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5487 results
- of the things that we were looking forward to under Kennedy seemed to have just sort of--my reaction was that they were killed with him in Dallas. B: Did this opinion change? M: Absolutely. B: Do you recall when and why? M: In retrospect I think
- r To the aaall buaine,? \ it mean• tree enterprise dthout tnr to sahool. tajt•, -~r unjust g0vemaent. of bic monopoly, 1.Jlpoeaible \ ta 'tory ~~ in the armed service• are talldng • "ni• oolllllOll aon in the 'l'bey haff learned new skill
Oral history transcript, James R. Jones, interview 1 (I), 11/26/1968, by Dorothy Pierce McSweeny
(Item)
- or anything--I had never heard of him before and had never met him in my life. So I tried to reach him, and I found out he was in New York for the weekend. Monday morning I called back and said, "This is Jim Jones. I understand you're looking for me." He said
- : http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Carey -- II -- 3 instead, wholly new merchandise, intellectual merchandise, with almost no surrounding analysis [or] data. It was very, very raw stuff because of the nature of the brainstorming that was going
- : That is right. While I know the press and some members of Congress always like to place the blame on their country, this incident looks to me like banditry on the high seas. There have been many new incidents in Korea lately. The squad of North Koreans sent
Oral history transcript, Thomas H. Kuchel, interview 1 (I), 5/15/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- had that kind of support in debates and in moving things through the calendar. I know I've skipped over the Bob Taft period of majority leader and I really don't remember too much about that. I was brand new; I was really overwhelmed with the place
Oral history transcript, Zbigniew Brzezinski, interview 1 (I), 11/12/1971, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- 12, 1971 INTERVIEWEE : ZBIGNIEW BRZEZINSKI INTERVIEWER : PAIGE MULHOLLAN PLACE : Dr . Brzezinski's office at Columbia University, New York Tape 1 of 1 M: Let's just identify you for the beginning here on the tape . . B: Right . M: You're
- , Date_-3_. --~.__ •• j • I Wednesday, 7:25 AM MEMORANDUM FOR THE March 6, 1968 PRESIDENT A C-123 with a crew of 4 and 44 passengers was hit by Communist gunfire and crashed at Khe Sanh this• morning. Initial reports from the base indicate
- activities in the morning really from his bedroom. He didn't get over to his office very early, but he would get up early and would kind of do a day's work in his bedroom in the morning. When I got there Marvin Watson was going over to his bedroom between
- , 1973 INTERVIEWEE: LAWRENCE E. LEVINSON INTERVIEWER: Joe B. Frantz PLACE: Mr. Levinson's office, New York City Tape 1 of 1 L: I'm sitting here on November 2, 1973, and we're all musing about the Watergate and the fate of the presidency
Oral history transcript, Merrell F. "Pop" Small, interview 1 (I), 8/20/1985, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- in the morning, Price came over to Tom, and he said, "Tom, I can't take it. Will you serve as acting minority leader while I get some sleep?"--and also, of course, as majority leader. Kuchel used to say, "Boy, I sure had the country by the throat. I could have
- the last years of his life was at breakfast in the Tudor Hotel in New York one morning. I was sitting in the dining room when Aubrey, staying at the same hotel, \'Jalked in and we had breakfast together. But I think this was even before he left
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 5, May 27 - June 10, 1966 [3 of 3]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 8
(Item)
- , 1966 -- 11:30 a. m. \~ (~"~v. J~, Mr. President: J \ One reason I have difficulty supplying you · names for State Dept. 7th floor is this: I believe the new Under Secretary you are looking for should have a considerable voice in building the 7th
Oral history transcript, Lawrence F. O'Brien, interview 8 (VIII), 4/8/1986, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , 1986 INTERVIEWEE: LAWRENCE F. O'BRIEN INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. O'Brien's office, New York City Tape 1 of 4, Side 1 G: [I'd like to] have you focus on that list of the congressional liaison people and assess the value of each
- and Appalachia; LBJ as a supporter of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal and his deep commitment to helping people; Sargent Shriver's early leadership in the War on Poverty; Phil Landrum as a leader in supporting War on Poverty legislation; the poverty bill's referral
- are now leveling off, since construction consists of completing existing facilities, not in starting new ones. It i s estimated that the Soviets will have enough material to provide for the weapons now forecast and to fill their other requirements as well
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 111: Dec. 18‑25, 1968 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 43
(Item)
- an important teat of new technolo1y at reaeonable coat (about $58 mllllon). We would gain &lmoat aa much in technological knowledge a• we would from the $100 million plu• that would be needed at a minifflllm. from us to help build the $250 million larger plant
Oral history transcript, Daniel K. Inouye, interview 2 (II), 5/2/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- to this day look upon Lyndon Johnson as a great liberal leader, not a great Southern leader. I believe that I indicated in my first interview it would have been extremely easy for a man from New England or from the North to support Hawaiian statehood. advocacy
- would accept, I guess, the initiative tr..2.t address. ~las contained in his March 31 I t Has the morning 1\Then he had a scheduled appointment '-lith Senator Henry Jackson--Scoop Jaclcsoi.l. ·-from the State of H':l:" The occasion the birthday
Folder, "INDIA - Prime Minister Visit 1966 [2 of 3]," Files of Robert W. Komer, NSF, Box 22-2
(Item)
- there is still an opportunity to improve both the bill and India's image to potential U. S. investors. Our Embassy in New Delhi over a long period has made our concern clear to the GOI. Ambassador Bowles raised the problem with Prime Minister Shastri and had
- conclusions drawn from it. II. NARRATION OF MISSION After receiving the assignment the afternoon of August 17, the next morning I conferred with Mr. Joe C~lifano and Mr. Lee White in the White House. There the nature of the mission was established. Two major
- objection, therefore, I am planning to have a meeting with Secretaries Connor and Boyd on Saturday morning and ask them to cons·der and prepare papers on the following ideas: l. A Department executive transportation z. of Transportation functions
- done what law and order required in seating those who were duly elected and who mean to stay with our Party. On the other hand, you have made new room for new voices which deserve to be heard in our nation at large. Cff- You have struck a ~. f
- Means, Mrs. J. H. Means; her husband was a professor at Huston-Tillotson College for black students; and Ada Anderson, an activist black, well educated; her husband was in real estate; and Arthur Dewitte, he was a news journalist LBJ Presidential
- from his recent trip that Subramaniam and Mrs. Gandhi are living up to the detailed commitments they made. Neve~theless we don't have enough wheat this- year to se·n d all India would like. So I propos.e we hold off signing our new agreement until late
- FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: New Delhi Assesses New Indian Cabinet Ambassador Bowles reports that the new Cabinet w ill be dominated by a " troika" composed of M rs. Gandhi, M orarji Desai in Finance, and Chavan in the Home Ministry. If they work together closely
- in the fields of social welfare. My impression is that President Johnson was looking for a tag to describe his major legislative accomplishments, purposes, to correspond to Kennedy's New Frontier. My re~ollection is that the phrase Great Society came out
- informed of your decision and hope and both have signed. So have Prime Ministers Holyoake of New Zealand, Krag of Denmark and Borton of Norway. •[ Mr. Kosygin, after lengthy and careful consider.s.ti.on, has dec.ided not to sign on the ground that he
Folder, "McGeorge Bundy, Vol. 21, March, 1966 [1 of 3]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 6 [2 of 2]
(Item)
- Taylor you want b.tr.n. to do tbls later, and to ·r aise it again with you in about three moAths. Shall I? R. W. Kome-r ----- Yes No THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON eom IDEN1'ntt March 29, 1966 Mr. President: Now that the new organization for handling
Oral history transcript, Joseph A. Califano, interview 60 (LX), 1/17/1990, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- . This is the meeting with the bipartisan leadership. Earlier that morning we'd had had our regular leadership breakfast. This is the bipartisan leadership meeting at 10:25 a.m. in the Cabinet Room. The President summarized the whole strike situation
Folder, "March 12-18, 1965 [Selma Situation]," President’s Appointment File [Diary Backup], Box 15
(Item)
- announce specific and imminent submission of the legislation. It was generally believed that such an appearance over the weekend announcing that the legislation would be sent to the Hill on Monday morning would be particularly beneficial. In fact
- to it and others contributed, of course, but he is entitled to a lot of credit. F: When you were holding those hearings, was there a great deal of controversy or were you mainly just trying to figure out--you're into something new here. S: That's right, a new
- thought that I was T. R. B., who was writing [in New Republic] the anonymous column--knifing him. And he used to glare at me across the Senate chamber so--when I barely knew the man--and one day I remember asking Bobby Baker as to why I’d earned this harsh
Oral history transcript, W. Sherman Birdwell, Jr., interview 1 (I), April 1965, by Eric F. Goldman
(Item)
- morning at the old :Fast Office Cafe iri Sari la'arcjs at 'clock. I zx et him Ind jeElse Kellam . Pardon Y -,e, what were you doing in South America? I had been an accountant for Gu genbeirn Brothers of New s ,ark at the old nitrate company
- the evident danger of growing bitterness and polarization merely by expressions of sorrow, proper these are.· Words, alone, are at a high discount in the Negro community. On the TV news this morning, c~e moderate Negro leader after another said, in effect: "We
- on the attached summa~y of·v a telephone report from New York. The full memorandmn .of the c ·o nversation is not yet ready but will: be available by morning. Bromley Smith ~ECL A lrlf'.0 t ,o . t2J!S/o Sec '$.1(b) WM· · lHO$.
- cooperation and support of people 2) Government would like to establish a new society in the countryside, and for ^ this new society to be established in the countryside, we have to have a social revolution, not from the top down, but from the bottom up; from
- Justice] got very badly reviewed in the [New York] Times. Have you looked at it? G: (indicates no) C: [I was] surprised. Maybe someone will send me a copy of that book. G: Okay. Was there a key guy in Fortas' office that would be helpful? A clerk
Oral history transcript, William P. Bundy, interview 3 (III), 6/2/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 4 Now, I didn't go to Australia and New Zealand, so I can't comment on those phases of the trip, but I do recall very vividly the Manila part of the trip and the President's performance
- for years. Between my sophomore year and my junior year in undergraduate college. my father moved to New Orleans to become professor of pediatrics at Louisiana State University's School of Medicine. So I went along with the family, finished my junior year
- Zorthian? Yes . it a little tough for him to do his job, doesn't it? Well, I had first known Alan Carter in New Delhi, seemed to be a pretty able guy . G: shall I say, That's another parallel, I think, India, too? He worked for Ken Galbraith
- Cabot Lodge; the new regimes