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2069 results
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 49, November 1-7, 1967 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 25
(Item)
- TO HIM ALL ALONG THE WAY,GAVINCONSISTENTLY HELD THE POSITION THAT HE HAD NO STATEMEMTS TO MAKE UNTIL HE HAD TIME TO THINKABOUTWHAT· HE HADSEENAND HEARD. FRA[ 1KLY, HE WASVERY GOODIN AVOIDING PUBLIC STATE~~-' TS. HE DID, HOv!EVER, DINE WITHDEANBRELIS, PE1
Oral history transcript, Sam Houston Johnson, interview 5 (V), 6/23/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- at Stonewall. You have My two sisters, Rebekah I was conceived on the Ranch and born January 31 right after we moved to Johnson City in November 1913. So I used to kid Lyndon all the time that more people came by to see my home than they did his. G: Your
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 56: Jan. 1‑15, 1968 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 27
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- by a relatively small number of full-time leaders who largely by dint of personality are able to bring their constituencies together in steer_ing committees like the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam. For manpower, ·they look
- , 1971 INTERVIEWEE: DUDLEY T. DOUGHERTY INTERVIEWER: JOE B. PLACE: Mr. Dougherty's office in Beeville, Texas FR.~NTZ Tape 1 of 1, Side 1 . F: Mr. Dougherty, I suppose what we will do ,is start back at the time when you came in from the war
Oral history transcript, James C. Gaither, interview 5 (V), 5/12/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- of But they created The mayors were always complaining about them because they didn't have control over them. Originally all Community Action grants went directly to community groups, and the local political types didn't like that at all. Over time, because
- and it has gone right on up to now. He would have been in his early twenties. F: I think so, I think that is correct. Of course, we had occasion to be associated with him many times while he was a Congressman’s secretary. Along about --when
- Group interview with Texas newspapermen and long-time political supporters of LBJ
- in Khartoum in anclllar-y meetings between myself and President Oamal Abdel Naeaer. Together we arrived at an agteeme.nt which we believe thi• time to be final, God willing. In conclusion, I send Your Excelle.ncy my sincere wishes ·-Co~ health and happiness
- ARCHIVES PROCESSING NOTE You will find two versions of the document withdrawal sheets in this file. The original document withdrawal sheets were completed in the 1970s and early 1980s. Since that time, many of the documents have been declassified
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 82: June 13‑19, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 36
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- time caa ea•baa• aa effaetlYe ••rlftcatloa •rnem. -Monoonr, ..,. aerlo.a tllH .. ... eltm latelllaeac• mattera. E,,.r,,n laaYe aa I qrH ■ ■ l- of ••rlflcatloa 1et bato c..W tllat lf we took tbe JCS pealtloa la the UN, •• w..id ... mlallt 1et ni
- , Levison told a CPUSA it publicly 0 " Further, functionary that King was concerned about a "communist label" being "pinned on us" but that, at the same time, he wanted to do everything possible to evidence friendship toward the Soviet Union O In addition
Folder, "McGeorge Bundy, Vol. 21, March, 1966 [2 of 3]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 6 [2 of 2]
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- in the course of' time. Despite the impartial and objective ~ttitude of' delegates like your own, however, it transpired, unf'ortunately, that justice and equity were thrown overboard on the basis of' the votes of a minority of state members of the U.N.O. which
- with Texas delegation. During afternoon meets with Walker Stone, talks with Thornberry re: Will Wilson wire (?), and later to Lee White and Arthur Goldberg re: Bobby Troutman. 1/11 Talks with Goldberg re: Troutman. At 12:30 Kennedy delivers State of Union
- in the afternoon. The date is March 4, and the time My name is David McComb. P: The year is 1969. M: Yes, you might add that, 1969--somebody may wish to know that 50 years from now. First of all, I'd like to know something about your background, where were
- and restrictions, however he wishes to make it; and that we will type a transcript, send it to him to edit, and at the same time, give him a legal form with which he can express his restrictions as he sees fit. The tape, t h e transcript, the legal release form
- , the SIG has met with decreasing frequency during the last year. In the last six months of 1966, the SIG met three times and has met .-only twice in 1967. It is significant that it has taken no part in the conduct of our most serious and complicated
Folder, "March 12-18, 1965 [Selma Situation]," President’s Appointment File [Diary Backup], Box 15
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- in 1963 with voting rights; Congress took it o ut (4) Your decis ion on D ecembe r 5 to ask for a strong voting rights bill in your State of the Union message . Not a civil rights leader had discussed it with you at that time (5) This week ' s
- n•n •}'tlPathetic to the Nn Deal. Ma I 9nly havti the atat.etnent ,.b1oh J . 4'-'0ted. You hr.ve the .tee ta ot w1h1.t he has u.1d mNll' timee, end 1'he.t he hei; dCCf\ 1 r-rtd you pilt'io».ally think he is not put1oul&rly etitbuaiast1o
- times the resources committed to anti poverty programs. A heartwarming and unexpected development was the_ finding of a Harris Poll after the riots. 69%of the nation endorsed an emergency work program to provide jobs for all unemployed. An equally
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 45, October 10-15, 1967 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 23
(Item)
- MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Supplementary Background £or Your Appointment with Congressman C~ller--Noon Today Eshkol's comments on the Mid-East arms balance reported in .The Times this morning were made after Celler requested his appoint ment
- [Brown] as a friend and saw him, talked to him from time to time was [when] he was here with a job as [state director of the] National Youth Administration, just a little bureaucratic job, nothing. It was just one of those programs that they had going. He
- Bird Johnson's family and her business skills; events leading up to John F. Kennedy's assassination; LBJ's opinion of his time as vice president; Tommy Corcoran; Charles Marsh; Alice Glass; Clark's work as ambassador to Australia and American executive
- . Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Proxmire -- I -- 3 some time. He's a fine, brilliant man, and he was very helpful. I just--I should be able to remember. I
- the deep depreSSion days), and I had only had that position a short time; about a post office. I I was satisfied and didn't know anything told him that, but he said I'd make a good one and insisted that I accept it, which I did. ?: Have you been
- departments on complex overseas problems, and assure that no sector of the foreign front is neglected at a time of preoccupation with some overriding problem. [Department of State Bulletin, March 28, 1966, Vol. LIV, No. 1396] SECRETARY OF STATE DEAN RUSK'S
- was [Robert] McNamara's lawyer for those hearings. You may recall that as we saw the major issue in the hearings, the issue was whether or not the civilian leadership in the Pentagon and President Kennedy, at that time, had the right, in effect, to censor
- spending, beginning in the 1940s was of course an excellent plan. And indeed, small wonder that Texas had more air bases than any other state in the Union in the 1950s. He was brilliant at doing that kind of thing. But now I come to the vice-presidency
- it; presidential decision-making; the Oliver Stone JFK movie and how young people believe such conspiracy theories; Robert McNamara and Dallek's and Bundy's reaction to Deborah Shapley's book Promise and Power: The Life and Times of Robert McNamara; LBJ's
- . , l/ Some time ago when I had requested an interview with the President for our SIPA News Syndicate I had enclosed some stories done during my recent interview with Mr. Eisenhower in Gettysburg. / I had as~ed that those stories be returned since
- , I levels. as subversion the pattern and unequal It is particularly believe to describe time war as a means to discourage describes which At the same of nuclear at other age has to revolution" preached. intehded Khrushchev
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 35, July 16-24, 1967 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 19
(Item)
- PAGE FIVE RUDTCR 496 S E "e t1 r. T HE HAD PERSONALLY DIRECTED THIS OPERATION. HE NOW THOUGHT FEW PEOPLE \1JOtJLD PAY MUCH ATTENTION TO NORIEGA ON THIS QUESTION IN THE rl'Tl'REo HE ALSO RECALLED A TIME ~.,HEN HE, ODRIA AND NORIEGA DIRECTLY THAT HE
Oral history transcript, Lawrence F. O'Brien, interview 19 (XIX), 4/22/1987, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- regarding Vietnam. You had a handful of members who were registering concern. That number grew as time went on, and it became particularly a problem when you had staunch supporters of the President's Vietnam policy expressing concern. So you have
- and Senator Johnson, and the popularity of the highway program on both sides, I think we got some Republican votes like George Aiken and Leverett Saltonstall, people like that who voted contrary to the wishes of the administration. G: At the time these votes
- people and army. Over time, we believe they must 1nake a l'I i.:--: .... _ i I i , .. Page.__ 4 of telegram to ____ NEWDELB! .;.___~-~--------'-------:-__, ~ ~~ ~ : t :l t ' major contribution to pe·rsua.dmg reasonable eJements in Hanoi
- present position should not be changed for the time being. We should welcome any indication that the Soviet Union would seriously consider a treaty with adequate verification, and we should be willing to engage in technical discussions with theSoviet
- commitment in 1966 is to hold such borrowing to a specified, modest level. Although the Government is expected to meet this target by the end of the year, it has exceeded the ceiling for several months at a time. We intend to insist on much better performance
- : One Artist's Engaging Look at Life is an eye-opening look at the life and times of America and the world, through the peri od covering much of the first half of the twentieth century. Throughout his life, Butler's observant eye and scalding wit
- the Paks have openly flaunted both the Indians and the United States by inviting the Chinese to visit Pakistan at the time the Indian Prime Minister is in Washington and secondly by displaying Chinese tanks '\ openly in a recent parade. Indian leaders hope
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 94: Sept. 12‑18, 1968 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 39
(Item)
- to reactloaarlea Tlaere l• a anat am.all mlaorltl•• the pr.W.mu. It la time for.,.....,. teacher l,otll polltleal of the law of tale laad.- aaaly• we canflllly tva pelltlcal effort at home •••uactlft tbat die•• l• a-,1,. a•las to let a tlaJ lldaorlty
- : professionally, politically, and certainly personally. B: In the times you've been associated with government, generally, have you found Mr. Johnson to be knowledgeable on agricultural affairs? M: Yes, he is. B: Even down into the technicalities? M: Yes
- . Senator Douglas is going to attempt to tack an anti-lynching amendment onto the natural gas bill. Eisenhower delivers State of the Union Message to Congress, outlining foreign, farm, tax and other major election-year issues. He calls for payments
- Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh advisor to many of us and was well versed in the history of China at that time. [He] predicted pretty accurately what was about to happen
- relations in South Africa; meeting LBJ for the first time; Sam Rayburn; Democratic National Conventions of 1956, 1960, and 1964; political social gatherings; visits to the Ranch; working with Mrs. Kennedy on the Fine Arts Committee; White House furnishings
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 113: Jan. 1‑15, 1969 [1 of 3]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 44
(Item)
- succeed. This conviction will not be created unless and until they come to the conclusion that the US is prepared to remain in. Vietnam for whatever period of time is necessary to assure the independent choice of the South Vietnamese people. The enemy