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2069 results
- 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
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 4 (IV), 5/21/1982, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , 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
Oral history transcript, Joseph L. Rauh, Jr., interview 1 (I), 7/30/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- 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
Oral history transcript, Donald S. Thomas, interview 4 (IV), 3/23/1987, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- 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
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 25, April 1-15, 1967 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 15
(Item)
- 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
Oral history transcript, Adam Yarmolinsky, interview 2 (II), 10/21/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- 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
Oral history transcript, Adrian S. Fisher, interview 1 (I), 10/31/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- 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
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 69: Mar. 25‑31, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 31
(Item)
- ·:.._·:~--~· :/ . .-· ~.... , · · ~.-,< -:·,:· .,:...\;':-,.-,,_, :•,.·~.~- ·:. _·_ . .. _.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