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  • at [the] State [Department]? RG: At the time that I was a student at the National War College, General Burchinal, Dave [David] Burchinal, who was at that time the deputy chief of staff for plans, programs, and operations of the air force, picked me to go
  • BY THE INCONSISTENCY.· OF ·' SEEKING ENTRY INTO TiiE -· cot1MON MARKET' At ·:·THE'. SANE TIME THEY WERE THREATENING !O ~ITHDRAW TROOPS FROt1 THE: 'CONTINENT• THE · uK WOULD THEREFORE .. LIKE IO ARRIVE AT A SITUATION WHER~ THE GAP WOULD &E COVERED ..so THEY WOULD Nor
  • because of the press of work that is piling up in the Budget session, State of the Union Message, and your legislative program. 4. At the same time, I think it may well be in our interests to have Wilson here in December, both to make sure their defense
  • that. Aime Forand had introduced the bill. He was not the ranking Democrat to me, but well up toward the top of the [Ways and Means] Committee. The only people for it were labor unions, and he was the only one on the committee, apparently
  • this will be interesting down the line. C: Joe, there were forty trips covering what we estimated at the end of the time two hundred thousand miles. F: First of all, you had no precedent for this, did you? C: No, only that Mrs. Roosevelt had gone and seen coal
  • it on. He was not confirmed by the Senate, and Secretary Connor wanted to have some people of his own choosing. He offered the job to me, and I thought about it for a relatively short period of time and said ''Yes.'' It was a job which encompassed many
  • a little bit about yourself. I know that you were a policewoman here in Washington at one time. Just what does that involve? H: I dealt largely with delinquent children and delinquent girls. I did patrol the dance halls, Union Terminal, and some
  • of this time--from 1950 to 1965--you were assigned to the Washington Bureau. and covered both Washington congressional and political moves and then the last seven years of this, as military correspondent for the Cleveland plai:l Dealer. In 1965 you first came
  • on two or three months to finish up some work I was doing and then came to the Urban Coalition. I donate my services here on a part-time basis. M: You are, of course, with the Texas nativity. in connection with Mr. Johnson is cronyism. The obvious
  • there la capabWtle• lncrea■• aad tho•• of our alllea; oa the baala of tM Jad1ment of lleld commander•, that tbe enemy'• of all the evidence the ba•l• boasbllla halt at tide time woald aub•tutlally capabWtl••• elldanpr carry the burden" SUBSTITUTE
  • was elected. So I became very interested in politics at that time, running my own race. M: What year were you elected? B: I was elected in--well, let me see, 1938. I was elected the year Bill Boyd was born. I spent a great deal of time studying
  • this the approach is not likely leaders At the same time, security needs, to deter an Indian nuclear weapons program indefinitely. 4. Possibility of a "Peaceful" Explosion. other· immediate issue worth noting at this S~&IMITED ... There is one time
  • ARCHIVES PROCESSING NOTE You will find two versions of the document withdrawal sheets in this file. The original document withdrawal sheets were completed in the 1970s and early 1980s. Since that time, many of the documents have been declassified
  • unions a change in the qualifications for recruitment. For the first time we would permit some college training in lieu of time as an apprenticeship representative with a building trade~ union. Christ! I went to meetings of the AFL-CIO, I went up
  • " as they call it at those magazines, doing every department where someone else were unavailable, sick or on vacation . BA : What was the name of the book? BE : Time and a Ticket , it was called . BA : You may be too modest to mention this, but are you
  • Biographical information; TIME & A TICKET; LBJ's remarks regarding Vietnam; LBJ's reading and general knowledge; speech writing and the staff; "cussers/doubters/nervous-nellies;" consumer interest information; speech schedule put out on Fridays
  • very vividly because it's so belied by what has happened, even in recent days of the birth of Lynda Bird's daughter. It amuses me that--the girls are big and I remember the time he told us, when Lynda was about five, how he took her to Neiman-Marcus
  • ; problems with Interior Department; shift to Civil Division; Pure and Union Oil; critical of Ramsey Clark as Attorney General; LBJ’s difficulties with Establishment press; missile/satellite program investigation; LBJ’s neglect of functions as leader
  • and Eleanor Roosevelt at the convention in an attempt to swing the convention with the enthusiasm of the moment. However, the efforts we had expended over that long period of time stood us in good stead because, again, there was no erosion. So when the actual
  • Virginia primary and what JFK learned from it; the JFK/Nixon debates; JFK's handling of the Bay of Pigs incident; O'Brien meeting with each cabinet member to review roles in the Kennedy Administration; JFK's and O'Brien's time spent learning their roles
  • for the first time all the elements of the organization aremovingdownthe same road together. I think also the actionsthathave been taken by the United States during the past year have given new heart to the Vietnamese, in spite of theiViet Congsuccesses. Up
  • . M: Still 1963, right? R: The President invited me over to a meeting to discuss the outlines of his first State of the Union message. Somewhere I have some penciled notes of that meeting, but there must be better notes at that time. Walter
  • First impressions of LBJ; JFK and LBJ; JFK and the White House staff; LBJ as VP; LBJ on foreign aid; LBJ Berlin speech, 1961; LBJ on foreign policy pre-presidency; LBJ’s first State of the Union message; Vietnam; CIAP; Latin America; White House
  • -2 a distinguished array f leaders from board room and bureaucracy, congressional committee, campus and union hall. (See box on page 2 for par­ ticipants.) The two-day conference was jointly sponsored by the Library, the LBJ School of Public Affairs
  • interest in associating the White House with the signature of this agreement. In view of the fact that this ma.y be the first of a number of similar agreements to be signed. with other countries, and the current dem.ands on your time, I recommend
  • , significance and procedures to the Soviet or improving a nuclear there it is assumed that no paper, items to the Sino·-Soviet control inimical states particular Bloc. regarding This policy is one of Union,. Communist Chinat or other which would
  • WV WHITE HOUS E Dat DENT LYNDO N B . JOHNSO N e Oc Time Telephon 1 In Ou tL e fort Activit oL r say s th e Presiden t retire d 12:23a t Lt 4:41a t Chie 4:42a t Situatio 4: 54a f 5:00a _ y (includ e visite d by ) D 12:00midnight
  • agreement get that, that if we got it And that prior to that to be the most important point to the South Vietnamese. our election. circumstances time, that of comment on the timing at all, since right without a bit came to. on the advice
  • ] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Califano -- VIII -- 3 August 17. It was bigger than the steel union settlements in aluminum and in cans and it busted the 3.2 per cent wage-price guideline. At that point
  • not discussed it because it was a matter of such vast importance and still is a matter that's of tremendous importance and is very much before the public and before the Congress at this time . That [matter] deals with the deregulation of natural gas
  • going to do, you're going to-- M: Be as expansive as you feel like being because the more you add, the better the interview is. So don't, when we've got plenty of tapes and, I think, plenty of time. So, okay, we begin with then on the third
  • States at the present time might prevent needless bloodshed in the future. SEGR:e:P­ GROUP1 Excluded from automatic downgrading and declassification DEC SIF!ED E.O. 129Jd, Sec. 3.6 NLJ O -..l3 B~ NARA,Date~! '-,--;DEC22 PM 5 33 MARTINLUTHERKING
  • ARCHIVES PROCESSING NOTE You will fmd two versions of the document withdrawal sheets in this file. The original document withdrawal sheets were completed in the 1970s and early 1980s. Since that time, many of the documents have been declassified
  • about -·--·--the·-PaTiHnegotiations and ·connnunications between the U.S. and the Soviet Union. • Tcherniakov, his DMC, knows half the story. No oni~rn the Embassy has th-e knowledge to speak with any authority 011 what is happening about Vietnam. When I
  • that scmetime we'd come in the back way through the alley and use a freight elevator to get up in the offices because the bill collectors were waiting for us, particularly Western Union and the printers. time. They were there all the And here was Mr. Marsh
  • that 1 am deeply concerned that this aid be forthcoming in sufficient and timely fashion. However, as I said in my recent State of the Union message, I am convinced that this problem is a responsibility of the international community, and will have
  • , discussed, Vietr:.ar~ese US sense has the polit~cs has been Vietna..~ese bad course of cor:.cerning There right deat:~ policy t.11at "we we:1t once or to whol:.7 time brackish." were the in Vietnai.~ese of a South South broad long
  • sketch your background, education? H: Ny home town All the time. "laS Mi nera 1 We 11 s. But when I got into NY A I had been in Lubbock, going to school at Texas Tech and had finished out there and was out looking for something to do right
  • together? You gave me what I was looking for. I was trying to think at that time, did Lyndon Johnson already evidence the ambition and the drive and the motivation that has characterized his whole career, and you think he did? L: I think he has ever
  • , Levison told a CPUSA functionary that King was concerned about a "communist label" being "pinned on us" but that, at the same time, be wanted to do everything possible to evidence friendship toward the Soviet Union. Moreover, King has been described within
  • this, what are blacks going to say out here, what are black leaders going to do, will they see through it as transparent b.s.? I had that problem all the time. I had no other job, really, than making sure that the politics was right because we were
  • . G: The New York Times piece by Bob Semple, why don't you give the background of that, because we never discussed that on tape. C: At some point in 1966, Semple, I think with prompting from Max Frankel, came to me and said, "We'd like to follow
  • ~ Ascension) by June 1966 without serious degradation to scheduled programs • .. (See details below in 'a ction on paragraph 4 of NSAM 295). Timing of !CJ Judgment on South West Africa The best current prediction is that the !CJ, now in sunnner recess