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  • for the deanship. That is, he never tried to guide the development of the School--no, that's wrongly put; I think he did do that--but he did not try to press the committee to recommend anything about the structure, organization, functions. But he did press
  • FOBS launch sites. While it is difficult to associate numbers with such a system, DDR&E estimates this system will have 90% confidence against single launches and very high confidence against multiple launches. The system will be further augmented
  • of the Study I Commission of the Thre e Diseases as reported in the press . I I would greatly appr eciate receiving a copy of the complete text when . it becomes available. My high r egard for Dr . _Michael E . ;>eBakey and my own ex­ perience lead me
  • and the distinguished representatives of the press and other United Nations; UNESCO; Dr. Kurt Waldheim, Am­ Committee; prominent scien­ news media. RESOLUTION THE 7th INTERNATIONAL UFO CONGRESS UNANIMOUSLY STATES AND PROCLAIMS THAT UNIDENTIFIED FLYING OBJECTS - UFO's
  • INTERVIEWEES: VIRGINIA and WILTON WOODS INTERVIEWER: MICHAEL L. GILLETTE PLACE: The Woods' residence, Seguin, Texas Tape 1 of 1 G: Mr. Woods, let me ask you first of all about LBJls association with Maury Maverick during this period when he was secretary
  • Association with LBJ; Blanco County; Johnson family; college life; White Stars; student activities; Houston; Professor Greene; assistant to Kleberg; Maury Maverick; 1937 campaign; campaign advisers
  • the press conference here at the Manned Spacecraft Center we flew up to the Ranch and had a meeting with him at that time, and a very, very nice one as a matter of fact. It was sort of [an] informal meeting . We received our medals, that was Buzz Aldrin
  • in· long years of association with foreign policy c::.r-ic. il~ t:ei..--na tional rcla tions in and out of gov2:cn:-.~2nt > i~c~uding service as Coordinator of ·Inter-Am8rican - ,. . . . . 19 Lr 0 , ana tncrea~te~ , , ,.. " . At~airs starting
  • association with the President, as of December 1, 1966 you resigned as chairman of the Board of Regents. Was this an anticipation of an appointment? H: Yes. I knew then that-- F: That something was coming. H: It was just a question of the timing
  • USIA Carl T. Rowan, Director WHITE HOUSE George Reedy, Press Secretary to the President McGeorge Bundy, Special As sistant for National Secur ity Affairs Bill Moyers, Assistant to the Presi dent Jack Valenti, Special Assistant to the President Walter
  • . This invitation came from Mr. John Lord O'Brian, the General Counsel, who I had been associated with when he was Special Counsel for the Tennessee Valley Authority in it's constitutional litigation. Mr. O'Brian was, and still is, generally esteemed as one
  • communities. That meeting was an organizational meeting of mid-Western--I don't know what the exact name of it is, but in effect it was an association of citizens organizations involving the Model Cities Program. And Kincy Potter, my press person, had been
  • . Other Committee members include Associate Justice Thurgood Marshall, George R. Brown, Robert A. Good, Katharine Graham, Linda Howard, Arthur Krim, Mrs. Albert D. Lasker, Harry McPherson and Mark Ward. Dr. Lof will receive the Award in special luncheon
  • of newsmen wonder if r.c. will be open to questions following/before his speech to the '8,sne. dave l ~ . ' ... I ( t . I • ·t :ClarkAttacked BrRep.·Ga~dner By Unlled Press International 1 Rep. John Gardne~, R-N.C., to­ day accused Atty. Gen
  • Press
  • research exchanges with such material -- and that Peking's Foreign Language Press circulateo masses of it throughout the world in up to twenty languages. Some CIA estimates for 1964: Peking exported about 15 million books and unknown quantity of 17
  • File unit description: Contains notes, memorandums, letters, telegrams, press releases, press conference transcripts, biographies, resumes and reports related to operations of the Department of Justice during the administration of President Lyndon B
  • , that Israel will press for greater assistance than we have recommended. Given the basically sound state of the Israeli economy and the current limitations on our own resources, we do not favor giving any further on the economic side. With respect to military
  • easier to pull these things together. I'd like at this point to go back before I go on to the Delta or anything else [and] mention one subject which I think is very badly misunderstood and which gets a very bad play from the press because I don't think
  • to make Lyndon had called a press conference at five o'clock. At that meeting were Senator Wirtz, John Connally, Jesse Kellam, Claude Wild, and myself. meeting. I think that was all that were in that Lyndon started it off. The first thing he did, he
  • . Last November Professor Vincenzo Caglioti., the President of the National Research Council of Italy, and some of his associates visited Washington and a specific draft agreement was discussed. However, it was agreed that signing should be deferred until
  • . it caused trouble, as it should have. A stupid thing to do, and And while this was done at the campus level, it quickly got into the press and to the governor's office and the board of regents, and I was in the midst of that, including eliminating
  • would have made the same choice or not. F: That closed that conversation, didn't it? BH: Dick, in retrospect, thinking about that convention, you know we had gotten very bad press. There are simply not the facilities, unfor- tunately, in Atlantic
  • in pressing the Czechoslovak police and Czechoslovak Foreign Ministry £or informa­ tion regarding Mr. Jordan's whereabouts. The State Department is following this case very closely and has instructed our Embassy to report any additional info r mation
  • 1955. You had been at Brown University since 1946, rising from Assistant Professor to full Professor of History in 1951. In 1948 you became Associate Dean of the Graduate School, and in 1953 Dean of the College. K: I also was Dean of the Graduate
  • was among those that was persistent in pressing the case that this was a justifiable thing for his class, perhaps in civics, to do. At any rate, he let them go to this trial. G: Did they ever indicate what trial it was? R: No, I don't know. On another
  • to the press which finally killed it. before we had consulted the Germans. M: And this hurt him politically? Mc: Yes, it hurt him politically. M: What about Erhard? It was done It caught Schroeder by surprise. There were two meetings with Mr. Johnson
  • ? 0: Oh, it would come from any direction--internally generated or generated from the White House . into blocs . groups . It's hard to define . Let's see if we can break it One bloc of work was associated with some continuing interagency Probably
  • . For example, we don't advertise in the local press ; we don't buy spot commercials on rural television and radio stations . We do, however, believe that doing good work in a community is perhaps our best advertisement . Neighbor-to-neighbor, man-to-man
  • , Justice Black is not a chief justice; he's one of the associate justices. It's just as fascinating. I've been rather interested in the recent controversy on Justice [Abe] Fortas' appointment. So few people have realized that an associate justice has
  • of the press and of public opin­ ion. Probably the worst distortion is this picture of the President walled off by his advisers, his courtiers. Well, perhaps this could happen if a President were blind and deaf and lazy and a fool as well. I think it is fair
  • with President John F. ew York: Rugged Land Kennedv. Press). Mrs. Connally concluded by an­ nouncing that she was giving the original copy of her notes to the LBJ Library. A member of the audience asked if she disagreed with the Warren report, the government
  • during his c,u-eer; it was when Presid nt Johnson was pressing for support for the Highway Beauti­ fication Act, a favorite of Lady Bird Johnson's. 7 Photo by Charles Bogel to write more, eventually becoming a book. Although current times are simi­ lar
  • sorts of miscellaneous civic leaders, PTA [Parent Teacher Association], BNBW[?], Civil Defense, a cross section of the country, farmers' wives from Grand Prairie and Cedar Hill, the sort of people whom we hoped would be our supporters. We were trying
  • to be on the ballot for more than one office; Jefferson-Jackson Day dinners; Mrs. Johnson's ability to remember names; Hubert Humphrey's political defeat; the Women's National Press Club and May Craig; Mrs. Johnson's uncertainty regarding LBJ's rise in political
  • ." Well, that of course was indignantly reported and commented on by Pat's partisans in the press, and I'm sure it didn't please him very much, though I don't recall talking to him after that was [said]. I'm sure he didn't hang around for the whole thing
  • of the conference; the impact of the conference on related legislation; White House reception for conference organizers following the conference; the impact of the planning session on black leadership; press coverage of the conference; the relationship between
  • supervised elections, whatever that might mean; it surely doesn't mean everything that it implies. But [it means] at least certain supervision of the fairness of the elections. Nevertheless, most of the press interpreted the elections as another
  • Associate Director by prearrangement of the Florida Legislative Reference Bureau. I had a couple of years there. There was a link that's interesting in this Administration. One of the leading Senators of that time was Leroy Collins whom I worked
  • to Washington in behalf of some company business, in the interest of a company with which I was associated. I always had wanted to meet and get to know Lyndon Johnson, ever since 1941, when he had come so close to winning a special election against . . . F
  • . So the manufacturers were not in a very good position to be selling their bill of goods. They had some buyers, but the buyers were people who were sympathetic to them or closely associated with them. G: Were there segments of American industry
  • discussed. I think perhaps I ought to say, just to make this record complete, that back in September and October of 1965, Frank Keppel had discussed with me at some length the possibility of becoming the Associate Commissioner of LBJ Presidential Library
  • Profession Development Act; Fine Affair; Equal Education Opportunity Survey; HEW/Labor rivalry; U.S. Employment Service; Higher Education Amendments of 1968; Vocational Amendments of 1968; 1967 Title III proposals; National Education Association; major policy
  • , advised that on that date SMCChad called a press conference at Paschals' Brothers Restaurant on Hunter Street, in Atlanta, Georgia, for the purpose of announcing the results of the Central co-ittee election of SMCCofficers for 1967. During
  • within two weeks. This approach seems to be moving McVitty along. *I have requested copies of this; also, I am reviewing a similar non-scientific study made by the Associated Press as The study pur­ reported by the N.Y. Times on August 2, 1967. portedly