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  • Rouae, ALIOTO,Joeeph L., Mayor She.n. CAIN, Stanley A.., Interior ALLOTT, Gordon, Senator CALLISON, Charles H., Natl Audubon Soc. ANDERSON,Clinton P., Senator CANTY, Don, Urban America ANTEI.L, James B., 'l'Ulsa, Okla. CAREY, Hugh L., Congress
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Department of Housing and Urban Development/A-Z (FG 170/A-Z)"
  • File unit description: This file unit contains a substantial amount of material relating to the formation, activities and findings of the National Commission on Urban Problems - Codes, Zoning, Taxation and Development Standards (also referred
  • problems: au~ ~ationand the displacementof ; >_ ~ dock workers and others. 1 ~ In the Au~tralianparliament, there are 122memben in the ' • house, 2nd E3 ln the ICMtf'. • • Eacb ul lht SIX slates of the' • Awtal:anfederation has 10sen~.•-i ators, and each
  • . And, by then--of course, as soon as Kennedy was elected, I more or less became the liaison man between some contrite religious leaders and the new Catholic President of the United States! And I did assist in setting up some interviews for some leaders, some religious
  • TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Levinson -- II -- 5 such as health, education, or cities, or farming, and the like, in very simple form just
  • abaru Joar 'Mrf Jaigb.a-e1ard f.n blm _. ,ov comment. wlU N ~ la Illa .Ulmate dedaloa. Stanntr, LanJZ. T ..... • Special Cotlli•el te a. PNalcleat Ttta Boaorable Farm 1870 Chall.ea Aw Jackaonftlle, LET/bk FlO&"lda .B~ ---- .. , .- ·1
  • on the memo. I have a110 aent copies to David Klein, NSC files and I kept one for CEJohnson. Florence 6/IZ/64 JUN 41965 'SECRET f MDl>RANDUM FOR MR. MCGEORGE BUNDY THE WHITE HOUSE Subject: s Reply to NSAM 304 on United States Relations with East Europe
  • and he went on active duty and he got out somewhere, I think in South America, started firing machine guns from an airplane, and the brass said all right, that's enough of him, we'll just throw him out. So they were going to throw him out, and they got
  • the ladder, and how you came to be governor. RH: I have always been a New Jersey resident. Florence in Burlington County, New Jersey. I was born in I am a lawyer. I used to be an assistant United States attorney. F: When was this? RH: In 1939. I
  • , such as helping the Egyptians reschedule their debts. Only the United States, among the major western powers, refused to entertain this idea. request that we rollover our an answer on that one. There was a eec financing. We couldn't come up
  • you were a state senator and in 1958 you were elected to the Eighty-fifth Congress in a special election. Since that time you have been a member of the United States House of Representatives. Your committee memberships--I have you for committees
  • , renewals, et cetera. Our efforts to encourage European and · other nationals to visit the United States and spend their money in the U.S. as an offset were slow at best. They were hampered. The U.S. Travel Service was continually hampered by a severe
  • contains Information offoclin; the Notional Defense of the United Slotu within tho meonln; of the Espl-ge INln1ml11lon or ••••lotion of which In ony manntt to on unauthorized person la prohibited by law. lows. Tltle II. U.S.C. Soca. 793 ond 79-C.t!-ao
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Walt Rostow, Vol. 109: Dec. 1‑9, 1968"
  • were still looking at the United States Senate pretty much in Woodrow Wilson's terms. They were trying to do something that was physically impossible, and the difficulty was that they could be very embarrass­ ing about it. It was difficult to explain
  • farm programs. Truman moved quickly and hit that hard and identified it, and it had a great impact in the rural areas. That one thing, I think, accounted for the overwhelming majority with which Truman carried the Midwest as opposed to Dewey
  • and LBJ; rural-urban basis; White House involvement in agricultural programs; feed grain program problems; wheat referendum; Farm Bureau; relations with Congress; wheat program bill of McGovern; 1964 wheat-cotton program; debate regarding one price vs. two
  • TO PRESIDENT OF POLAND On the occasion 0£ the National Day of the Polish People's Republic, I extend the cordial greetings and best wishes of the people of the United States of America to the people of Poland. ,.._1 • ,.... Wedneeday,- July 20, 1966 9:15
  • Details of restriction(s) may be found on the withdrawal sheet in the first folder of the file unit. Withdrawal sheets refer to file units and are not necessarily applicable to all individual folders.
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Walt Rostow, Vol. 9, July 16-31 1966"
  • , Illinois on bebalt ot R. Milton~l.eton, Director ot Research tor ;(Vaughan's Garden Research Center 1n Wheaton, Illinois. Ce.rleton is interested 1n working with the President's gram to preserve America's natural beauty and I would Mr. pro­ appreciate
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Douglas, Paul H."
  • as fast as we could. Added a group or two, expanded the groups that existed, and tried to have an element in the Pacific, an element in Central and Latin America, an element in Europe, the Tenth, an element in general reserve at Fort Bragg. I believe we
  • elsewhere it will go over the other wires, some of it elsewhere in the United States and occasionally world-wide." Fortunately for me, Texans at that point already were so prominent that lots of the stuff that I wrote saw the light all over the nation
  • Albert In accordance with the provisions of Chapter 21 of Title 44, United States Code and subject to the terms and conditions herinafter set forth, I, Carl Albert of McAlester, Oklahoma, do hereby give, donate and convey to the Unted States of America
  • In accordance with the provisions of Chapter 21 of Title 44, United States Code, and subject to the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth, I, Douglass Cater of Durham, North Carolina, do hereby give, donate and convey to the United States of America all my
  • national distribution, which gave the independents something to be sorry of, that one political party group of workers would have done this. Which gave them some stimulus and some reason to vote for the Democratic ticket. We had many letters and phone calls
  • for Congress 80uple of years and then decided in 1937 to succeed the late J. P. Buchanan, what was your job at that time? GF: At that time I was the newly-made managing editor of the Austin PB: Now~ America~, morning newspaper here in Austin
  • be a forwarding of a request from a foreign government for an agreement accepting the foreign government's nomination of an ambassador to Washington. Not once in the history of the United States have we refused to receive an ambassador nominated by another
  • about there. B: Clean farming in the sense that he was not leaving piles of brush around? H: Sure. [And clean farming eliminates the small creatures.] B: One question arises here, that at that time the Johnson park was a state park. H: Yes. B
  • it started. Jn this situation, the policy of the United Sta.t ea must be to seek urgently for concerted action through the United Nations to bring about an end to the current h.ostllitlea. _W e are bending all our efforts to this end. Far from seeking
  • Details of restriction(s) may be found on the withdrawal sheet in the first folder of the file unit. Withdrawal sheets refer to file units and are not necessarily applicable to all individual folders.
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Walt Rostow, Vol. 30, June 1-12, 1967"
  • ?" The invitations do go up. They go up much less in the case of the Johnsons, moving from majority leader to vice president, than they would for Agnew moving from governor of Maryland to vice president of the United States, so that she had had a taste of the world
  • father, I understand, had some financial reversals during, I guess, the early twenties. He bought a lot of farm land and then set up some gins, and the price of cotton went down and had to sell it. J: Well, I don't know. I don't know about [that]. I
  • politics and the like, I associated myself with the so~called conservative wing of the delegation. It's not quite fair, I suppose, to call it a wing. We were united on many things, particularly.those relating to the welfare of Texas, but in the broad
  • for meeting w/ staff members OFFRECORD re appointment of coordinator on deslating projects in Israel and United Arab Republic in Cabinet Room Director Schultze Memorandum Henry Rowan - BOB Director Hornig Dr. Dean Peterson Bill Moyers Robert Kintner Spurgeon
  • between 1/u•. Forrestal a:.'l.d G::meral Krulak.(thcn in the JCS as their Vietnam man) as to \Vhcther General 'Taylor ever cleared the message. I boli:ave it is agreed that.:Mr. Gilpatric did so by phone from his Easte:--n Shore farm, on the basis t.h~t
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Hilsman, Roger (Vietnam - Diem) (1963)"
  • \.,. 3//J ~ illGl'I COM ' 11NT. LA ■ .i TIii /""MY .5OSD llM ■ CIA -//) USIA· TA,. Ali. ~ CJ -·· 7, 1963 AmEmbassy,SANTODOMINGO SUBJECT: United States Special Mission to the Inau~ation -• REF ot President Juan Bosch &nbassy's A-393
  • and so forth with some frequency, speaking on various issues such as the Palestine-Syria problems, [The President's Health Plan and the Brannan Farm Plan]--we could list them at some length. Did you tend to do this as a party representative
  • that I had taught, and there was a large number of them who had graduated, and that was after I came back from the service, and then we started building an organizational unit, and we did build probably one of the strongest political organizations
  • How Anderson got to know LBJ through Dr. Everett Givens; the establishment of the United Political Organization of Texas; recruiting members for the UPO; LBJ's interest in poor people; LBJ's contact with Anderson as president of UPO through Cliff
  • : Ted Gittinger PLACE: Justice Goldberg's office, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 TG: Let me get right to it. What prompted you to leave the Supreme Court and go to the United Nations? AG: I should like to make clear at the outset
  • and judgments that will change the society. Now the private sector, particularly corporate' America, has not taken that step yet, despite that example. The government has backed off of that as an important issue, certainly, but the main thing
  • January 4, 1962 I appreeiate your note (lJO kind end thougb.ttul. much. There is oomfort in the know­ ledge otJlers ca.re, and I am ~teful for Sincerely, IJ.lle Honorable \ Sarah T • . Hughes United States Ji.Ulge 3816 tforaandy Street
  • See all scanned items from file unit "HUA - HUG, 1961-1963"
  • on legislature employees and income of low wage workers. Correspondence from Labor. t ,,j .. • ·.-'..-,::_.r. ' Li.. . . ied to beo ~ ,. j '.7 aiffi!itt-lfa°Jve m,a.km~ ~a 1--dl.;o~ 3 Bl~ 2% ) 1 =-~-=-; Btt::::.·· , /·-&/ 7 SEP2 s~19t,f\,-57
  • See all scanned items from file unit "FG 170 DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (1967)"