Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

4469 results

  • by an air demonstration well inside Korea, so handled as to have high press visibility. 9. At this point we would assess the North Korean reaction, if any, and decide in light of intelligence gathered through other sources whether to resume private meetings
  • for lingering echoes in the Nationalist press. ·Alternate Sites As the result of actions begun over a year ago, NASA and DOD would be prepared, if necessary, to move all space tracking operations from South Africa to alternate sites (principally Malagasy, Spain
  • . It did not enter into my own decision. TG: When was this proposal made? I associate it with Adlai Stevenson. AG: No, it was made before, and then typical of Lyndon--now I can call him Lyndon, he's dead; I always called him Mr. President although I
  • Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Wilbur Cohen -- II -- 11 during my secretaryship. One was Jules Sugarman who was head of the Head Start program, who I made associate chief
  • . Then I guess the third phase of my association began in the spring of 1939. F: You were president of the student body what year? C: I was president of the student body in 1938-39. I was elected in the spring of 1938, took office then and served until
  • ; LBJ's congressional work style; LBJ trying to get on the Appropriations Committee; LBJ's use of charm; LBJ forcing staff members to stretch their abilities; FDR's third term campaign; Connally's wedding; LBJ's 1940's senatorial campaign; press relations
  • Press relations
  • with Alice Roosevelt Longworth; photos with little boy for United Givers Fund; Lady Bird meets Arthritis & Rheumatism Association group; Tchaikovsky Competition reception; LBJ gives remarks; Lady Bird describes performances; receiving line
  • Press relations
  • Lady Bird to Portland, Oregon, for last trip & speech; LBJ nominates Abe Fortas as Chief Justice & Homer Thornberry for Associate Justice of Supreme Court; Lady Bird gives speech to American Institute of Architects; Orville Freeman is in panel
  • Press relations
  • gallstones; Lady Bird gives speech for the American Forestry Association event; story about origin of name "Honeymoon Cottage" where Lady Bird stayed
  • of the project, 1 am acquainted w:l.th many of the property owner• in thia vicinity who own properties along the ooaat and who would be vitally interested in this project. 1 am associated with several of theae buaineaa affairs and feel that 1 can speak matter
  • were in HEW at the time and how you were drawn into the task force. H: Well, I was associate general counsel of HEW, working only in part on matters related to what eventually came about in the Economic Opportunity Act. Mankiewicz. I think I got
  • and Senator Hayden were the closest kind of associates and personal friends of long standing, and I'm sure this had influence on the President's desire to get this behind him and give Carl Hayden some help in his declining years. And the President did. He
  • that they can make a profit out of that operation, what specific things does your agency do for the businessman then? F: Well, we work with not only the individual firms but with the trade associations and other groups to acquaint them with our judgment
  • in conservation. R: Over 50 years. I was a member of the old American Game Association, and I was on the Advisory Committee of the Biological Survey. I was on the Commis sion to buy refuges - -the National Migratory Bird Commission to buy refuges and pass
  • was gone, MACV publicized--they had also been very secretive up to this time. The day I was up north they probably thought I was going to go find the press and tell them all about it. thing from my mind. Farthest The worst thing that could have happened
  • to it ; and if you don't I'll just tear this little piece of paper up ." He said, "Oh, no, don't do that ." I said, "Ail right, then let's have a press release on it to seal our agreement .'" � � � LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL
  • oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Whiteside he was always trying to do something for Dr. Evans. buttons to press, all I .:..:. 21 He knew which right~ G: What did he do for Dr. Evans? W: I don't know that he ever did
  • not really sure. MG: I was wondering, was there one point in your early association with him where he more or less convi.nced you that he was advancing ci vil rights? HW: No, the only time that I think I was really aware or him really advancing civil
  • or eleven o'clock maybe, between eleven and twelve, and I went by Lyndon's hotel suite. Of course the press was all outside and they had a bunch of guards LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library
  • TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh his tent, but not wanting to be associated with a Johnson Administration enterprise particularly, and busy
  • talk to who could understand you. I mean, I'd been associated with him in a law suit in Mississippi in 1960 so that I had a professional kind of acquaintance with him. But that was tough and Alabama was tough, but we always found some people. There were
  • Marine guards or some sort of uniformed people standing along the aisle keeping the people back. But the people wanted to press forward and we had to move very swiftly to get through and into the other ballroom and back again. As I recall then we danced
  • . let you know in the morning." 14y son had associated with his children. So the next morning he said, "Sherry and I'd like to go." called Rex up, and he said, "That's fine." I That's the way that he went down in the latter part of 1961. Within two
  • on to the heights that he did, I know McFarland was extremely proud of the association, and when we went to Washington at the occasion of the Kennedy funeral, McFarland wanted very much to tell Lyndon personally � � LBJ Presidential Library http
  • Cohen and had gotten one from Wilbur Cohen saying that this was a good thing, did vote with us at the full committee level. He was the only Republican who did. Congressman Edwards and Congressman Erlenborn nevertheless proceeded to press to a floor fight
  • TO THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Relations between the President and the Joint Chiefs of Staff Press critics who are trying to drive a wedge between the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Commander-in-Chief by overstating and oversimplifying differences should be reminded
  • of mounting pressure in Parliament to go nuclear, is not clear. Lower -Indian officials have been quoted in the press as believing that a nuclear explosive for "peaceful purposes" "'- would not vioiate India's formal commitment to Canada to use plutonium from
  • with the minjnn1m of repression; that the second is to ex,­ press and act proportionate values in the use of time and emphasis;: that such approach, of course, will encourage intellectual honesty, intellectual curios­ ity, kindness, clarity, and above all
  • by an officer assigned to the Narcotj.cs Squad of the Buffalo Police Department, who had :been pressed into riot duty .. PHIPPS was a patron in the Crow's Nest, a Negro bar on Jefferson Avenue, Buffalo, New York, on the night of fire­ of June 29, 1967. Because
  • good in itself, but ultimately good for our country. Today Rostow would have press d for assistance to countries from which terrorists come, and for openings to those societies on grounds that iris their rigidi­ ties that drive people into non
  • tenn as the state's Governor And he is not the first of the state's had he remained silent in 1960. ~olitical leaders to be rejected at the polls because of his sup~ort of and association with the present Democratic administration. I am quite aware
  • is at last removed from the stricken tory. Nearly half of their production countries overseas, the first and most may be going to the British and Amer­ pressing need will be action to bring foo'cl ican governments by the time Hitler is to the starving
  • it to the press. I told my associates that we should not do so. We have submitted to the committee some 200 copies of it so they may release it. I doubt very much th at we will be able to withstand the pressures of the press today without releasing it. We have
  • , at that particular time in 1947 we had the same situation facing us that we have today as far as school financing. What happened was that the doggone schoolteachers did me in on that thing. Charlie Tennison [?] represented the Texas State Teacher's Association. F