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1875 results
- AND FROM 1 TO 5 YEARS ANO A FINE FROM 360 TO 3,600 CONF'lSCATIONo VI• CARRYING AND TRANSPORTATIONOF ARMS IN CATEGORIES 1, 4 OR 61 EVEN IF' THESE ARMS WERE LAWFULLYPURCHASED• CATEGORY It 2 TO 5 YEARS IMPRISONMENT AND FINE FROM 800 TO 15,000 FRANCS• CATEGORY4
- 44. Research File [TASK FORCE VI - Firearms]
- CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE DATE RESTRICTION ., t .~ ~il.09 memo. re Brandt 1- , ~ 'i ~ All.. .j C,/- tow t~ the PrnSTden e Vi.-etnam ~--8e-G¼e-t-- -1- p.-. ~ J ~ ; ! A 3 - , ~ N~ .l'il ~SI, DtJhl"?"'AtieJ ,, ,.. NL .J &jf-:>.S/p ~ S - 0.5- CJ , 41L J 'J
- just used it. Later on Sarge Shriver's group came in there; their Citizens for Kennedy-Johnson used a lot of that space. But Charlie Murphy's group stayed in that space. My wife worked in that space with Vi Berry and Charlie Murphy and Jack Burns, a son
- p a r t y an d I f e lt h a p p y . Vi d e ■ I1" B a r t l e t t h a d b e e n e s p e c ia lly a r tic u la te and in te r e s tin g in h e r c o n tr ib u tio n u p s ta i r s a b o u t w h a t youth h a d done in A la s k a , p r in c ip a lly
- e o f i t - - "Vi c t o r y Thro u g h A ir P o w e r ". A n d h e s a i d , " Y e s , I s p e n t m o r e th a n 50 y e a r s o f m y lif e w o rk in g bn a i r p l a n e s a n d n o w I a m a 'c h im n e y s w e e p ' ' S o m e o n e r e m a r k
- th e n s t e e r e d B i l l W ir tz A n d l a t e r th e S e c r e t a r y o f S ta te . I w a n te d to m a k e i t a b r i g h t e v e n in g f o r h e r to o , a n d to sh o w m y a p p r e c i a t i o n f o r th e v i t a l i t y . Vi
- I d o n ’t r e m e m b e r o f A b r a h a m L in c o ln ,Vi' s o m e m e d i o c r e , o ne I th o u g h t q u ite a w f u l . - A n i n t e r e s t i n g c o l l e c t i o n o f F D R m e m o r i a b i l i a , in c lu d in g c a m p a ig n b u tto
- e w h ile ■ '■•, , ..........■ - t , v ~ '. •’■ ■ ■ ■ . ■ • ’• . . . .. V. • ■ ■ . ' ' v . V > r- ■ -.V * • - ,, . . . V jr^' . ■' _ *■ -,•,*■• ' • , ' ' . . - . *^v ' - . V ’Vi,.'. . . . c- . . : .-■ .• •
- l ? ” - I co u ld c a ll him an d r a is e him on that! . - ■ Vi--'-:,': Vv; ■V.: . And he said/y^a r a th e r dvilcet e x p re ss io n , som ething to the e ffe c t th a t "co m e N p v em b er, the b e s t m an w ill w in ,’* And I got iii m y w o
- a n d m o t h e r s b f t h e ' Vi' V‘: ;H e a d S t a r t p r o g r a m a n d t h r e e o f th e l i t t l e c h i l d r e n i n a H e a d S t a r t c l a s s ' - - . :5 ^ a N e g r o , one a L atin A m erica n , and one w hite ch ild - - co m e up
- with the National Security Council. At that meeting , we were briefed on the major f oreign policy issues by the various cabinet members. De,f ense Secretary ;.1cNamara t a l ked about South Vi etnam, Secretary of State Rusk about Panama and Brazil, Under Secretary
- , and especieJ.ly t hat of the EEC, until the EEC demonstrates that it can ca:rry out the responsi bilities of a surplus area "1.sely and cooperatively. One way Of dc::1onGtrating this would be through agreement vi th the United states and t he rest of the world
- ""'"' ·• Meo. a. SUBJECT: Tbt• le a aaor-t meetlag deataoed only for lafoftnatloa bltlefta:a ·o a two auiljecia: :Sou.ti. Vlet:um aad Cypnia. On South Vi•tnam ·t h ite may l>e A\nher dl•cu•sion-•tlll ol a p•ellmiaary •nt. at bmeheon.' Cypra•, oae act l
- : ecidcd t t.i.at in vi.1 .l or tl'o ser~ou;Sness 1.. f t'1e ..atter a..id tm. probt ... i l~ ty tha t later l..rl. l:.enr:e.-~ . ou10. dan~1 ... ·.L ine suc!1 stc.\.ementa I a~l.z c.. w.y nur ..; e .'io.:; O.' ... JY Bli... cu-sr t' 1! tau . .~ L
- were like Shannon. You knew Shannon? CL: No, I've just read all of his material. ML: Oh, for God's sake. CL: Yes, he was. ML: No vis i on • CL: No broad vision. ML: No vision. CL: What we'd call tunnel vision. ML: He abso1 utely hated
- . And when we went to vi s it at that time Johnson as the majority 1eader of the Senate, I bel i eve Jack [Jacob] Potofsky was wi th me and Arthur Goldberg, and I think must have been also Alex Rose of the millinery uni on. There were four of us. He
- for the FBI? S: Oh, I went in about the time of the beginning of World War II and stayed in till the end of the war. I returned to Dallas then to practice law. [vi: Did you join this firm that you're now in at that point? '. LBJ Presidential Library http
- of those signs, "White" and "Colored", and this is his great achievement. But it's lost in the maze of Vi etnam and so forth and so on, and he finally felt obliged to resign. I always liked LBJ personally. I thought he was a nice human being, and I had
Oral history transcript, Calvin Hazlewood, interview 1 (I), 2/14/1979, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- had one in vi rtllally every county. people. I was doing that. I had to go out and see those Eventually though, it got changed. Inste.ad of my having all of those counties, they changed it to where I had only Big Spring and Lubbock and Amarillo
- playing in Laos in the early sixties before the accords were signed? H: The North Vietnamese a) were supporting the Pathet Laos military forces~ and b) they had troops in areas of Northern Laos. The North - Vi etnamese never honored the accords
- contact? L: How \'!Ou 1d you set up these vi sits? This was done largely by Claude Wild, who got on a long distance phone and would pick out a target town and call two or three people tnere, and get somebody to accept the chairmanship and to call
- Career; Civil Rights Bill of 1964; first meeting LBJ; contacts with LBJ; change in opinion about LBJ; contact with White House through Douglass Cater; cut-off of federal funds; Directorship of the Office of Civil Rights; school guidelines; Title VI
Oral history transcript, William F. McKee, interview 2 (II), 11/8/1968, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- and certainly no one would deliberately do any thing that would impair our safety. On the other hand, I did feel that there would probably or quite possibly be impediments to getting programs through that I thought of vi~al importance to meet the growth
- a vis i b1e man in po 1it i c s . G: Anything on Herbert Henderson, who traveled with Johnson, did a lot of speech writing I think? This was just 1941, I believe. M: I don't recall him. I recall the name, but I don't know him. G: Of course
Oral history transcript, Earle Wheeler, interview 1 (I), 8/21/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- . up. Pass him Go to the kitchen and talk to the hired help, because there's more of them. They'll listen better and they haven't committed them- selves like the guy behind the cash register." G: This was in the 1937 [campaign]? VI: Yes. Now
- · - '~ ~~(..~ w. w ~ /)--vi; --p, [3 of 4] /J~~ ; , v ~- · u~J 1- ,~ ~J I / J #~, , L rt..Wv
Oral history transcript, George R. Brown, interview 3 (III), 7/11/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- Christmas? He had only been in office about a month . He saw it coming, and he was going to have to make up his mind because he had read all the commitments and knew all the =7-vi tments . He felt like he was committed to it . G: Do you think that he
Oral history transcript, Richard R. Brown, interview 1 (I), 7/25/1978, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- . We had several top-notch ones . He was very Campbell was outstanding . We had the president of Arkansas State College in Arkansas . a wonderful program . He had He vied very closely with Lyndon on the road- side park and community recreation
- member firms. One of AHAC's main projects is "VIP", which in Hunts vi 11 e means "Vo 1u n teer Instruction Program." With the assistance of its Technical Advisory Committee (TAC), composed of Huntsville citizens, AHAC has designed "VIP" to meet the need
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 54: Dec. 11‑19, 1967 [1 of 4]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 26
(Item)
- ,-9~.:~ /flfl--meffl6'-t----l
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 63: Feb. 17‑21, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 29
(Item)
- . E. DePUY General, uSA Majo-:- - ... ..., • · C~ ·. ;. ---fb I. INDOCF.I..1xA II. AIR DISTAi,c~ FROM SU??CRT BASES !V. G~'ERAL AREA - !G-3 SA.~ V. BATTU: AREA - -DIE! 3IEN PEU VI. BA'i'TLE AREA - !C~ SA~'IH &: D!-1.Z Annex 3
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 63: Feb. 17‑21, 1968 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 29
(Item)
- SEORET COURSE ANYWAY, AND HE WOULD PUSH VIEN TO ~O VE P.H€A D IN THIS SENSE. HE ADDED 7riAT 1-,E PLAN. 12:D TO SE ND GENERAL THANG TO IV CORPS AND Gr NE RAL LA N TO II CORPS AS SOON AS POSSIBLE TO REPLACE GENERA L MANH AND GENERAL VI NH LOC. IN CO NNE
- revlew of n11 appllcadou ncelftd. You may be ••••ed ~ •• ann& appllcation to wldc:11J011 l'efe~ncl will be>revlewo4 -,mpathellcaUy aad conalctc.ot wltll lbe nlea anHormly applied to all appllcuu. • I 'Vi• appnclate J"I' lnterest la au_ pollutloa
- . and Mrs. Clifford J. Durr Box 300G, Route 4 Wetumpka, Alabama 36092 --.t . Fu.~ u· _ ~ ll'i~9S9: ___ ,. l J .. . c; ('J : • : ___,. !:A-ft? ..... July 16, 1974 V ea.IL Vi.~g i. n.la. : l enjoyed .youll. .new.6y Lett ell., a.-6 1 alwa.y.6
- TERRORISM.HE ADVOCATED T~AT PAR-rYWORK AMONG THE MASSESWASFUNDAMENTAL BUTTHIS VI EWWASALSOREJECTED SY THE PLENUM. 8 A COMMISSION WASAPPOINTEDTO STUDYTHE QUESTIONOF 'w'HAT POSITION THE PCV SHOULDTAKEIN THE SINO-SOVIETDISPUTE. THE COMMISSION WASTO MEETAFTERTHE