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1875 results

  • I volunteered as he pu.ts it for a •combat mission over hostile possessions in New Guinea.• " 1 After my-experience vi th the .Air Corps in the Soutbwe:st Pacific it would be hard for me to conceive or any hon.or I would rather have than
  • #45 Memo 7/17/00 ..vis 'i"i-30 . • I #44 Memo RESTRICTION ~ ,Y • (' _L Bundy to Pres. re Cuba S t 1 1 p '~ 3 ;:.i,i, N Nr ~~ ih:'-f'.tf3~.~s.t:,tq ~ .Jt :lJ I, PS/? Pcb- j Jiu ,,/taJ ~ 3(' ~ ..) Bundy to Pres . (dup. #44 above) S 1 p 3/6/64
  • ~dget loan.s to maintain the lev~l of ~;Vi· J r:::~iliion, prL~cipally t.::~ gove!"n~:ent ac:ivc arj,d L""lvest.:r:el-:t bud.:;et, thereby kcepL11g the economy as a whole un.e:inploy~1.ent low. :~50 !:lillion of t..">-iis aid has already been
  • a payroll of $1,150 a week and, as of this time., are having difficulty making this payroll. I RH T-1., on April 3, 1967, adv:l.sed the subject was present at a State Meeting of the Vi!,ginia Realm he ld at Martins­ ville., Virginia., on March 26, 1967
  • M WINDH AM OF LI VI NG STON= OLTORF= THE COMPANY WILL APPRECI ATE SUGGESTIONS FROM ITS P ATRONS CONCERNL°"O lTiJ SERVICE [Front] ., ALL MESSAGES TAKEN BY THIS COMPANY ARE S~BJECT TO THE FOLLOWING TERFi_ :/ T~ard 1111alMt mlatakea or delays, tho
  • and that he wanted redoRe. I suppose from the po i nt of vi ew of the people do i ng it, it mi ght ha ve been unreasonable, but I've never seen him nasty to anybody, or vicious. Sometimes a little short-tempered. M: HoW did the NSC staff relate to the rest
  • problems which this nation confront are prob 1ems I want to help solve through my own act i vi ty . II And as I 111 point out in a few minutes, there were, according to our last study, LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • we can add that as an appendix. L: Yes. President Johnson--I went to see him in Palm Springs in the winter of 1964. thetic. He was vi siti ng there for a day or two. He was very sympa- He really had deep sympathy for people's illnesses
  • . Suggestive, I interpolate, of my growing conviction that he had made up 1ess than a vi ctory. II his mind to accept nothing LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID
  • : No, I can't recall any real problem, any failures on any of their staff members, and to this day General Bob Smith remains in my judgment a very fine individual. He was the associate, as I recall, and a very competent i ndi vi dua 1 . ~kNugh was 1ike
  • background, I was born in Fort Worth, October 1, 1909. DM: Did ....you go to school here? HM: I went to the public schools here and also the private school here in the elementary and high school years. And I went to Vi-n, Virginia Military Institute
  • and the kinds of things that had kept the consumer philosophy so far removed from day "to day concerns of the average family--car repairs, package sizes, credit costs, et cetera. Of course, I ve always worked for my 1i vi ng. I farm. things. I I ve had a very
  • in the draft legislation. In the end VISTA, or domestic peace corps, was one section in Title VI of the anti-poverty law. B; Were these men acting on their own in getting you to draw up this title just in the hopes that it could be included or--? P; No. I
  • Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Wil son -- I -- 3 vi: No. B: What were your first duties when you came to Washington with the Senator's staff? W: 'rJell, as an interesting
  • working in responsible to~ say, Walter Jenkins or someone? 1955-56~ were you Was there a sort of hierarchy on the staff? Who did you report to? VI: One, to Arthur Perry, and then right immediately above him vJOuld be Walter. It was really Walter
  • , visit around, politick a little bit, but not always, in the afternoon. G: Make speeches or just vi sit with local s? J: Well, he did make speeches. He didn't like to drive and I used to-- I can remember there in just those first months driving
  • was the feeling at your level of how Johnson got so deeply invo 1ved in Vi etnam? Did they feel that thi s was a Americanis~ t~\/O-fi sted coming out, or that he just blundered in, or was he misled or he trusted the wrong people, or do you have as many
  • Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh GENERAL SEf.~VI CES ADMINISTRATION NATIONAL
  • ,~tt,lcr l - -~~tirn:m""li~resid- ent ~ 1:;;,.~';;1.3-
  • be bcereattld 1D • ~-; -::::.: ~:::!:::-::~:!'.93 c:-..::::,ltl c:! 01:= .:~;,~::10:1 u:::_.: ~:... ~::::.:.,:i t.:> t.::!~=~~~ •~Q::ly. ,::.:..~i:as vith ?r::r.ca do vi~ ~ cu,ply of tcee Wo:r=:, of U•233 ~~ich t~o !::~ h--vc :c~~~tccl to~ uoa
  • 1lcl pr vi pt to o te beat for non-stand aai.a. o rural rout•• with nwaber or aubaoribera. Tne eidtor would appoint tlw beat nen oorrespolUlen.t po" ible or ti1111late the man • then. Li ~iDg the t•rritoey I would knOII' that th• I.Mrs content
  • - This should VI. Special Proccc,urcs A. Large nur s of arrests ;;nd prisoners introduce.cl unusual ·kloads and '---' 111e follo.-ring items should b~ considered and included processing problems. in future plans: 1. Adequacy of detention facilities
  • of ;:n•~on r:i.nd vandal:t~m were ha:i.1dl~:d by· the· Buffalo Police D-::part:::~,1;; on Satu:c·day, July 1, 1967., ·but the5e app~ar¢d to fall ,;,d.thi:n t!:l'°- cat~gory of' u~ual police act1vi t:!..en~ The: acti vi t.t~ll of organized. groups
  • I had made to hill earlier. In suba quent eetings he al.so held the line u4 hi• far well st te­ ment to the Presid nt, including hi• vi hes tor the sJ.1Cceseot the President' ■ p ae efforts I r present a wry considerable devi t1on tr.. Afghani tan
  • during his visit to U.S. and ltr re the courtesy extended to him during his visit to U.S. 5. 4/27/64 Msg to Bustamante 6. 5/1/64 Msg fm Bustamante re his visit to U.S. 7. 6/17 / 64 Msg fm Bustamante his vis it to U . S. re courtesy extended
  • •po.i t. p» tent& a 110-• a.onablo. an4 pe.-etta•ive ·-ppr()aeb to a JtrosrAm of .coop•J'atl~Jt . wlth. the · 'ri•t Uulol). la th l1e14 ol outer· spa~ • Th_, repo.:rt and a-ecommenda.ttona..thorcd~ h&Vi iny gell.oGral eftdol' e. mont and 1 htlr
  • of s.u e111te covera1e sut"l'1n signl!ic~tly a bck cf ~~!:.(.,'Vi!l:"f ~xt6'-~~ely coi:cA"::o ti~~Un.e~. There la a delay of' sovaral days (about S-S) !or difficult. f~ :lcth types rosr.octiireJ7.) ~t~uld Rot ~· Such a paclzto progra •U=hate
  • Am jjj^ng bA oadiy. a n d a c k e e A i^B.ni uf:> '^Aom jJxem aA tve madji. o io t wau. beJLiveen jJiem s t e p s a n d ik e y , c a l l e d o u t, "Go o d l u c k , M r. P r e s i den t ", a n d 1 9 , 1 9 69 vi kancLi ( f pag e 10 w&rvt o
  • the counterweight to SUkarno1 s more extreme policies. most Ji keJy succe6§9F to i:t1Jk1rno, either as President or as the power behind a civilian figurehead. While he is a strong nationalist and bas taken a hard line in Indonesia• s dispute vi th Malaysia ( which
  • OF THESE IMMUNITIES ANO .PR! VI LEGES UN QT E. 4. MINJUSTICE STATES THAT IriE ONLY LEGAL GROUNDS GOJ WOULD HAVE EXTENDING IMMUNITIES AND PRIVILEGES TO US NON-DIPLOMATIC PERSONNE; BEYOND WHAT IS NOW ACCORDED WOULD BE ON BASIS OF RECIPROCITY. FOR DECLASSIFIED E.O