Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

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

2069 results

  • the State of the Union, has met with a more pleasing prospect than that which appears at the present time. 11 Harr~Pherson, I l. l .j Jr. wwa DllArr
  • Mrs. Johnson: Bill "train Brawley, Lindy Boggs, 3 of ·rrwnan's man in the businesa"---did are hard at work on the trip. schedule and time-wise 1) A call Br~·ley it Everyone is good. purpose. It has ehecked out this What is needed
  • President Johnson and the tore1gn ort1c1ala, titting as many aa po•aible into the short time between the funeral and the visitors' departures. Thia enabled the Prea1dent to aaaure the v1ait1na oft1c1ala or the continuity ot American foreign policy. 'l'he
  • .•• the descendant product economy. times -- accounts of the horse-drawn for one in every In 1965, ·that amounted t~ the -- a sum greater than the entire gross in 1940. • Shortcomings Vital as it is, mammoth transportation • of Our System and complex
  • of Israel and (aft:er the Secretary's qucs tion) this also be the end of belligerency. He went on to say tl~at the Arabs couldn't; agree and since that time there had been different interpretations by the Soviets and the U.S. WOlLld He then asl
  • . Dick's father was living at the time that Dick Kleberg was elected to Congress. He was elected to fill an unexpired term in 1931 at the death of Harry M. Wurzbach, who happened to be a Republican, one of the few Republicans that Texas ever [elected
  • for the first time in thirty-five years. M: I was going to say, your career as a government slave goes back for some time. And now you're out of it. G: Yes. M: But you did serve in that position for-- G: Two years, a little over M: Two years
  • oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Jones -- IV --2 G: Keeping the options open? J: Yes. It's sort of old-time politics; you always keep a door open that you can walk out of. G: What was Mrs. Johnson's view at the time, do
  • in June 1967. to send Presidential or Syria which.broke In view of the accusation by President Qahtan al-Shaabi of the People's Republic of Southern Yemen that the United States was attempting to bring down his regime ("New York Times", December 26, page
  • :15 PM ... Mr. I. n President: y... .........;.,. ., ............ -11 ....... ~- ..... _., ___ ...,..i. ......... -.- It occurred to ~oe that, since you have· ifrged 'him:·:severc.c.: J times to get out to Africa, •you might b_e
  • of the Nation• s communities and of the people who live and work in them. Among other things, this means that it must recognize the integral relationship of the physical and social environments. At the same time, the Organization Plan must enable the Department
  • OF EXECUTION AGREEMENT WITH SERVI CE#CHARCE BE'ARING .4. 5' PE-RCENT INTEREST RATE TO BE PA ID BETWEEN EXECUTION. DATE AND TIME OF DEL IV ERY AIRCRAFT. AT TIME DELIVERY, IAC TO PAY ·DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CA->_qNE PE.RCENT _-j 1 • • ' l XMB RSR ·o1 so 1965
  • and scarcity.} XIV The government and 60 million jobs. (Only the government can put a floor under jobs. No corporation or group of corporations, no trade union or group of trade unions, can do it. No government can do it wiless all people realize
  • THE GEORGE LINCOLN ROCI~vELL PARTY In his book "This Time The World", copyrighted in 1961, George Lincoln Rockwell identified himself as Commander, American Nazi Party of the World Union of Free Enterprise National Socialists (ANP - WUFENS), Arlington
  • WHITE INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ February 18, 1971 Tape 1 of 1 F: This is a second interview with Mr. Lee C. White in his office in Washington, D.C. on February 18, 1971. The interviewer is Joe B. Frantz. Mr. 'White, last time we just got you
  • LIFE TIME A LIFE lltOCtn:,-ILLlfl NEW JUDSON YORK BUILDING CINTlft 10020 6·1212 Dear Mr. Okamato: Enclosed are the prints you requested. I am glad we could be of service to you. Sincerely, Richard O. Pollard Director of Photography Mr
  • sent this stO('yto my good pal. Al Spivak of UPI. SOIM time ago it is an account of one of L8Js great political trips, New Or1eans.1964 that I never got published.The trip coincided with the famous Lady Bird Special. LB j took the (ace lS$UI head oc,, I
  • sent this stO('yto my good pal. Al Spivak of UPI. SOIM time ago it is an account of one of L8Js great political trips, New Or1eans.1964 that I never got published.The trip coincided with the famous Lady Bird Special. LB j took the (ace lS$UI head oc,, I
  • DATE: August 27, 1969 INTERVIEWEE: ELIZABETH CARPENTER INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: Mrs. Carpenter's home, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 F: Liz, last time we just raised the subject of mistakes that might have been made, either wrong
  • in the legislation that went up? W: Well, there were a lot of different problems that were discussed during the task force, but because of the extremely limited time that was involved in putting together the program initially it was generally thought that a lot
  • piece of legislation passed under his-- C: I think he did in time, regard it, certainly. Yes, I agree with that. Also, what I'm looking at here is--we come back from the Voting Rights Act to a meeting on the drought in the Northeast, then to a meeting
  • .em. oil I$ cut off$ and oven in normttl times. tlta la:r.gest single supplier of the ttS • 12-~6 million long tone of lroa ore aninutlly ~hlc h go to 6 Gteal = ills thyoughoat the US. and. $t.6, billion 1A ann.uQl trade ($198 million la oxpods o.nd
  • as a nation was, in fact, the result of a union of Pushtoon tribes in the mid-eighteenth century. The "F-ushtoonistan" issue is thus a highly emotional one among Kabul's power elite. Nevertheless, criticism of Daud began to mount when a series of border forays
  • and in their constituencies which something to strike back at. It would have not been excessively conspicuous make the cause fit the effect, it would up to this time. Not many political lead- give us a motive appropriate to the cr·me. · ers have shown that they realize tha
  • believes we can never keep the Times with us and might as well ignore it. I think Joe is reflecting his exposure to some of the fighting troops and his own natural belligerence. But there is just a sniff of Embassy Saigon in what he says, and I think
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh December 19, 1968 B: This is a continuation of the interview with Mr. Goldstein of the White House staff. This, like all previous ones, is confidential until otherwise notified. Mr. Goldstein, you said last time that when
  • Hawaii or Alaska to the Union at this time. Dudley Dougherty writes the general managers of Texas radio stations carrying LBJ’s weekly radio broadcasts and asks them to provide him with the same services they provide LBJ. 3/21 In his Sunday radio
  • to maintain c0111DOn political alliances, to plans for Federal union. With independence, - 2 - however, the political benefits envisaged in moat ot these schemes have become considerably less attractive to many national leaders who regard such schemes
  • visit. Union members, TV.A fa...~ers, mey-ors, educators, students. ; .:.~.;.-.,,._.:.., .... uO s·.'.'law,.,.:. "."L--;.... 3o vn1cn. they [;;X'8 together, show the Prosid.cnt listening J.L.:. u\: • .., '-'•J 1 1 Sho~ the PresidGnt s seriousness
  • : http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Johnson -- I -- 2 said that, why, they turned around to me and said, "ls it true? you know about it?" I said, "No, I didn't know about it. wouldn't be up here taking up your time or my time. Did If I did
  • settled," or whatever, what I considered to be an absurd amount of time. But if Mac said it, you did it. And [I] ended up movi ng d o ~ m to Washington, I remember quite well on July 11 since that happens to be Adele's and my anniver- sary. F
  • on our proposals~ For the first time in a written message from the DRV, the implication seems clear that it is US escalation, not the bombing itself, that rules out such talks and commentso The last paragraph states the usual pre-condition of stopping
  • !an)ilton Wrig~t having "wrote five s tories userl In Times, Gcogra11hic to do with the Taiwan ac- another five ,vrillen by us and count." But the NANA editor literally flooded the u. s. ,,. Wright also n n t c d that ~aid "all the stori es were non
  • understand that you will spend some time studying how we work to rehabilitate the 4isabled and handicapped here in America. -- We will be most grateful for any comments or suggestions you may have after you have seen our rehabilitation centers and have
  • . Gillette PLACE: Kozy Korner Cafe, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 2, Side 1 B: At the time of the first primary's results--I have no recollection at all of the number of votes cast in the first primary or the percentage distribution, except that Coke
  • on and so on. Z: Right. G: Khe Sanh was coming in for an awful lot of attention about this time, too, and there have been criticisms of that coverage. What was good or bad about the press coverage at Khe Sanh? Z: One, on the impact of Tet on public
  • 11Stb cSelep.te an4 C0DCfft v1- Se~to aa oataae o:f Cauference. cons~ ' wlth vacation Please a4v1ae eaoa..t schedules of goveiwt pou:l.ble aa time t90ll"w.a n.lltt offtc1al.s. ,:' ; . .. .. ..•. . · . . ' . .. l I • ' cn!CW
  • . 1970 INTERVIEWEE: CHARLES ROBERTS INTERVIEt1ER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: Mr. Roberts office, Washington. D. C. I Tape 1 of 3 F: Mr. Roberts, you were in Dallas at the time of the assassination, November. 1963. R: Ri ght. F: Did you have any
  • ARCHIVES PROCESSING NOTE You will find two versions o f the document withdrawal sheets in this file. The original document withdrawal sheets were completed in the 1970s and early 1980s. Since that time, many o f the documents have been declassified