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  • Honduras problem, but might require time to make arrangements. (7) Concerning proposed US-WI consultations before December 16, he would be unwilling to participate until he received US commitment. To do otherwise, would make him po_litically vulnerable
  • , Oregon. 4/11 LBJ surveys labor supply in Portland shipbuilding industry. 4/13 LBJ meets with NYA personnel re: war work centers, leaves Portland via Union Pacific. 4/15 LBJ arrives in Denver, Colorado, meets with Orren Lull, Colorado NYA director
  • is expanding rapidly must cop.e day-by-day with of reasons over a period concern >~ATO context, to U.S. purpo·;e that of Greece, of time have been national through and role has largely the focus of particular Nevert:ieless, these being
  • , considerations of geography and seniority. I think that Russell was a little con­ cerned that McFarland wouldn't work hard enough at the job. McFarland, I don't precisely know what it was, but he seemed to be having some personal problems at the time
  • are allowing the almost wholly goverr...rnent-controlled media to feed the growing anti-US and pro-Chicom sen.thnent in Pakistan. Oux Embassy and USIA report' US prestige is at an all-time low. The risk here is that Ayub may paint himself into a corner
  • and wanting some help. We usually tried to get up ahead of time what sort of American involvement there was in a country, if there was any at all--if so, what was it, what type of aid was the US giving them, and the monetary levels, and that sort of thing
  • for a year and was here every Friday. But full-time I'm very new, beginning around the middle of April. M: When did your first contact with Mr. Johnson take place, back when you worked for the Senate Armed Services Committee in the late 1940s? H
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh October 10, 1968 B: All right, sir, if we may start here, when did you first get acquainted with Mr. Johnson? H: I met Mr. Johnson some time in the forties. assignments--OPA, Agriculture, other things. I was in Washington
  • ) INTERVIEWER: PAIGE MULHOLLAN July 20, 1971 M: I can refresh your memory fairly quickly, I think. I've talked to Mr. Baker, and he's quite sorry that he was not able to come back this time because he enjoyed meeting you before. You all had finished talking
  • particularly, as far as the national administrations have been concerned, with the Americans for Democratic Action and the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, and UAWand other labor organizations at various times. R: You did that better than I could, so
  • of unity. ~tever we do from this point :must ma.ke allowance for the insane, the excessively stupid. and the superstitious . We may have to admit here that our unity must be confined to the mass _movemant in health of' the human race through time
  • where press (Press room located in Rm. Union facilities available.) time and rest. MORE ( * Sam Aldrich, Chairman of the Hudson River Commission will give an historic introduction to the river.) - 5: 15 p. m. Press 6:30 p. m. Candlelight tour
  • leader of the Union armies who wenl on to become the country'.- 18th President, the exhibit opened in January and will run through May 4. The exhibit is jointl_ ·rxmsored with the National Portrait Ga lcry in Wa.hingt D.C .. when~ it \\JS sho,\.n
  • of alien influences. American labor unions, to their great credit, have stood resolutely against the incur­ sions and influence of communism s,ince World War II. At the same time, American business has played a part much larger than it receives credit
  • known then-Senator Johnson, he called upon me from time to time to advise him with respect to matters, frequently dealing with civil rights, which was not a particular expertise of mine except that I had worked on the restrictive covenant case which had
  • ; LBJ as President; Vietnam War; LBJ and credibility; Nixon Administration; civil rights leaders and the Vietnam War; LBJ and education; various Presidents’ support of civil rights; LBJ’s early position on civil rights; LBJ’s 1965 State of the Union
  • time talking to the then-Director of the Bureau of the Budget, Charlie Schultze, to find out a little bit about what I would be required to do. 1 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library
  • of the Budget; the privilege of working hard for a president; keeping ideas fresh and balanced over time; LBJ's strengths, especially in communication and helping people.
  • the following statement. ·r arrived in Corpus Christi, Texas on Friday~ January 1949 at 4: 25 p . m. at which time I immediately went to see Mr. Peter Dunne of the Dunne Funeral Home who is a director in the Texas Funeral Association. During the course of our
  • will stretch the time. Thanks for giving us the whole picture. I am .· not sure the American people are as aware of the security pacts the North Koreans have with the Soviet Union and with the Chinese as I am. Congressman Boggs: I agree with what
  • ://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Palmer -- II -- 3 And so, on that ground, they were very sound, but the timing
  • &ad tlae oezt time I ••• .Qa,rlie. -.:ac....... , l 11dll pre·•••· ,ldm for lai• l'•e·Jobuler. Slac•rely, Joaepla A. C&Ufaao, Jr. Special Aaa.lataat to t,l:le Pre,aideat J ,I' • ) TheBrookingsInstitution 1.775 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE.N.W
  • now become Pre•ident, and I remember that Congr•••m&n Thoma• •aid: "We are ready to carry out any order• you have, Mr. Pre•ident." Thh wa• the fir.t time I had heard him addre••ed a.• "Mr. Pre•ident." It ••emed to me that there wa• a change in th
  • . m. Mr. Pre•lcleat: Sec. R•■k ■aw !:baa till ■ aftenu,oa. Eban levelln, for tile flrat time, with reapect to tlae laraell-Joz.laalaa prwate eacllaas••• Sec. Ra.It aaW tbat lie felt lt to IHt aa "lloaeat •-~•••· " On the •••twe, •• talke4 &boat
  • Members on Commerce of the Federal of Transportation. of Congress have offered bills to create ' the Department. Private same recommendation citizens, experts in the field, havo mado tho to me. Now it is time to act on these recommendations
  • station, and he just delayed and delayed and delayed because of his perception that entry into this business at that time--and this is at a much later date than when we went into KTBC--was still fraught with so much peril that he would move his tower
  • llf him A scnil1r offo:ial of the .Johnson adrrnn1,tration someone in h1 White Haus~. satd tu me rec ntly that by the time John.on c..ime lll office his predecessors had created such a myt or inv1m:1blc communism that Johnson and his adviser-. could
  • to better terms with the S0"1-et Union. But there is a feeling that somehow we were going ahead on ou~ own without them. I think an extra investment in time and effort toward the Germans is well worthwhile. If it is made, I am sure that this nation a.n.d her
  • in the legislature of Texas, owned my people in slavery time. I understand that he came from Attica, New York into Texas be- fore the Civil War. able to say. Where my people came from I don't know, I'm not But I do know that my grandfather Mr. Shoemaker
  • to the peninsular campaign in Napoleon's time down through Ireland down through Philippines, Malaya, et cetera. We also had Lucian Pye, who had gone out and interviewed a number of the guerrillas captured in Malaya and wrote an extraordinarily perceptive book based
  • be useful to record it. But it would be just as useful to record how you felt about it if you were aware of it at the time. J: Well, yes, didn't take it seriously, didn't encourage it. I personally think he was scared to death of such a prospect
  • The prospect in 1955 of LBJ being a candidate for the presidency; Amon Carter and LBJ's relationship with Carter; John Henry Faulk; LBJ's 1955 heart attack; humorous story regarding suits a tailor was making for LBJ at the time of his heart attack
  • more serious, it occupied more of the personal time of higher officials of the Executive Branch and the President; so I would not characterize the support by any President as different in quality. I simply think that, as the problems became more
  • of a nighttime basis. I'd go to work on the poverty task force stuff when I left the Pentagon at seven or eight o'clock at night, and then after a bit of that I shifted to full-time as Shriver's deputy. G: In his phone conversation with you did Shriver
  • be m S.,tomber 1967 and. e,c:,~11:>l•HI ·w ltb the Clmminl ~ fer c.eremoay-. TJ10 time framework y«. nie.ntl.,_4 1• the .Amistacl Dam C0-1'J.V41!B&ti~ . ,. March er Ap.-11196'1 ~- :ould ·a ot be c:ea,re-al•llt I.or the added reason that tb:e Summit
  • American exporters _show their wares, arrangements will exist for export credit at the time an order is plac i d· 2. There was again discussion of the Korean steel mill project involving ~oppers Co. This'is the project which Secretary Smith disucussed
  • and flag vessels and air­ craft were not permitted to enter the Trust Territory without the per­ mission of the Navy. At that time, the President directed that only applications for entry of aliens and foreign flag ships and aircraft may be vetoed
  • a couple of weeks leave to come back to the States really to see what I was going to do when I got out of the army. I was thinking of teaching at the Harvard Law School at the time, but I had another errand to do. One of my fellow technical advisers
  • . You'll recall that one of the things that committee staff worked very hard on, and I spent a gre~t deal of · time on, was the investigation that was conducted jointly by the Senate Armed Services Corrmittee and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
  • grade at Tandy School in Fort Worth, Texas, and I must also confess that in the fifth grade I wasn't ready for all of it, but it made me very early in life aware of the Daniels. And so from the time you emerged, then--I suppose I'm a small generation
  • on this problem wi ll be presented in a paper for circulation to the Council. ...... The President: On our recent Europ ean trip we spent a great deal of time on this problem and we wi ll continue to do so. However , it is doubtful that acceptable solutions
  • to the next. Reedy had previously written a memo saying that without some concessions, Senate rules would probably be drastically rewritten at the beginning to the next session of Congress. 1/10 Eisenhower delivers the State of the Union Message to a joint
  • ·:.._·:~--~· :/ . .-· ~.... , · · ~.-,< -:·,:· .,:...\;':-,.-,,_, :•,.·~.~- ·:. _·_ . .. _.i:- -·•. ·.!_ · · ..: · . · . • ,:_·.- · -· ) ''.\, .?,/\ •,./ •·. :·__ . ~-. .:H -~,,_-i ~. ~-\·: : :- ._._ · -.'.- ~-\··~;: . • THE '· ACTION WHICH WE HAVE .i IN MIND :WOl.'1.D FOLLOV 'A TIME . TABLE ,· __,· ,i STARTING At .7AM B.s.T