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  • house. So we moved into the Stonewall Motel. And we got the same rooms every trip. Who was it? UPI [United Press International], Ferd Kaufman was with UPI and he had two rooms because he had an awful lot of equipment and I'll never forget him, but he
  • trips; LBJ as passenger; flying under conditions that were not ideal; providing an adequate number of pilots for long trips; the logistics of transporting the president, staff, security personnel, and press in two planes on trips; Sam Houston Johnson
  • Affairs; during 1954-58, he was an Associate for the Middle East, American Universities Field Staff; and in 1958-59, he was Assistant Director, Humanities, The Rockefeller Foundation. Mr. Nolte has been, from 1959 to the present, both Executive Director
  • - THE Ji NEWS NEW YO .. K'9 ~tCTU,_11!: NEW ■ ~A~ER 1272 NATIONAL PRESS BUILDING WASHINGTON, D.C. 20004 NATIONAL 8-5058 J°UllP JO, 1971 J>1ar Bill, tl~rff~S that IillibJh Hilsman dooum.~nt. B~st, \ TO . FR011 SUBJECT .... l._ Diem-Nhu Move
  • s UN Security Council censure of Israel. They claim the UN action gives a blank check to the Arab governments backing the terrorists. We 1 re pressing them to beef up their own border control effort and to help improve the UN machinery there. They're
  • there fighting--and I would say that for the people that I knew, and I knew most of them. I'd either served with them at one time or another or been associated with them, and we met frequently. In fact, we met formally once a month up in Nha Trang. And I believe
  • ; updates on the Vietnamese leaders Desobry worked with; the 42nd and 44th Rangers' strengths; Desobry's relationship with the press; Ward Just's writing; events leading up to the Tet offensive; the loss of Viet Cong strength in the Delta; the effects
  • • _ • "!.- · ~ · -'· : . :. , • _. - refonna. In this reApectJ the work of the lnttfrnatJonal Longshorcmen•s. . Association (ILA) has been par~tcul arl y noteworthy. Under the patrio-tic and imaginative leadership of its president, Thomas Gleason,· the ILA has assigned to Saigon four
  • !M19InL • 2 ... two, w~ would leave the lndlan rationing system ha:rd pressed, but India's fall crop brings stocks. to their highest point in the yeas-. Sa tf are going to hold back, now ls the best tim• beea\il.ee it gives us time ~ assess the ctop
  • seeking to respond to the general desire for settlement as expressed in the convention. Friends in the hall and whole delegations with whom I had spoken during the course of the week had made clear that this was an urgent, pressing issue with them; we were
  • and told him that the President had been shot --on the plane--and he said that they had just had word from one of the press services and what was the situation. I told him all I knew. He said they were going to come into Hickam Field and he would call me
  • : That's correct. I basically was a newspaperman. I was labor reporter on the San Francisco Chronicle, and in the late fifties had been given an American Political Science Association congressional fellowship for a year in Washington. During that time I
  • at the airport and arranged a press conference for hUn. That was my only contact with him. M: What did these big city northern mayors think about Johnson being the vice presidential candidate in 1960? C: I personally thought it was a very good choice, I
  • legislation; Senate vote on Medicare testifying on the hill; civil rights bill; duties as Secretary; expansion of Office of Aging; women in government; appointment by Secretary; birth control report; surgeon general's report on smoking; LBJ and the press
  • on the part of the Ecuadorians in getting the change made? B: I don't know. I never did know because we had agreed to do it. The Ecuadorians were actually pressing me to get our agreement to do it. F: So I never did find out why it didn't happen
  • date by }1r. Busby's office. Correspondence dated 1964 & 1965, Box no. Loose Leaf Binders: 1. 2. J. 4. 5. 6. President of Korea Park - Visit - list of emplpyees who will attend ceremor.y President's Press Conference Briefing Papers - 3/ll/65 & 3/20
  • of people. It's a conservative [organization] like the Americans for Democratic Action on the left. And the second way was in anti-communist seminars. Now, there was a little flurry and some news about that and some complaining in the press and arguing
  • _directly -with Senator Johnson's Texas office. So that my associations w~ .,. President Johnson at tha t time were intermittent, let me put; it ,/ LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library
  • relations back to close association with President Roosevelt in days of Good Neighbor Policy. Recall Great Depression in which hemisphere and initiatives of New Deal; link this past in Alliance for Progresso 7. Pledge continued joint effort in carrying
  • CLOSELYUS PRESS; HE HAS-TALKEDAT CONSIDERABLE LENGTHWITHME ABOUTHIS DIFFI­ CULTIESAT HOME WHICHHE BELIEVESARISE IN PARTFROMTHE BAD PRESS WHICHHE GETS ABROAD. I MYSELFHAVENOTFOUNDANY SUBSTANTIAL EVIDENCEFOR THE EXTREME ALLEGATIONS FREQUENTLY MADECONCERNING
  • expect the entire Goverament to pull in the same direction. Examples: Panama 1964, Ayub and Shastri 1965, and the Dominican Bepublic. 2. The importance of wdty in what we aay. The press -a re continually trying to divide the Government againat itaelf
  • 'in the galaxy of New _Deal personalities. -One need only read his speech to · the Free World, Association, extracts from w.hich ap­ pear on page 725, to understand his profound concep­ tion of the humanitarian advances and reforms which can be forged out
  • facts I observed and the conclusion s I drew. 1 . The leaders of West Berlin and West Germany a r e les s critical of the United States than press d i spatches have indicated they were. Conversations with both Chancell or Ad enaue r and Mayor Brandt made
  • . I took some of my consternations over to George Christian, who was the press secretary at the time, who was present at the ranch in Australia when Mr . Johnson was tendered the offer of the kangaroos . George said he had enough to worry about ; he
  • LBJ's tour in Australia; kangaroos for the ranch; LBJ's decision to retain Kennedy cabinet; press leaks; opinions of Stuart Udall; appointment to the Department of the Interior; Rebekah Johnson's relationship with LBJ; Boatner's father's death
  • of these states 'Will press for US support in their endeavors. We are skeptical of their ability to cooperate effective4' - - either with each other oz: jointly with local rulers along the Gulf. C. Nevertheless, for the next couple of years the chances are against
  • : Beaty at Interior with [Stewart] Udall and an associate of his, Bob McConnell, [who] worked with Beaty. Ken Birkhead, similarly with Orville Freeman.I think that was essential, as these were positions in the department or agency that were high
  • . INTRAUSlGEt~CE. I\ POVtHF'UL VOJC~· \!ILL BE TH£ co:111u·rsr ILL SU~PORT OAlLY P~nrv, SOLIDLY BEHlfD·HANQI POSITIO 'WHICH IT I~ n·:; PRESS AUD, fl.S APPP.OPRIATE, BY D.tNOUSTRATIONSAUD ACTIVITIES Or F?.Otri ORGAtHZATtOtlS. ABOVE ALL TlfERE \HLL REIG~ THI
  • INITIAL The Scenarios to suggest either that for SIGMAI-66 are not intended de-escalation desirable illuminating or likely. o~ the war 1n SEA is These some of the problems wlrl.ch may be associated level SCENARIO of hostilities. are aimed
  • to National Assembly Ceent to Department via USIS signal:S-) has been widely enthusiastic. l'his was true both initially arid after passage of three days. Cabinet Ministers, generals, members-National Ass bly, press, businessmen and diploma~s have unanimously
  • authority runs out in June. We are encouraged that the Europeans seem to be moving ahead, but we need to wrap things up soon with a balanced bargain. Money talks also reaching a critical stage. Must press forward toward a more adequate and dependable
  • dimension . That was Tucson , in_which a second night of -"rioting" seem~ to have been planned or ~taged for the press . There was even reported sniping at two or three media vehicles . POLICE-COMMUNITY RELATIONS IN CRISIS: THE PROBLEM _OF CONTROL
  • up Joint Export Associations to help U.S. get into the export business. (no legislation) companies Reducing programs the foreign squeezing more exchange offsets cost on military of government Promoting foreign The controversial 1
  • AT' VIA . 1. cv ) dY2 I U 235 , 2-r;t✓],) of pages. Talking points for meet , with Mrs. Gandhi March 9, 19 66 = 1) Food situation: letters a) The problem of public relations abroado b) The need for pressing other governments from Mrs. G
  • in the press? We are trying to do so many oth~r things with our economic and health projects. ConstR.ntly remind the people that we are doing other things besides bombing. .­ UtM€R: Took this question up with Zorthian end I pres~ p~ople. { ' CJc
  • ." At the last minute, I decided to make the race, to the consternation of the press. elected. You see, I did not live in Tom Ford's district. Melvyn was at the time already overseas Burma, China Theatre of war. I was serving in the India, He heard of my
  • a nice occasion it was, that kind of thing. G: You mentioned the picketing. Why was he so concerned about the picketing? Was it because of the press coverage of it or was it just a personal--? K: I don't want to overdo his concern because he
  • LBJ’s frustration at the end of his presidency, especially regarding the Soviet Union and Vietnam; LBJ’s attempt to meet with Nixon and Soviets; Urban League dinner in New York; LBJ’s concern over press coverage of anti-war, anti-LBJ picketing; sale
  • did that entail exactly? M: Task Force was a headquarters composed of about, oh, forty people, most of them communicators in a regular staff with a commander, a deputy commander--the one, two, three, four kind of people, and their associated
  • started. And some private money which we were able to raise to get started in East Kentucky. G: Was that Ford Foundation money, or--? A: I can only remember two specific sources of resources. with Reynolds Metal. One I associate I had gone
  • Chicago and downstate Illinois took up the incident on their. front pages and made it a cause celebre. In areas • where every opportun-lty is sought to criticize a Democratic administration, and the Department of State in particular, the Republican press
  • required yet since the proposal will come before you shortly. IV. Title III Programs for India-Pakistan-UAR-Algeria. This is the item on which you wanted us to see you (we 1 ve included Freeman--and Reuter so he wouldn 1t keep pressing for an appointment
  • by the press because many of them are in the Georgetown set. In fact, my current wife is a member of the press and covered the White House for Life Magazine. She happens to be a good friend of the President's but that brings you into contact with a lot
  • INTERVIEWEE: RICHARD H. NELSON INTERVIEWER: MICHAEL L. GILLETTE· PLACE: Mr. Nelson's office, New York City Tape 1 of 3 G: Let's start with your association with the Peace Corps. How did you get involved with that? N: I had met Bill Moyers and Sarge
  • >< L STATE 108715 L!MDIS io MISSION ~ND MAtV EFFORTS TO KEEP PRESS FACTU~LLY INFORMED OF EV~NTS •IN SOUTH VI ET-:NAM IS THOROUGHLY REFLECTED LATEST ?RESS REPORTS~ AGREE FULLY WITH YOUR INTENTION TO MAI~TAIN FU~L FLOW at l~FOR~ATION, INtL0oiNG ~IGH