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  • VICE PRESIDENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON. DAILY DIARY The Vice President began his day at (place) Telephone f or t Entry No. Time Lo 1 4:00a 2 11:15a 3 12:45p 4 1:00p 5 4:30p 6 5:30p 7 7:30p Day Monday Ambassador's residence, Berlin Activity (include
  • April 26, 1961 visited by)* LD Expenditure Code Dick Berlin and Ed Weisl in hotel suite (among other things discussed Gen. MacArthur haircut in Waldorf barbershop (see letter fr. Mr. Berlin dtd Apr. 27, 1961) hamburgers in suite with Reedy, Dick Bird
  • in Viet-Nam and the Middle East. Dobrynin asked what we thought of the situation in Europe. Rostow said we had noted the absence of trouble in Berlin. Dobrynin said he thought the government had decided not to act in the face of the "provocation" in Berlin
  • the Senate but not the House. So naturally the Democrats did not have as much authority as the Republicans did. Senator [Leverett] Saltonstall of Massachusetts was chairman. Richard Russell, Dick Russell as everybody called him, was the ranking Democrat
  • modernize and amend his statement to say, 'The only thing nece~f!&ry for the triumph of evil is for good men and good women,to do nothing.'" ###### WHAT THE WRlTERS SAY ABOUT MRS. LYNDON B. JOHNSON Richard Wilson, Columnist Cowles April, Publication
  • . Crawford of a report he had that Richard Goodwin, Arthur Schlesinger and Blair Clark have undertaken an effort to get Secretary McNamara to resign in protest to the handling of the Vietnam War. The President said the Congo has cooled off considerably. "We
  • of independence. -8- The prompt creation of such an institution, based on this principle, would fill an important --and never more apparent-- national need. Respectfully, and Welfare Richard Helms Director of Central Intelligence N~~~d11 J~~ Under Secretary
  • In Firemen's Parade Sure, However 1 Voters As He Devotes At Time To Needs Of Port Vue Lost Night U. S. Meanwhile, Berlin Is Triumphantly Waiting Full Capitulation t. Confer uJJ011 the Pre!Sldent Cull wu·-time power Lo pt:·~par• ShoL while marching
  • She ppar d was my very great friend. The Florida shi p canal, seen by Morris She ppard as a def ense vraterway , savin~ five hundred safe miles from t e sneaking submarines of any beast of Berlin, has not been built. name was on the bill vrith mine
  • we'd send marines to guard the embassy. If we hadn't made our mistake in Cuba, there's be no wall in Berlin. We should have sent the marines into Cuba to rescue those boys who went down there to fight for us. "We say Yugoslavia is •our kind
  • and a possible future president. F: We're moving ahead. H: Yes. F: But did he ever express himself on Richard Nixon vis-à-vis Johnson? H: You mean as being elected president? F: Yes. H: No, not that I can recall. If he did, it was, "If Dick
  • .'s shop with quiet efticiency since Johnson moved into the White Hlmse. He supervises such speechwriters as Richard Goodwin, Douglass Cater and Horace Busby, tosses in the scriptural citations of which Lyndon is so fond. Better than any other staffer
  • .'s shop with quiet efticiency since Johnson moved into the White Hlmse. He supervises such speechwriters as Richard Goodwin, Douglass Cater and Horace Busby, tosses in the scriptural citations of which Lyndon is so fond. Better than any other staffer
  • . [Richard] Kleberg and having met just about everybody in the Fourteenth Congressional District, and because of the U.S. Naval Training Station--I think that was approximately the name of it--which he had helped get placed and kept there. In fact, I think he
  • lived at Floresville, Texas. At that time he was secretary to Congressman Richard M. Kleberg. F: You were in his district. C: Yes. So he came to Floresville, the Congressman did, and Mr. Johnson did from time to time. My daddy was quite active
  • to the President - Henry Hall Wilson, Jr. 654 Que,en Ann,e Terrace Falls Church, Virginia Special Aaslatant to the President USA. - P. Kenneth O'Donnell 57,0 Maeaachuaetta Avenue, Special Assistant to the President - Db.•ector, Food for Peace Richard W
  • ? W: Certainly. He made all these trips to Vietnam, Pakistan and Europe and the Berlin Wall. There isn't any doubt about it. I think it lifted him clear out of his strictly state character and made a national figure out of him. It's hard
  • on his way down to Corpus Christi to accept his first big assignment job with Congressman Richard M. Kleberg. Congressman Kleberg asked him to stop by and meet us, and he stayed all night in our home. C: Were you publishing then? F: Yes sir, fifty
  • or not . But, for instance, when I'd been up there two or three weeks--we'd been to Berlin and back--finally one day he said � � � LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More
  • . Bromberger-Barnas, Maxwell R. Brooks, Richard Chase, Bernice Cohen, William Coleman, Guido Crocetti, H.Z. Cummins, Marsha CUmmins, J.E. Deese, Sara deFord, Clinton DeSoto, Eugenio Donato, J.D.H. Donnay, Gunter von Ehrenstein, Leon Eisenberg, Jerome Frank
  • . Calltornla 90012 ( \1) ( THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON March 20, 1965 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT Press Contacts, Week of Marc),1.15 On March 15, Crosby Noyes brought in one of his foreign reporters, Mr. Richard Critchfield. Most of the talk was about
  • Ma)•or Neubauer, de­ claring himself "shocked at the crlme," iminediatelY, called upon Berliners to remain calm and come to the aid or the police In their investlgatlon. But this incident constituted the first attempt at p~l.ilicii assasslnjtlon
  • ■ compiled the following of continuing interest to the etaff, for use in distributing material. It will be mutually helpful if you ~l continue (Ext. 2.237) of any changes ae they occur. ,.,-}/··• I . ! • ¥/ I ,._ / / ROSTOW NATO - Germany• Berlin Algeria
  • ? , NARA Date , 11-;;,1,~r;4 ,J• ,--~ , •j , ' .. ' -..... / i i C "E ~ !, : ' . ~ -.. DECLASSIFIED E.O. 12958, Sec. 3.6 NL,J '7 ~- l~ 7 ... '\ ........ . . , EXDIS BERLIN FOR AMB MCGHEE SUBJECii ROSTOW MEEfJNG WifH THE CH~NCELLO~ i' w DUR I
  • : the problem of the credibility of the American response has in any case been less in the forefront of European anxieties since the Cuban missile crisis of October 1962 and the end of the Soviet diplomatic offensive against Berlin. Nor can the force proposed
  • ■iraculoualy three tilll••• I waa in hospi­ tal• 1D Berlin and aavania frca llovember, 1944. until S.ptember, 1945. After beincJreleaaed froa the hospital, I vaa under continual doctor'• care aad vaa COl'Ulidered l~ diauled for life under German law. In April
  • . Hosts dinner for Pres. Aleman and his party. Later attends Cherry Blossom ball. 4/7 10:30 a.m., meets with JFK on Berlin negotiations (in cabinet room or his office), arriving at P-38 at 2 p.m. 2:25 a.m., President calls to ask if he could be at Glen
  • convicted of any subversive activity in this country could be exiled. 2/22 LBJ attends a conference at the State Department to discuss the Berlin conference. 1954 Chronology ● p. 7 of 36 07/2024 7 lbjlibrary.org REFERENCE: LBJ CHRONOLOGY Drafted
  • from Governor Richard J. Hughes of ·New Jersey who, in a letter to me, says: - - , r •ff "I returned from this trip with a high respect for the courage of the Vietnamese people and with a confirmed belief in the • honesty of the September 3 elections
  • to penalty for treason is is worse than the grave. but never her traitors!! to your country. None shall Many of you have escape!" Other names are Dr. Benjamin Spock, David Schoenbrun, Les Crane, Marlon Brando, Bishop Pike, Dore Schary, Richard
  • that the briefing was use.f'u.l., but I am equalJ.3' convinced that it did little to change the views ot the three Senators present. 8. Please let me lmov if you want more detai1. ~ ·Richard Helms Director -... =M(JII
  • S. STRATTON, New York OTIS O. PIKE, New York RICHARD (DICK) ICHORD, Missouri LUCIEN N. NIIIDZI, Michigan ALTON LENNON, North Carolina WILLIAM J. RANDALL, M188ourl G. ELLIOTT HAGAN, Georgia CHARLES H. WILSON, Calltornht ROBERT L. LEGGETT, Call!ornla
  • WITHALLOTHERPEACE-LOVING PEOPLEAND COUNTRIES OP' TKE WORLD,FOR THE NOBLEAIMOF COMPLETELY PROHIBITING DESTROYING NUCLEAR WEAPONS. ANDTHOROUGHLY 28 OEC l830Z CF/CP 90, ATOI SMASHER VASHINGTON AP>•MATOR RICHARD J. DALEY PLEDGED CHICAGO•s COOPERATIONWITH ATOMIC
  • in Berlin-Dahlem, of which Hahn became Director in 1928. On January 6, 1939, there appeared Hahn and Strassman's first publication of "experiments which contradict all previous results of nuclear physics". The nucleus of uranium was split into two parts