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998 results
- behind this'? 11 --because thev look at the names and numbers. ~hev They see Max Brooks, Jill Heath, George Christian. see all these people that they can identifv of being somehow connected with President Johnson. ~ave ~ell, half the oeople
- ; office work under hair dryer; tea for friends; rest, office work and telephone calls; hair styled; Johnsons greet Trejos; LBJ gives humorous toast; new White House china; President Trejos' toast receives standing ovation; entertainment by Patricia Brooks
- . ~ ~ Photo1raphby Caine's Studios SUVA'STWISTEDMOUNTAINS Facing Suva across the harbour is a range of ru gged mountains -rising steeply from the beach. The strange attraction of these mountains was described by Rupert Brooke (Poems, with a Memoir) after his visit t
- didn't brook interference from OEO. The last year when I was his executive assistant, I can recall a call from [Joe] Califano to come over to the White House. He'd call us all over and say, "Goddamn you bureaucrats, I want a program for Chicago. Now
- the woman's name who was [division]. r,\J •• Marietta Brooks. L: No. G: Julia-- L: Yes. G: GY',ydon? L: Yes, she was the he i} d k no ck e r . G: Was Claude Wild active in that? L: No. G: I see. L: Oh, he was the power behind the throne
- Brooks But a lot of time it would be people that everybody wouldn't know. It would be just friends that would come in and go hunting with him, and sometimes it would be some of his staff that he would take hunting. G: Now let me ask you this. 0
- --is it Brooke Hospital? hospital. Anyway, the hospital in San Antonio which is an Army They had the only machine that could possibly save that child. Well, I couldn't get hold of Clark so I made the arrangements for the child to be cared for and the child
- never have lived under Johnson's leadership. He wouldn't stand for any downtown group stepping into the United States Senate and taking away the prerogatives of committee work, which is being done today by the Brookings Institute, as one unit; the Peace
- guideposts discussion, but later on Kermit Gordon and I, interrogated by Joe Pechman, did that at Brookings, and that became available for the Kennedy Library. On that earlier tape--we have the transcripts--but I understand of the LBJ Presidential Library
- , they were able to pretty well snow under Shivers in the 1956 Convention, and, of course, then they fell apart. PB: At the Convention itself! SL: At the Convention itself! And it became a real donny- brook, but at that time there was reestablished
Oral history transcript, Margaret Mayer Ward, interview 1 (I), 3/10/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- covering the Stevenson campaign, I believe Weldon. Brooks, but I think more likely it was Weldon. Maybe Raymond LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More
- now at Brookings, was one of them--a group of men who came together and had what I would call germinal ideas and fed them in. Out of those ideas came these various proposals. the Department of Justice attended meetings of that nature. Schlei of I
- to EDA and related to some other things. So that was the first and only time I met Schultze, in the fall of 1964. I finally decided to turn it down. left to go to Brookings. Time went on then, and Schultze Then Kermit Gordon left, and Schultze came
- to replace Bator, and he's up at Brookings now, handled these, and we didn't get into it. M: Would this include also balance of payments? Z: Balance of payments we got involved in to the extent that there were LBJ Presidential Library http
- of the dietitians from either the Bethesda Naval Hospital when he was president or, after he was out, Brookes [Army Hospital] or wherever we'd--you know, sometimes Dr. [James] Cain or sometimes Dr. [Willis] Hurst would tell him what type of food that they thought he
- this same old bunch, Marietta Brooks and Julia Bryson down running the .office; we had Charlie Herring, later our state· ·senator, and Don Thomas, he1ping on this helicopter; Sam Plyler and Dorothy Plyler, Willie Day Taylor, Mack DeGeurin were all involved
- Garthoff, who is now over at the Brookings Institution, but who had a State Department arms control career in between. Howard Stoertz was also in the Office of National Estimates at the time. G: Does the name J. J. Hagerty ring any bells? An army
- always have a cabinet officer or two, for example, Doug Dillon or Henry Fowler, or maybe both of them . He also had the economic advisers . What's the name of the fellow who's now the head of Brookings--Gordon? F: Kermit Gordon . B: Kermit Gordon
- the authority to lift it. Eisenhower said he wanted it lifted, and finally Rayburn sent me around to talk to a few people. I talked to Brookings and all these other guys, and I came back and I said, "You know, it doesn't make any sense. After all, we've got
- ; veto power and overrides; creation of the National Advisory Council; Perrin’s duties as deputy director of OEO; Senator Morse; involvement of BOB funding; political red tape; GAO investigations; Nathan Report from Brookings and its effect on efforts
Folder, "Whistle Stop [6 of 6]," Liz Carpenter Subject Files, White House Social Files, Box 11
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- .............. ••••. PASS QUANTICO, VA •••• •• •••• •• ••• • ••• •. PASS "WIDE WATER, VA•••••••••••••••••• PASS BROOKE, VA.•••••••• ....... ••.•• ••• PASS DAHLGREN JCT., VA 111 .... •• ••• •••••. AR. FREDERICKSBURG& V~. • •• • • • •• •. • • ..... o
- Albert Thomas, Congressman Henry Gonzalez, Congressman Jack Brooks and myself. There were only one or two others in the entire South, and that was, I believe, Claude Pepper from Florida, and Charles Weltner of Georgia. And one other man from Tennessee
- we have Brooks Assist{lnt - SAIOON the from in Saigon. Ir! Enclosure received for TELEGRAM Hays Secretary No. 1820 '" iii Q ii iii Ii_ (UNCLASSIFIED WHEN SECRET ATTACHMENT REMOVED) Department INCOMING TELEGRAM 34-H of State- ~[GRET
- career. He's an expert on bureaucracy and upper managerial bureaucracy, written some books on it. I think Brookings published one of them. Corson was the deputy to Aubrey Williams. But anyhow, Jack He told me this story which I didn't write down
- kind of an appreciation dinner for old Jack Brooks, Congressman Brooks, and from Beaumont we were to go to the Lockheed LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781
- . There were some congressmen who didn't see eye to eye with Stewart Udall, who was a former congressman, and for those that were in the Texas delegation, like Jack Brooks, who was a � � � � � � LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 82: June 13‑19, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 36
(Item)
- opportunities. It is noteworthy, in recent elections, that many Jews found it possible to identify themselves with Republicans like Romney, Percy, Shaffer of Pennsylvania, Rockefeller of New York and Brooke in Massachusetts. All of these men received some Jewish