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  • . Williams, AlC Curtis Clark, USAF--------------- JWGA USA JWGA USAF--~-------------------- AlC Richard G. Hall, JWGA USAF-------------------- JWGA Mrs. Marion E. Boland-----------------------Mrs. Wilma Matasic :..__________________________ JWGA
  • passage of U.S. and British military trains through their occupation zone in Germany to Berlin. 4/2 LBJ delivers speech in House on the Marshall Plan bill. Later that day he takes the train to New York to join the others. Truman’s veto of the income tax
  • in Guam Richard Taitano, Director of the Office of Terri­ tories, Department of Interior, telephoned at 3:45 PM, Monday, 12 November, with the information that the Office of Emergency Planning dispatched a representa­ tive to the Guam area earlier today o
  • and Berlin -------~------roeutscher Gewerkschaftsbund fuer das Gebiet der Bundesrepublic Deutschland und Berlin - DGB) May 19, 1964 JI ~o l/ff.J With every good wish, Sincerely yours, · . J~t Jr~~ ~ay, i"ovestone Dirdl;tor - ­ Department of International
  • and refrain from further public rev&lations on 25X1A 25X1A Richard Helms Director SANITIZED l u~ rity NLT0/
  • : http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Theis -- I -- 2 was about to leave he put his arm around my shoulder--we scarcely knew each other--and he said, "Bill, I spent the weekend up in New York with Dick Berlin." Well, Dick Berlin at that time
  • Biographical information; first contact with LBJ; LBJ's legislative talents; generosity; LBJ's support of Diem; 1961 Vietnam trip; India stop; camel driver incident in Pakistan; LBJ's relationship with Richard Russell; LBJ's relationship
  • badly for everybody in the hemisphere. P: What were your activities during this period when we committed our forces? N: In the Dominican Republic? P: Yes. N: The day was the day that Mr. [Richard] Helms was appointed director of the CIA
  • [NAID 24617781] O'Brien -- Interview III -- 7 Richard Russell. Let me ask you to describe President Kennedy's relationship with him. I'm talking about during this early period, before the civil rights [legislation]. O: Yes. Well, Russell was a giant
  • of congressional staffers; Vinson's importance in Congress; John McCormack's relationship with senior southern Democrats; the effect of putting a Lockheed plant in Georgia on Vinson's support for JFK; Richard Russell; Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson's (LBJ) role
  • Richard Nixon was in Congress and one Richard Nixon was about to suddenly steal this away LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral
  • ; it would be interesting to know what [Jack] Valenti and [Richard] Goodwin--Goodwin doesn't have a whole lot of truth in him but he's bright as hell. D: McPherson? B: Harry would have the most thoughtful view. My experience with him was very much trial
  • . · · Andrew Jackson·was placed in nomination ·as early as October, 1825, by the State Legislature of Tennessee, for the election of 1828. · John C; Calhoun; Democrat:· a.nd John · QUlncy Ad/ams and Richard Rush, National Repub­ Ucan candida(ies, were all nom­
  • inter­ viewed Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor in all the world's capitals-Paris, Rome, New York, Hollywood, London, and Leningrad. I had been the only journalist at "I'm just as amazed as you are that all of this happened to little Mary Elizabeth
  • in American history. Luck and accident, Poor Richard notwithstanding. The greatest accident in American history, Brands argued, occurred on January 24, 1848, when "on the middle fork of the American River, in the foot­ hills of the Sierra Nevada Mountains
  • advance exploration. But for some reason he just cut himself off from almost everybody that could have given him any decent advice on it. G: [Richard] Russell referred to this tactic as procedure in the Senate. 11 a lynching of orderly 11 R: Right
  • LOACH, Cartha D. EDMONDSON, Ed., Congressman ATKINSON, George H. McGRAW, Donald c.,, McGraw Hill BERLIN, Richard E., Hearst Corp. BONNY, John B.,, Morrison-Knudsen Co.Inc. ~---Publishing Co. Inc. SMIT, Hulett).'# Governor of w. Va. CANFIELD, Cass
  • into areas which were covered by our treaty commitments elsewhere. To give one or two examples, in June 1961 Chairman Khrushchev produced a crisis on Berlin in his meeting with President 3 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • certain -- would China be .e xpected to intervene, and then by occupation of _, . N~rth Vietnam. The~ would probably be pressing Hanoi to seek peace, they might be putting pressures against us in Berlin, and they would . be ~arry­ ing on a vigorous
  • ) REPRESENTATIVE - Lt Col Charles D. Ford.,. Jr, - Major RED TEAM(North Vietnam) REPRESENTATIVE USA Richard W. Uobb.c, USA USA USA YELLOW TEAM(Red China) REPRESENTATIVE - Col Samuel N. ·Karrick, GREENTEAM(USSR) REPRESENTATM Commander Harold
  • world can't be played but the various games. facets can be considered for different * * * * * RED I TF.AMMEMBER: The Red I team perspective indicated that the BETA I game should alert us to the dangers actually• inherent in the Berlin situation
  • the discussion with an outline of the authority which he has been g ranted to take countermeasures in the event of Soviet or East German action to deny allied air access to Berlin. He described measures which he has taken to implement his authority and to prepare
  • Berlin (Germany)
  • , Clark D., Syracuse University CURRY , Helen Louise , GLASER, Rober t J ., Affiliated Hospitals Center GD.ARD , David R., University of Pennsylvania HARVILL, Richard A., University of Ariz . HICKEY , Maurice J ., University of Wash. HONARD, Robert B
  • now, a little fellow that wrote about Presidential power, was adviser-M: Richard Neustadt? F: Neustadt. Only one person has ever really criticized President Truman for this. If you really want to be critical of the problem, the Joint Chiefs
  • First meeting with LBJ in March, 1946; Ganson Purcell; James Rowe; Sam Rayburn; W. Averell Harriman; Truman’s anti-inflation program; General Counsel for AEC; Herbert Marks; Kenneth D. McKellar; Dr. Edward U. Condon; General McArthur; Richard
  • ADMINISTRATION NA FORM 1429 (6-85) FOREIGN POLICY GROUP MEETffiG \~' ~ .:·· October 29, 1968 THOSE ATTENDING: The President Secretary Rusk Secretary Clifford General Abrams General Wheeler Richard Helms Walt Rostow Harry McPherson George Christian Tom Johnson
  • E.J. '. .fI.i '· ~· \ [ J - 2 - · C l,3(u.) , (4) ~ Richard Helms Director (s) INl'OJilMA TION _...._ ...,, JIIM 12. 19'8 -- 8:40 p.m. Mr. PreaWeat: L A State De,-rtmeat •raft. peraOllllllJ clearetl 111, Sec. Rull. for the C...-.lar Caw
  • President not to form any firm opinion until he had had a chance to see the present situa­ tion in Germany and Berlin for himselfo In facing a difficult situation,such as that we face today., it is especially important to consider emotional and psychological
  • Berlin (Germany)
  • was a classmate of mine!' "He kept up the clip in Africa, Sicily, l\ormandy and the sweep to Berlin in World War II, as Veterans Affairs Adminis­ trator, Army Chief of Staff, Joint Chiefs Chairman thereafter. He is the last, along with classmate Dwight D
  • was a classmate of mine!' "He kept up the clip in Africa, Sicily, l\ormandy and the sweep to Berlin in World War II, as Veterans Affairs Adminis­ trator, Army Chief of Staff, Joint Chiefs Chairman thereafter. He is the last, along with classmate Dwight D
  • to help seize the initiative from John Morley in dramatic-address to Berlin. 500,000 cracking-communism, contain other dangers at home and abroad . . . as the first urgent steps to­ ward a free world-order. WORLD-LEADERS I SAW ... latest face-to-face
  • ADLER, Richard, Saddle River, N.Jer. MARCH,Frederic, New York City Telegrams sent September 27, 1965 WILKINS R New York Ci~ ~lRENCE, Harding, Beverly Hills I Calif• MacBRIDE, Rhoades, Montvale, N. Jer. ---.oomm:-,,rthur, New York City DAVIES, Ralph K
  • . We had just won the Cold War. Communism had collapsed. The Berlin Wall came down. We were the only remaining superpow r; everybody want- ed to get close to the Unit d States. There were only four or five countries that didn't like us .... The Soviet
  • , Richard Nixon used a dog as a prop. Nixon was Dwight Eisenhower's vice presidential running mate, and the speech - unofficially named after the dog - saved his spot on the ticket. In rebutting allegations that a group of supporters had created a slush fund
  • , Richard Nixon used a dog as a prop. Nixon was Dwight Eisenhower's vice presidential running mate, and the speech - unofficially named after the dog - saved his spot on the ticket. In rebutting allegations that a group of supporters had created a slush fund
  • was the side gunner; William Fletcher was the top gunner; Mario Sanna was the belly gunner; and Richard Wright was the side gunner. the crew. We had ten people on Quickly, there developed a tremendous, fine personal rela- tionship amongst these people
  • agency Inter- TS 13-17 Aug 62 MUII-62~ Middle East Inter.; TS 17-21 Sep 62 EPSILON I-62 Berlin Inter- TS 23-25 Nev 62 EPSILON II-62*** Berlin Inter- TS J-4 lVJS.y 62 * No formal report ** Conducted at CINCNELM, London *** Conducted
  • to end Russia’s 10-month blockade of Western occupation zone of Berlin. 4/27 Breakfast for Mrs. Truman. Chiang Kai-shek flies to Shanghai, urges the Chinese to resist Communists. 4/28 The Armed Services Committee meets to mark up S.1269, the military
  • members of Congress that year who were closest to Roosevelt were himself in Texas and Jerry Voorhis from California. Well, he was closer to Roosevelt by a long shot than Jerry Voorhis. Jerry Voorhis was beaten by Richard Nixon. He was the proponent of co
  • . discoverlbj.org LBJ meets with members of the National Home Builders Association who are attending their convention in Chicago. At 10 a.m. he meets with Mayor Richard Daley in his office. At noon LBJ addresses the Southtown Economist Club in Chicago. He and John