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3217 results
- the development of the Algerian Govern ment's attitude towards us closely and we find some grounds for hope. The Boumediene regime seems slowly to be sorting itself out. Respon sible government officials, including the President, have assured us repeatedly
- -chairman for the Mend.e s inaupra.1 m.ight be the Chief Justice or the· Attor.ney General. President Mendez has been the Dean of the Law School of Ouatemala's National 'University. w.w.a. cc: Bill Moyers Bob Kiatner ,.~ DECLASSIFIED - ." :,➔ E.0. 12356
Oral history transcript, William S. Livingston, interview 2 (II), 7/19/1971, by David G. McComb
(Item)
- , were Pat Blair in the Business School; Millard Ruud in the Law School; Jack Otis, the dean of Social Work; Steve McDonald in Economics; Bob Divine in History; Emmette Redford in Government; and myself. So. . . . M: Any significance in the discipline
- , Ralph Huitt, Charles Schultze, Bob Wood, David Truman, Gardner Ackley, David Bell, and Willard Wirtz; Frank Erwin’s suggestions: Otis Singletary, Dean Rusk, and Eric Goldman; specifications that candidates be academically respectable, have government
- were, as I look back now, quite ungracious in many of the things they did to him. M: The Kennedy people, not the Kennedys? s: Not Jack Kennedy, but the others. Bob Kennedy and Ethel--oh, they used to--God, I was one of the original Hickory Hill
- it to find Bob Knudsen, Mrs. Johnson's photographer, with two suitcases in hand. I asked, "Bob, what are you doing here?" He said, "Liz sent me over. sa~d, She wants me to chaperone you." "But," I said, "we're already chaperoned." "Well," he said, "she
- report." , Given the Senator's action, Bob Wood and I recommend that you release the President's statement Saturday with a Sunday release da~. In addition, Bob and I propose to hold a joint press conference on Thursday or Friday to background the Kaiser
- it was not, I hope, a narrow-minded political affiliation. When I was on these committees, they were inevitably bipartisan committees and had been sure that that would be so. About that time I was also serving with some State Department committees in a couple
Oral history transcript, Lawrence F. O'Brien, interview 4 (IV), 12/4/1985, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- serious question on the part of some members of the administration regarding any movement of this extent. I hope I'm not recalling this in the context of some other activity. But I think there was an up-front State Department concern. My recollection
- . Sallftclera Enc. Cy Joint Resolution, 3/7 /66 ~ch 28, 1966 MEMO FOil DOB.OTH1' JACOBSON Bob Kamer aeat the attached letter to S.cntuy Freemaa. Now here la all_i~.,..J the bacJm.p material .Dr. Ewell ••t to fiiiL You can mab better uae ol lt th .. we
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 94: Sept. 12‑18, 1968 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 39
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- •tH ■hip Council and as Special Aasi1tant to the Secretary of Stat•, to be effective, I would hope, not later than tbe ead of thia month. My rea1ons are entirely per• sonal, which I am sure you will undentand. Hr. Pre1ident, it baa been a great honor
- were there with some other friends of the President. I remember specifically Jay Smith was there--he used to be an Austin automobile dealer--and old Bob Present, who is the chairman of the LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL
- bogged down in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee . State tells me that the Florida Congressional Delegat ion says that the President has indicated his support for the bill. Commerce and BOB have b een negative . State has taken an e quivocal position
- on the achievement of greater intergovernmental and interagency cooperation in solving critical urban problems. We hope that through discussion and meetings with top Washington officials, the Board Chair men will return to their cities with new insights
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 77: May 15‑19, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 34
(Item)
- Australian to schedule meeting with Nort.~ Korean contacts and carry out co\lrse of action set forth in pa:-a fou:- of :-e:fe:-ence telegram. Meeting should be' held as soon as possible and in any event before next Pan.-rnunjom meeting which we hope to call
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 104: Nov. 5‑8, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 42
(Item)
- ; \.'K{,PONS OUT 0F··1·m~ HN~llS o:-· A Nt.~ST:..Ii• •• A Cl~SlEO. c ./',NJ) M!-'NY OTt:E!{S -- 'iir!:N "fill::.r:E c~:-: B;:: LI'f1Lr: HOPE 1-'0B oun FUTUf:E IN 'fiiIS \•:ORLD., • • I f..J..SO'hi=LI-EVl:. 'lHP.°f WE i.1:UST HAVE 'frlD}:xx Trir.":° COU
- company of the elite fraternity seems to have sprung a leak. Can i t be that Bob Persons has smeared the thing all over Indiana, plastering that eminent state Ni th his gross r.rl.sinterpretations of the order ' s ideals? Maybe you had better get in touch
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 68: Mar. 19‑24, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 31
(Item)
- with the practical tasks of moving from where they are now to a point where troops have been withdrao11. and there is a viabl~ political life in which all can participate, With the hope that it may moce the world one step closer to peace, it has been decided
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 84: June 26‑28, 1968 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 36
(Item)
- ) outline ■ ih content ■. You will recall President Bourguiba'e underata.Dding of our ■hortage of fund• but his hope that we would help a ■ much as pos ■ible. Three years ago, we laid out a $25 million program over five years de ■ igned to do no more than
- . Resume saa IBeeting at 2:45pm BALL: \Ye can't win. Long protracted • 'fhe most we cnn hope for is messy conclusion. There remainR a great danger of intrusion by Chicorns. Problem of long war in US: l. ·Kot'ean experience waB gal 1 i.ng one
Oral history transcript, William H. Jordan, Jr., interview 1 (I), 12/5/1974, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- didn't seek to avoid confrontations. with Bob Kerr. It was no Marquis of Queensberry Bob Kerr was solid. I don't know how you used to hire a combatant in the olden days in a war. Senator Kerr was certainly not for hire, but if you identified
- [in which] [Averell] Harriman and [Roger] Hilsman are accused of having conducted an end run around the administration, instructing Lodge that "If you can't separate him from Nhu, I guess there's no hope for it." And of course everybody knew that you
Oral history transcript, Robert E. Waldron, interview 1 (I), 1/28/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , 1976 INTERVIEWEE: BOB WALDRON INTERVIEWER: MICHAEL L. GILLETTE PLACE: Mr. Waldron's residence, Washington, D.C. D.C~ Tape 1 of 2 G: You're from East Texas. Beaumont, is that right? W: No, Arp. G: That's right, that's W: A-R-P, in East
- and hope, I amgratifiedto beZat:etc report to the worlda significantagreement-- an agreeme-t.I :iave andan~-.cunce activelysoughtandworkedfor since January1~64: Agreementhasbeenreachedbetween the Governments of !ne Unionof SovietSocialistRepublicsandthe
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 58: Jan. 25‑31, 1968 [2 of 3]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 28
(Item)
- . perlodlcallr. He draw the loa•t atteatloa. ha ■ a.1a,..r•• ca&fldwe alld would la Ccwer Ollffr'• &Neace. •• have dlaca••od thb matter wllla Bob Sayre. He beU.ve• that Gallaper would be the lMttar of tile twit. VI. W. B.oatow Prefer Berle Prefer Qallaper
- everywhere and anywhere. A nd they breed more rats. That's w hy when our congressmen vote against getting rid of rats, they' re votin g against all of us. Not just the poor people. But all of us. Fortunately, there's still hope. The vote was 20 7 to 176
- ~ parties to the conflict. Time and time again, Communist leaders in Red China and Vietnam have made it clear what they hope to accomplish in southeast Asie.. I would note, for ex ample, the recent statement of the Chi nese Defense Minister. He said
Oral history transcript, Melville Bell Grosvenor, interview 1 (I), 4/28/1969, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- followed it through? G: I don't know whether it was Stew Udall--he looked down on statues and wanted to get rid of them, you know. But I'd always thought that was a natural place for it and I still think so and hope eventually that it will come back
- : We split the vote . F: Did you have much hope that you could get a nomination? B: That's a battle that we fought, from the southern states, convention after convention . We hoped that because of Lyndon Johnson's national posture, and because
- . It was a comfortable and successful trip, and the Vice President commenting to me at that time, said II~lajor, that was a nice trip. Hope to see you again soon." I thanked him and went on back to Washington. M: You didn't realize how prophetic that was. C: I had
- of these centers in operation in Houston a couple of months later just as it was beginning to open, and found that, at least in prospect, the idea was working out as well as I had hoped it would. I think there are several morals to this; to me there were 5 LBJ
- ~siclentialappointee and secure thei1· alone could not solve social problems. In agreement to two conditions of appoint earl I mnnhood. yndon 8. Johnson had a ment: "One, to retire no later than age sev burden that became a vijon of hope for ev enty, so a. to make
- into the women's division and what it did and how it operated. J: Marietta Brooks was chairman. Mrs. Bob Long may have been vice chairman, at least she had an important role. She was always president of some woman's civic club. There was an elderly lady of very
- the hope that our journey to West Germany and West Berlin would prove to be a mission for peace that would remove anxieties between friends and strengthen the securities for freedom. It was in that spirit that our mission was undertaken
- histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 6 M: Did he discuss with you his hopes for the city government? F: Oh yes. He many many times discussed the hopes at the first meeting that I had on the 24th, discussed them again when we were
- Appointment as Deputy Mayor; LBJ's hopes for city government; work with D.C. Council; relationship with Congress; difficulties from serving unrepresented constituency; high percentage of disadvantaged people in D.C.; budget process; program budget
- and spend the night with Bob and Homer Haley. Usually permission wasn't granted. Something was about to happen. This time it was granted promptly. So when we came back the next day we had a sister. M: Were you delighted to have a sister or were you much
- was of There was some hope that, if it wasn't going LBJ Presidential Library http://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
- of power in his wrists and forearms. I remember one time--I think this was the time in Acapulco that we were playing with Bob Hope. We ran across him down there, and he made a golf game with the President the next day, and we were playing. I hit a ball
- of this material in the earlier interview, but what I hoped we could do is go into much more detail, particularly in two areas: one, your work with the subcommittee, investigating the-C: Which [subcommittee]? G: The Naval Affairs Subcommittee during World War II