Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

2069 results

  • Venus had been failures. He said the USIB, which was now meeting, would probably re c ommend to the President that the Board be authorized to c onduct an investigation to determine how this informa­ tion reached the p r ess. The Times story was similar
  • so much to be there but I have a very im­ portant committee meeting in Washington that day which has been scheduled for some time. To cancel would be to inconvenience a lot of people who are coming from a long way off to attend. But, Sarah, my heart
  • resident began his day at (Place) , The Time Telephone l1 In Out S ______ Lo 10:40a 11:46a 10:45a 11:14a fort Activity ! LD x Tom Hon. 11:45a~ t MW 11:47a 12:00 __: 12:00 Hon. 12:00 Hon. Francis Bator 'I V£ : : 12:05p f : To Oval Office w
  • was the Democratic Senatorial primary held on Tuesday) Cong Adam Clayton VP Rusk, Amb Diop Powell (B.1) Returning his call To the Mansion w/ MW -- for White House Reception celebrating the Third Anniversary o f the Organization of African Union Date May
  • discovery shocked the western world in the early days of the cold war and who were the subject of a recent book written by him .... . . . Nan Robertson (below), Pul­ itzer-prize winning former reporter for the New York Times, whose own just-published book
  • the President came as a congressman, and sometime subsequently, we met; I don't know when. M: There's a whole scale of subjective values that people have who've known another person over a long period of time. You're in a parti- cularly good position to make
  • INTERVIEWEE: IRVING L. GOLDBERG INTERVIEWER: MICHAEL L. GILLETTE PLACE: Judge Goldberg's office, Federal Courthouse, Dallas, Texas Tape 1 of 1 MG: Judge, President Johnson I guess had already been overseas--he went in 1942--by the time you went
  • actions now are not sufficient to justify that. Presidents go personally to the Congress to deliver State of the Union messages, declare war, impose some kind of general mobili­ zation or cool the country off at a time of great racial strife. The items now
  • conflicts~ corners of of the 11 that and wonderful Unit~d wars, and quarrels conferences for eartho century international the and 11 States curing From good kept of time aloof from It Europeo correcting uLrest faith
  • ~ corners of of the 11 that and wonderful Unit~d wars, and quarrels conferences for eartho century international the and 11 States curing From good kept of time aloof from It Europeo correcting uLrest faith"­ in to· tir.ie
  • a letter ~f designation. The designation has these antecedents: From the time he took the OAS-CIAP job, Sol Linowitz has been pressing to establish an OAS Mission comparable to Goldberg's UN Mission. ARA has resisted -- as it had done with effqrts of some
  • to avoid insult, we must be able to repel it, !! 1!tsnef{@P~1/D we desire peace it must be known that we qnest-and the ha!, ~ are at all times ready for wa.r ," and a.gain ot Jess pa tr!ot!c han we Abra.ham Lincoln questioned, "What constllJned to admit
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh (Tape 4) June 2, 1969 M: You had gotten last time to the summer of 1966 with the decision to bomb the Haiphone POL, which came at the end of various efforts at peacemaking . The one question that occurred to me just as we
  • , common 1.miforms and -4- corr:m.onflag. Thc~e are clearly important not only to the Germans but: to the other Europcanso At the sama time, Wilson will probably insist that ·we accept the sama arrange­ ments with respect to our POIARIS or MINUTE!.Z.c
  • time to soften. - • * There without are very important major legislative improvements which can be made change. •. I suggest a program based on these points: 1. Labor relations; • jurisdictional disputes; manning scales. * It should and can
  • CLIFFORD: Yes. The understanding, which of course, was of a general nature, in Paris, was that the DMZ would not be violated because we felt we could not go on with the talks which we hoped at that time would start promptly, if the DMZ were violated. Now
  • CONVERSATION I MENTIONED THAT AGREEMENT COtJTINIJED TO BE HELD UP ON ~ATTERS I HM) ~ffNTIONED EARLIER BUT THAT THESE MIGHT BE RESOLVED AT ANY TIME AND IF so -I"WOULD TAKE THE . LIBERTY OF MAKING DIRECT CO~TACT WITH THE PRIM~ MINISTER IF THERE SHOULD
  • President Johnson, I write to express my appreciation of your p~licy towards the _.;:!!, important issue or peace and future relations with the Soviet Union. I am particularly hopeful that your Administ~tion 111 find a way of involving China in the essential
  • , 1989 INTERVIEWEE: JOHN HENRY FAULK INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. Faulk’s residence, Austin, Texas Tape 1 of 2, Side 1 F: I was thinking the first time he [Lyndon Johnson] came over my horizon was in 1938. He had just assumed
  • all the time: he kept his options open. Even on some of the things that other people may look at as relatively insignificant, he still kept his options open and the decisions were his. You know, for a reporter or writer where he used to go out--and I
  • LINCOLN ROCKWELL PARTY In his book ; "This Time the World," copyrighted ih --1~61_, ~ GEORGE LINCOLN ROCKWELL identified himself as Commander , _,Ame...,t ic;an Nazi Party of the World Union of Free Enterpr!_.'.?-e__.~!!;t{;--l0n,J:l; ·,Soc-1a'J.is;t s
  • V. Federal - Dean, Alan Federal 'Deason, Willard _ -Deegan, James L. Civil -Devine, Gregory S. Chesapeake Dial, Morris G. Union Door, L. J. ^. House of Representatives Maritime Commission Aviation Agency Interstate Commerce Commission Aeronautics
  • by tailors: Irving Frank e Mr. David Ginsburg c, Mr. Amore Pace Secretary McNamara Rosel Hyde F.C.C. Chief of Protocol, James Symington Secy Eeeman Joe Calif ano To the theater for OFF RECORD taping in the theater of a message for the Plumbers Union
  • . Mbr . . B' d o f Directors, Time . Inc . Robert E . Kintner . Pres . . NBC Dr. Rober t F . Goheen . President . Princeto n Uni v Walter P . Reuther . Pres . . Unite d Auto Workers o f America (o n his left ) Other guest s included : The Secretar y o f
  • to-P«~ 9, Col. 1 p e iarSMay9ral Rae .atchedClos¢1y I 1 m _....._ ____ ~ ,:,,." ~· ''>t _I I SERVATION COPY ____,. r0S ANGELES TIMES OCTOBER 1~. 1967 MAYORAL RACE forward his best attack­ the need to get Philadel­ phia moving again
  • don't need this force very often. You'd have a large static force that would--if this were its training, and if this were its mission--they'd really have nothing to do most of the time. B: Obviously, the Pentagon and Washington itself, as you said
  • the New York state delegation--who voted for him in Los Angeles on the first ballot. I remember giving a newspaper an interview at the time which said that we shouldn't discount the effectiveness of Lyndon Johnson on the ticket because he brought enormous
  • sixth from the left on the front row. Loaned by Mrs. Ava Cox, Johnson City. 2 Blacksmith shop in nearby Blanco, circa 1808. Loaned by Mr. W. L. Bayars, Blanco. THE ARTS: Years of Development, Time of Decision Th weather was magn.ficent
  • basis. 1 1 .~ '' . . . i ... I gave Ely aa much background on this whole situation as I could in the time available. ~I.:! was not strongly impressed with his ability to absorb the realities ol thia situation as we see them. · I do think, however
  • have that background. B: I was working at McCall's magazine with Lynda Bird. She and I became good friends, and I came to Washington several times. I was in her wedding, and I got to know the family pretty well. One day her father called me
  • a political subject as between the Democratic and the Republican parites. I can't recall a time when either one of them had a plank to discredit reclamation or even to single it out that they were going to give it special attention because everybody takes
  • to be sent over there to work with Sargent Shriver and the other members of the task force at the time this proposal began to be put together. G: Who sent you over? Do you recall who approached you initially? S: What was the date? G: February, I think
  • : During the time out there, any disputes between the politicians as to what was going to happen in the campaign, I had the sole decision to make . In other words, [being] from outside of the state, I knew none of the politicians . I told them where
  • Building in Washington, D.C. The date is December 2, 1968, and the time is 1:30 p.m. First of all, Dr. Stewart, I'd like to know something about your background. S: Where were you born and when? I was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on May 19, 1921, grew
  • /oh 3 B: Yes, sir. Did Lyndon Johnson give you any help as a, by then, an older hand? W: Lyndon was always helpful. Not only to me. third term, wouldn't it--my first term? pretty well in Congress by that time. he helped you anyway he could. Let
  • military situation is clear. Nass~r will never be able to. defeat the Royalists. They have received no outside arms since May, 1963, as attested to by ihe UN observers. Yet, in all that time, they have never lost an inch to Nasser, but have gained
  • good to the gre.a test number. At the present time it is not practical. to undertake activities more or less dominated by unions. may be any direction of If there are any inequalities that corrected by management and capital control, the first needs
  • brought in Mr, McCone does not believe the dangers of anoth~r coup (except as a result of a possible assassination) at this time are as serious as he believes this paragraph implies, Mr, McCone, while encouraged by Khanh's evident ability• does not believe
  • possible time" if feasible, or to be conducted as a "protracted" war lasting 10-15 or 20 years if necessary.· The ultimate objective remains the forcible takeover of South Vietnam by VC/NVN forces, leading finally to communization of the South