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1875 results

  • . Miller lived in Corpus Christi. Welly Hopkins was a state senator from Gonzales. G: Rut he L: Yes. v! ass t i 1"1 tea chi n9 vI hen you VI e n t 0 u twit h him? LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT
  • to assure your destructive capability vis-à-vis the opponent if he strikes you first. We have attempted to support the Administration's policy decisions, once they have been made, on the size and characteristics and deployment of ABM's as well as offensive
  • : Too many Secretaries of Commerce. M: That's what I was going to ask. weaken Commerce vis F: ~ Why so many; and does having so many vis some of the other Departments, perhaps? I don't think there's any question that it does. I think continuity
  • that as these are retired at the end of the Vi,etnam difficulties, then you f 11 be able to take up the slack by the increased commercial use and the renewed emphasis on the commercial arm of it that you were talking about. LBJ Presidential Library http
  • , the Vi ce Pres i dent was more often than not in the room. ~ ness of him j~ Now, my conscious- those days, 1962, early 1963, encompassed primarily, however, an awareness of a man who was there and was quietly leaned on by the President with respect
  • , and of course the biggest problem was vis-à-vis Portugal because the Azores was a vitally important stopping point. It's not quite half- way, but being able to stop to refuel meant that our planes could carry twice the payload. And about, I don't know, 75 per
  • or state attorney general did you have any relationship \'/ith him? H: ~'Jell, not to amount to anything. Supreme Court. I can't remember any on the I don't remember that at all. I came through vJashington when I was attorney general one time and vis
  • , yes. the candidate. I didn't want to spend my time with For heaven's sake, he can take care of himself. was trying to reach people that he wasn't reaching. F: vi d you get any sort of i nci denta 1 benefi t from thi s, when you offered yourself
  • of the relationship beb/een Congressman Johnson and f'k. [Carl] Vi nson, the chairman of the parent commi ttee? C: Yes I did. I saw that at rather close range. S: It's often been described as a kind of protégé-type relationship. Is that right? C: Well, I don't
  • in the position eventually of doing what you fellows did vis-à-vis Europe--managing our own industry eventually and taking over . It seemed reasonable, and this was the thesis that I always mentioned to the American community, which I think most of the American
  • to the Community Action Agency not being a program-operating agency, but to plan, to coordi­ nate, to be the fiscal agent vis-à-vis the federal government, be responsible for the fiscal surveillance of the grantees, of the delegate agencies . But that programs
  • with the primary interest in our trade problems, particularly vis-à-vis Europe because that was my area of assignment, and also having some rather strong thoughts which I still have about the inadequacies of our trade promotion program, I started out
  • ? Pfesident ~ t?...q-9q Ai 1-:S t/?--32;,J.,I S· 4p ~ostow to President ,vi...:~ '1 '7 - 3 ~ ,/8foD o~ -A- 1 C lp [Duplicate of #18, NSF, CF, Brazil, Vol. VIia] #42 memo Rostow to President, 7:40 p.m. C 1 p S#f,wt,....,J.. "l/1,/00 ~ .., 7 --,2- 41
  • . rather than the usual requirement of a proapt request to the Agency, hu been used because Ireland is not now a aeaber of the Aaency. Proposed Article VI would reflect the "Private Ownof 1964 permittina arrangeaents ership" legislation for the transfer
  • OF POSSIBILI'iLE:S ot· HAD ...- J. FlNi\Lt..V., I BELIEVE THAT 1'0 GO BEYO ~D 'I.HI~ CONC ESSIO ~S WE HAVE ALR£ADY MADt t~OULD CO"PlHM I N ·tu~:- t1l i~ OS Or '!HF. GVN AND THE .,·. VI£1'iiANE°$E. PEOPLE THZ APPREHE NSION AND SUSP IC lO N~ OF OUR lNTENTlON
  • Long The St. Louis Delegation will - Missouri - this Afternoon. Further information call on Senator will be furnished later on. /vi Dictated ~~~ by Deke DeLoach JP .--. September 2 7, 1966 MEMORANDUM: RE: WAR ON POVERTY MARCH As of 3
  • for if it is to d r vi d ita o Uc:y r uu.,;, ... v. 1 yi ,~,,_.. ..,i;;.,,... y o1 hich politic l pr u· r tor £or n r (S) Th su.ppoe dly th Seer • - .. a.t moat o ad. cid t • c e • uth L'..frie n ona. pin a recon u bout n a position. fll::~ ;,,.~.-...~•f
  • NOTED THIS HELP WOULDi 1 BE USEFUL PRIMARILY VIS-A-VIS· FOREIGN EXCHANGE ASPECT OF CURRENT' '. iFINANCIAL PROBLEM. ' 1 CFN $6,000 $5 MILL.ION $10 MILLION l ...,, .. ··- ..... ~---· S=B=0=~=='f____ ' ,.,) REPRODUCTION FROM THIS COPY
  • neighborlines~aa.l -- iWM1. at the price of individualisll}\. at the price of the beauty of --.A. of our ~n ~--~kA~ terms ~ ~eward. the loss of It would taegraciousness / mean the loss ~a.:::~vi d 1 of history, znb.and the loss ~ ~ l
  • went in and did the thing and then as the routine called for, when the two of them came out I stood in the way and said, "Line?" That meant, "Do you want a recei vi _ng 1ine? 11 time he would say yes. . If he 1i ked the group and knew he had
  • : • • I .~ • , ' '• ,; • , •• • •\ • • I I ( (' ' ~J ' ". . ;:h.1L ) ' ' () \ ' (;,,,/ '\2'+-V· 1966 10:00 a. m. MEMO!lANDUM F01t THE PltESIDENT South .Aaia is so important to our larger interests vis-a-vi• the USSR. and even mos,e
  • are sym­ pathetic to peoples of all the •newly-independent countries who have been victims of colonialism. What is more. they believe that Pakistan's case vis-a-vis I[\dia and Kashmir is just, and they , have demonstrated their wil• lingness to back this up
  • opponent, when parts of their territories are under foreign occupation and when the Arab countries live in a state of uncertainty owing to a possible renewal of the aggression. Dear Mr . President, we are now, after the vi sit to the Arab countries, even
  • of a misstatement, because from the very beginning it was more a matter of word than deed. In fact, Justice never really developed a strong coordinating responsibility. We did under Title VI of the '64 act which vested in the executive agencies the power to withhold
  • , h e n eeded me to come that particula r Friday because o n Monday Secretary Mc Namara was leaving for Vi e t Nam and the Pr es ide nt wanted me to go with Secretary Mc Namara to Viet Nam . So I had to ge t my shots and pas s port and all
  • ( EUC382 R ec t'V rO ' * ’ ” ZZ RUEPWW Vi u s A D£ RUEPCR 128 0 5 /1 0 1 4 Z Z 051010Z i%/|AU6 5 10 25 *^®CIASSIHED I FM JCS INFO RUEPWW/WHITE HOUSE RUEHCR/STATE R U E P |A ^ IA 350828Z ^^^CLASSIPted FM CTGIJEVEN SEVEN FT FIV E TO HUATZL
  • as o v e r I s lip p e d b a c k in to th e liv in g ro o m and w a tc h e d th e end o f th e m o v ie w h ic h w as lig h t an d fun in a s ty le a s n ew a s pop a r t and vi n yl d r e s s e s , a n d th e n to b e d by m id n ig h t. . . T he r
  • e y w e r e , le d b y th e tw o c h a i r m e n , J a c q u e lin e S h a rp , a N e g ro g i r l , a n d G e o r g e ; MEMORANDUM-' ■Vi TH E W H IT E HOUSE WA3BINOTON W e d n e s d a y , D e c e m b e r 2 8, 1966 Fox. Page 2 A n d g e o g
  • . L yndon did n o t co m e h o m e fo r a lo n g tim e . T o d a y h a s r u n th e g a m u t f r o m e x a lta tio n to g r ie f , f r o m a f i r s t s u c c e s s to a f i r s t tr a g e d y in th e s p a c e s to r y . I i I ' - * '• . ,Vi
  • s s e . A ai w e a l l fle w o u t to th e R a n c h w h e r e R o y W h ite w a s w a itin g f o r u s - - t h e - g r e a t v':vi -W i ^^ 4 "M EM ORANDUM ' ■ T HE w h i t e '. h o u s e " - :/■ S u n d a y , A p r il 2 , 1 9 6 7 W
  • . ' T h e y d id n o t q u it u n t i l 9 :0 0 . v^At-long l a s t i t e ' ' “i.'v.- V .• ' '- . ■ 'J •'.''■■■.v’.' ^ ‘ '■ ’VV 'v " f - T ' V; ‘ i - ‘-Vi a n d w e w e n t in to the. S ta te D in in g R o o m - f o r ; '' a d r i n k a n d a p
  • . . . . . . _l)//L . 1) ;/ 11.illfJ~ h ti/I' " ~ i ,4-,,, s. .· - ·-·­ .. '\'/ ;.fI) ~('~ti·~ I~, ... ; iJ .. ./ . {)c ,_. /J "~ 'W ~--.,. 45 t\ rn~ , .. . . _ _. . MHTl~•C UOTES 'QP'r'RIG~ITED Pwialieetieft Reqaires Rw•iuioA ef Cep >'4 ight Heltter. VI
  • . ·' 71. AJIBASSADOR BER8ERI WE THOUGHT THE GVN WAS WITH US. 72. AMBASSADOR BUNKERI YES9 VE ·HAD EVERY INDICATIONS THAT . THE .&VI VAS vnH us. 73. Q• VHEN ,DID VE FIND OUT THE GVN WAS NOT VITH US? 74.· B~~~~·:·.~l··TH~ · VERY END. 75. · Q•. .THE... ~AST
  • Cong guerrilla. ::md t errorist ncti vi ty i n South Vietnam. This decla.ration, we further presume, !IlD.kes i t cleo.r that the US means to go beyond specific reprisels f or i nd.ividua.l n&jor Viet Cong actions o.nd to continue air attacks until