So we got busy and we got hold of Bob Jackson who was secretary--it was either Bob Jackson or Arthur Perry, I've forgotten which,that was secretary of Tom Connally; and then we got in touch with~retary
  • ACTION FrWay. NOYember 15. 19'8 7:15 p.m. Mr. Pre•ldeat: Herewith a •b.ortened for Bob Owbar1h'• ••r ■ lOD the letter w. w. WWRoatow:rln R.o•tow file. of NO¥ember 15, 1968 l --14 like te brlaa to JOU au.el• IN outat .... •I ... effect
  • recent reply to a Gaullist paper delivered at a European conference. As you know, I backgrounded, along with Bob Fleming, some 5 or 6 White House correspondents on your State Department appointments. W. W. Rostow WWRostow:rln . ,. September 21, 1966
  • . President: Mex:eza:n:e:rthe::m\fi-etwNa:m~i:terntw ~ iaro."'l"out;har&a:b-orn. I think that is the best way. Rather than make heavy weather of it 1 ]95u~~1-Fsf1:.Ra!·s:s men.:. -n~~ jo~ Bill Jorden and Colonel Bob Ginsburgh who worked with me on the Policy