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  • of that dismissal that the column evolved. work and various things. I did free-lance I finally went to work then for the INS, and I w-auld wind up eve ry week with a lot of odds and ends. together in a piece which went over very big. I got to putting them
  • ~ ~ f.-~ '1e~ V1 (CR_ f}--YtA~o-{~ I r- rM- ~ (CL l'f-/i M u,..__ ~ c;{_ ~ -h ch-r- {(5 ~ - vCtV' Mt /)de d 1'. 'V1- do-r ,.,,; 1tcfI ~d , . A-wv-e~~ ~ ~e.NL ~ cSedatA~ ~~ w~'4- U dlY\Ade.-r r ~I . I 1 V~ 4-0VtAcJ. ~ p o{{A/J
  • involved in foreign policy, and that he was assuming the role that had once been played by Senator [Walter] George. R: That's not altogether accurate. Senator George played a very unusual role in the Senate in that he actually formed opinion
  • agreements. W. W. Rostow CHILE CEYLON PARAGUAY GUINEA approve approve approve approve _ _ disapprove disapprove _ _ disapprove disapprove _ speak to me speak to me speak to me speak to me a ~~~~ ,r,--
  • Rostow, W. W. (Walt Whitman), 1916-2003
  • mUUoa opl♦ ·wati-t Jn -- to say :1l'GthinS of ~ palUlcal oost t>f military Inter~ ttcm. I. 9. 1n the apriag ol l964. it looked a. lI Oottlarl ml ·h t take B-r a=U dowa th
  • Rostow, W. W. (Walt Whitman), 1916-2003
  • : Of course, in '48, he was running like mad himself for Senator. B: O r '52. 1956]. '52, that was the year that Kefauver beat me [actually that was I was the nominal head of the delegation. I was the favorite son candidate for the presidency here
  • Dff1C£ Of A&R IC. ULTV IAL DEFENSE l(LJTll>IS U. S. NA1t111£ CORPS 0. 11 . , 1CiGU , l . l. N.JOM C. LllhL l llOlll&ll 11(1Lt 04 , C0-..lltiU1 CL IFI OI ~ 1 0.1.)( r O. C.O(.l;Alfl'M(I I I I I I SEL ECTIVE SER VIC E SYSTEM ECONOM IC DE FENS E
  • , m~king the most campus leader at a meeting of some widespread attm-k upon the gowrn- ·1,000 Cape Town students and faculty , ' I 1 whitN. ment ever made by South Afri,~.an The upro.,r be1tan two W('('b aJ:o when the government, in\'Oki111,t South
  • ~ •• l&t.at. trip Th~r& flrE . w.1 1uppo11d to co1111morat1tbE tact only going out of hi1 •Y ·, doing taYore tor old tri1nd1 1aloon or pool hall, h1 my, it t,aa1 on tbE ball ~ that o.orsi. 'iaahin;Jt'lln one, l!l&dE about it right, git
  • . On the corresix1ndents' panel were Frank Cormier, for a long time with the Associated Press and now retired; Helen Thomas, United Press Interna­ tional and dean of the Whjte House press corps: Marianne Means, Hearst Newspapers and l(jng Features syndi­ cate: James
  • • ~ •", r&qe. of lldi•tpllta witb •ci-111e , u• ot. the·.-.~( w•• u•. ' -·• -- u• lll Cbli 1.-c,~ •, ·.;, '.•..;-/- • ~ 1111, o1 ct. ~c alrliedy .. atd-;',,.fatiaue: ~;;-t~f '· .. .. ·,. . ir ,,.;,1r91wlliD -.au~ fJI ._ • •ttll. the pre
  • W Westinghouse Broadcasting Co.), Douglas Kiker (New York Herald Tribune), Francis Lewine (As­ sociated Press), John Chancellor (NBC), Marianne Means (Hearst Newspapers; Look Magazine), Bob Thompson (Los Angeles Times, Hearst), Helen Thomas (United
  • '/NODIS/!!!!HHS''fIJM,:~n;A I - Lepartment of State T~LEGRAM 929 .. PAGE 01 euc;H·t 9I ACTIONS$ 70 INFO W /070 00566 1'7192.lf.Z R 17~44SZ OCT 67 FM AMEMBASSYBUCHAREST TO SECSTATE WASHDC1617 IN~O AMEMBASSYMOSCOW300 USMISSION USUN 063 AME
  • Rostow, W. W. (Walt Whitman), 1916-2003
  • "'----•· ....6""'--'• r. ,·~ ............. ord~r a~~1M'1n~ le~.~-"'.!r~~i',, ~ .... J..v•·"'..., ·,,..,.._..,.....,,---.·•··-.-.,,.-. ..., in r .• ,., .... ---' ... .. ,,...,_. I .... ...-i "6..._.•w&..i. -
  • '.!rald Trib- ou t the Umted Stales ... 'Ih1s . . ,,. t h man q ua lifies as a top v r p statement, said that m:ilenal k I d d une, ac n?w e ge w,a t _e in our books and l recom·m~nci prepared by their firm "has 11ews service as well ~s his that the Red
  • ) 3/65-11/67, NVN Leadership Attitudes] 10/18/67 A os ow o res1 en, r . Laos ~ l&-/ lfo/04 3 p '!.A•"~~ W/1-l
  • Rostow, W. W. (Walt Whitman), 1916-2003
  • • "tu.kl r•pori ·oa.how Bea-S,.pbua,ky·to be appotate4L · · · w. w~ WWRostow:rln · came· llntow r DECLASmlED MEMORANDUM', , E.O. 12356, Sec. 3.4 . THE WHITE HOUSE WAIHINGTOR CQ;NFIDENTil... L , EYES ONLY NJJ l 9~- 3ft,O
  • Rostow, W. W. (Walt Whitman), 1916-2003
  • . 1,yo:1 "~ho will escort Hrs. to th-~ fl :?g-raising ceremony. Jut;1:w:1 will present flag to to Johnson Mrs. each 1'1':.:Jy
  • reporter with the San Antonio Light. That was the Hearst paper down in San Antonio. I mean, LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral
  • ler Dln.o kshirts robbing our trenGUry and w,uti~oying our hoad­ qun.rlors. Wo knC'
  • . John Connor - Dallas, Texas (b . 1 ) To the office -- w/ Bil l Moyers and Bob Fleming an d Jake Jacobsen Cliff Alexander and Jo e Califano in joined Moyers and Fleming (Fleming out shortly thereafter) Oval ofc Meeting with the Executive Committee
  • a mtllkm dollar youth center to the community. We e&•'t declde U we want tt. or· where to put lt. Eventually. we wlll tbouab." R!ffi!r• • ••ne Clty PJ.anmeg (Department) hae a map maiiked ln blue where the oll l• under w,a tta. That la why they want ou
  • OFFICE OF THII DIRECTOR SECftB'f UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT FEDERAL BUREAU yl OF JUSTICE OF INVESTIGATION W&SBINGTON, D.C. 20535 December 17, 1964 BY LIAISON Honorable Bill D. Moyers Special Assistant to the President The White House
  • a platfnrm befnre thnufands l"!f people, I d"n't have tn tell have ch-·sen 25 years ag,.,. But 25 year·E' and the inventinn have left rather dnwn, nr standing r,u what I w-uld of the nuclear b('mb us nr chni ce. '' Claudia Tayl..,r Johnson waE a "doer
  • , the Committee took a bus tour through the city. The highlight of the tour was at a tr~ngle between Maryland and Independence Avenues and 3rd Street, S. W. , where Mrs. Johnson planted the first azalea of the beautification program. The buses also stopped
  • that because it prevented whatever chances the Democrats had to carry the election. And they nominated John W. Davis for President and Charles Bryan, governor of Nebraska who was a brother of William Jennings Bryan, who had run for the presidency a number
  • 06255 '+68 1807372 03 10,AID 10,GPM 0'+•H 02,SY' .!i : DODE 00, JUS· 02, TRSY· Pl8, RSR 0 03,MC 01,INR i, 01, RSC /054· 07,C1AE 00,NSA 02, W R 180712Z JUN 68 FM AMEMBASSY CANBERRA TO SECSTATE WASHDC 2530 UNCLAS REF~ CANBERRA STATE
  • , origin of major componentq _________________ U.S.Cout Guard Icebreaker W cstwind -----------------------------------Amphibious helicopter landing on U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Vigilant ________ ActiYity in an FAA control tower
  • know why 1 thought it would stay there, but 1 had it on this car where 1 thought it would ride, in between the bumper and the engine. And Johnson asked me if I minded moving from that car over to another car so he could ride back with A. W. Moursund
  • saw my name in there--he was there for INS or Hearst--and he said, "Gee, if Beech is going to go, I got to go, too, or else I'll get a rocket from the New York Journal American "--or at least that's what I think he was thinking--and Jim Lucas . So
  • about that time, the Ladies for Lyndon movement. Predictably, Marietta Brooks was a big factor in it, and a lady named Mrs. W. A. Griffis, from, I believe, San Angelo. Later on they wore darling little red, white, and blue costumes, girlish straw hats
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh February 14, 1972 F: Let's talk, George, about the President and what you know about the Richard Russell situation. R: I don't know too much of it directly, Joe. I do know that a number of months after I left
  • Kennedy and Robert Kennedy right after President Eisenhower's State of the Union address in January. Do you recall any of the significance to that meeting? R: No. I don't remember it at all, and I doubt if there was any unusual significance
  • ) Talked to them; coffee. Reports given by Charles Haar (Assistant Secretary of HUD), Polly Shackleton, Nash Castro, Steven Currier: "Cities Beautiful Near and Far" was the theme as left Yellow Room next set entered – L’s guests – Hearst Papers 2. 1:15
  • , and it was essentially a picture newspaper. Hearst's Mirror. It was challenged by There was a war of tabloids which drew in all of the newspapers of New York. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral
  • particularly? M: I don't know. What was his name? A: James W. Pate, P-A-T-E, Jimmy Pate. At that time, of course, radio was kind of in its infancy; it was new and it had a lot of appeal. A radio announcer in those days was really a celebrity. I had
  • incident. Did I ever tell you the story about Cassie Mackin, who since has become quite well known as an NBC news commentator, very prominent in covering the conventions. She replaced Marianne Means on the Hearst headline service. Marianne Means had sort
  • INTERVIEWEE: DAN RATHER INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: CBS Offices, Washington, D. C. Tape 1 of 1 F: I suppose we ought to go back and place you at that point in November, 1963, at which you get involved in things. R: That's as good a place as any
  • , but the JCS said 40 of these we re insignificant. He said the buffer zone targets we re under consideration, that he'd felt that there were risks in hitting China, but General Wheeler had said planes could go parallel to the horde r and thus cut that risk