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  • their interest in the matter. m BOB FAISS . ..,, fs./jf - ­ ·=-=·16 ;;~;;;~1J~ THE WHITE HOUSE OFFICE ,• REf-ERrtAL o:::::A '?-- Director Burc~u of the Budget To1 f July 30, 1968 .· Doto: t· l t,. j . i
  • . Scholar~ It He was elected from a district in Houston where the labor unions and liberal elements elected him time after time. They now have Bob Eckhardt. M: Again, this is a question that is sensitive, and it's the kind of question that comes up
  • . C., 20036 393 • 7166 412 14 September 1964 EH zabeth Carpenter The White House Washington, D.C. Dear Liz: Enclosed :is a perfect your new Whistlestop caravan. Campaign song for Inasmuch as Linda Boggs is one of the wr1ters of the song, I hope
  • this. At that point in time there was general agreement that the first thing to do was to get the tax bill we had, pending the adjustment act, passed and out of Congress. Although Bob McNamara and David Ginsburg said if there was some way to quickly attach
  • that -- while you are still excited by the hope desalting offers -- you realize, after painstaking personal review of the subject, that there are many unresolved questions. ··- on Shazar is not the man to press Viet Nam, and larael has strong argument
  • in controlling terrorism· incidents such as that which occurred on March 18th cannot but arouse passions most destructive for common hopes for peace in the Middle East. I found your public statement of February 15th EE~~ courageous; but despite this statement
  • I hope will be a series of mutual moves toward peace. MEDAL OF HONOR May 1, 1968 There will come a day when the last American soldier will have stacked arms in Vietnam. The last sortie will have been flown. .The last ship will have sailed out
  • produc­ tion by next April. The ~ov­ ernment had hoped to increase agricultural production by about 30 percent through a program that included increased irrigation, a fivefold increase in fertilizer Background ~ltrJP· Approved Ft;, !Releaseli~09'-f
  • Hl RTY I N ORDEH T HAT HE WI LL CM;iPAIGil OFFICIALS HOPE FOR PEOPLEOMMt,YTP.IRTY. LOO}{GOOD., . THREEHUt)DRED THOUSAND ·Ht,S BEEN IDENTIFIED AS fJ. LEVISOi! SECRETCCM~UNISTPARTYME~SER.AS LATE AS ONf NINE SIX THREE ANDHAS ACTEDtS AMACVISCRTO
  • to roduca mtlltary 1113682). Pidll:JPina J/lSA- Col. CCJ".3tar,t(drart) • • i
  • of nounced that the Communist part y cil; conflict was now working to develop a the nunities; third party movement with "other won list of progressive forces ." He indica ted it, ,. .nges in that the Communist party has vir~ of t he tually given up ' hope
  • and a very important man, and as a freshman congressman I didn't want to get myself in a box where I would be--so I went over and visited with him, I never will forget, and explained to him at least my feeling that I would hope that we could work together
  • , once with Allan Shivers and Bob Anderson. J: Why? G: That's what I wondered. J: Was there a state convention or something? G: I don't think so. He went again with Horace Busby later. Remember anything about that? J: No. Probably [when he
  • remember Bob Brinkworth, the dispersing officer, [said], "Well, I wish he'd make up his mind what you're salary is going to be." day he could be very generous. staff. Because every He could be very abusive of his I may say this, I didn't quite get
  • did you overcome that? I: In part by bringing in a new personnel officer to head the personnel office. That's the most important step we took. M: And he had outside contacts then? I: He just knew how to operate. We also of course--Bob Wood
  • remained substantially the same, Remember this paint: This organization of the DEeD and its working party didn't get established until I guess it was 1961--it may even have been 1962. At that point in time Bob Roosa was undersecretary of the Treasury
  • Biographical information; Douglas Dillon; Jack Connor; Henry Fowler; restructuring international finances; Work Party Three; Bob Roosa; Group of Ten; Denis Rickett; Frank Figures; Khrister Wichman; Ottmar Emminger; Rinaldo Ossola; Frank Schiff
  • , but Harriman Brothers in there. living. I have a feeling he's not Only would be based on something I think someone told me many years ago. MG: Let's hope it's exaggerated. IG: Of course. MG: He went to Europe in May, 1945, at the close of the war
  • think that Lyndon grabbed the ball just for Lyndon's sake or politics. I think he had enough friends in the academic field and in the manufacturing field that they pointed out to him the importance of space. No other man except Bob Kerr worked as hard
  • [position]. Bob Novak, I guess, have you interviewed his wife? G: No, but I hope to. How about Bill Brammer? He was on the staff then, wasn't he? H: Yes. Bill and Nadine. G: Did you know Brammer was doing a novel at the time? H: No. G: You may
  • think it I think it was rather thinking that maybe he wouldn't be here, and then maybe he would have another enemy. G: Do you know if they tried to discourage him from running.? I think Dr. Bob Montgomery might have tried to influence him there. R
  • in the rural areas, the religious institutions, the churches, the schools, and just basically being a part of a community and knowing the community. G: Did you hope to reverse the out-migration from the rural areas and have people who were living in urban
  • with a certain prestige; and among these was the prestige with Dick Russell and leaders of the Senate. my senior Senator, was a very great friend of his. Bob Kerr, And other members of the Senate who had been a part of the Senate "establishment," shall we say
  • (Laughter) G: Johnson's version seems to have stressed Bob Kennedy's disappointment, how disappointed he was, reportedly, that-- O: Well, if Lyndon Johnson had called him in that day and the conversation went, "Bobby, you may be surprised, because we've
  • blacks that mostly supported Bob Taft. They'd go to Republican conventions hoping that if they jumped on the right bandwagon they might get some plums out of it. But Clements, as a Kentuckian, could understand that. Further­ more, he was probably--he
  • of the answer here is coordination within the executive branch to be relayed to the representative on the commission. And this is done very frequently through the Bureau of the Budget [BOB] or independently by the departments involved. At the same time, it must
  • . The military plane that we were most interested in was the C-5A that could move 750 fully equipped men, we hoped, when it was fully off the ground. I might say that became another issue, which we injected into the SST. When we started looking at it in 1964, we
  • : --a congressman. He said, “I've heard Daddy speak of you many times. He held you in great regard and valued your counsel and I hope I have the benefit of it.” Well, no one of consequence had ever said this to Mr. Talley in a long, long time. Just absolutely
  • and arranging to work for him in Texas; Faulk’s activities during the McCarthy period; Faulk emceeing Washington D.C. events; Sam Rayburn; Richard Nixon; O.P. “Bob” Bobbitt; a supposed lawsuit against Texas Broadcasting Corporation; dispute with LBJ regarding
  • interest and big push in those first years was the innovative tax cut of what he had hoped would be early 1963 and which ended up being 1964, as the date of its beginning. But he was certainly well geared up in his own thinking to the things to do after
  • ] McNamara. G: Perrin? VIas it Bob Perri.n? W: Yes. Bob Perrin. Bob Perrin. And following him. it was a very talented black fellow from an education background. G: Was it Lisle Carter? W: Lisle Carter. Lisle Carter. Exactly. Both of whom were
  • wrapped up what you wanted to do? G: We were charting and talking about what we thought the legal relationships were, what we hoped they would be, what we could do and couldn't. F: Did you leave feeling sort of confident? G: I thought, as far
  • . These traits have stayed completely as I knew him, if anything they've become more apparent. M: The same is true of things like goals, hopes so far as public--? L: Oh, yes, yes. In thinking about the chapter, it seemed to me that what I was trying to say
  • you're going to find that he wants you to come into the administration." I said, "I hope he doesn't ask me," because that couldn't fit into what I was doing at that time. But it was a hint that the President was taking a look at whether I could play
  • deal I recall, to do with land tenure, but I'm not sure enough really comment on it too had a of myself to that . While we're on the subject of Ed Lansdale, well, I consider him a very good friend, and I hope it's mutual . But, you know, back
  • . The ambassa­ dor there at that time was a man named Horace Smith, and he had a station chief named Henry Heckscher [?], and they disagreed very strongly . They both were very strong-minded men . I hope I have the details here right, but memory--I would
  • in those fields I hope is being covered somewhere in the historical record, if only one thinks 1 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library
  • Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] Johnson -- XXXVI -- 2 M: Absolutely. How about any of the people around him? Do you know that any of the people around him were pushing him or hoping that he would--that lightening would strike? J: I think
  • of Mary Rather's brother and sister-in-law and Rather's efforts to care for their children; Juanita Roberts; Oklahoma Senator Bob Kerr; LBJ's view about alcohol; Averell Harriman; Estes Kefauver and his speech in Waxahachie, Texas; Christmas Eve at LBJ's
  • by hum1111bl_•inl(l.\'ery much like our­ sch•es who hftvc landed spi•here on our earth, which thry plan to conquer m the nPar future. F.MPRO stands for "elcetro- Star Index . ETHELBROWN... Life Story of Col■•bus Girl Wrestler Hopeful i11tlle Wrestling
  • a.Dot.he~ speech in the record before the Senate closes dowa. Francis will be doing some backgrounding on recent con-atructive achievements in foreign ·p olicy; and so will I. W.W. R. I am additionally in!ormed that Bob Hardesty today 1s got three auch