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4469 results
Folder, "March 31st Speech, Vol. 2, Tabs a-z," National Security Council Histories, NSF, Box 47
(Item)
- ALLIANCE AND PEACE -AT HUE THE APPEALS OF WHICH HAD BEEN REPRODUCED IN THE VIETNAMESE PRESS. WHEN I ASKED HIM IF TH.ESE 'Two ORGANIZATIONS WOULD ' EVENTUALLY BE ASSOCIATED IN A COALITION GOVERNMENT, HE TOOK A RESERVED POSOTION. FOR THE MOMENT, HE TOLD ME
- ... < ., •. •.··•.• XNDUSTRYJ\lm !'BB FEDERAL' GOWRNMEN'l'aw BROUGHT ' • • ADOUT 'l'HXSt YEAR Is RF.MAlU(ABLEACHIEVEMENTS 'l'OWARD.'J.'BE. •.•. SOLUTION OF OU1\ B0USINO AND COMMUNITY PROBLEMS. .. • • 1,' '4• .' I • YOUR. NATIONAL E0t1SINO ASSOCIATION TO OUR LEGISLA'l'IVB
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 104: Nov. 5‑8, 1968 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 42
(Item)
- CEASE-FIRE ANDCOALITION ANDTHIS REINFORCED HIS ANXIETY ANDFEARS. THE'LAOSSETTLEMENT, ANDHARRlMAN•S ASSOCIATION WITH IT WAS ALSO' IN HIS l'JlND. CERTAINAS KE WAS OF A NIXON VICTORY,HE SAWIN THATVICTORY THEREPLACE~ENT OF HARRIMANIN THE f~iGOTIATIONS. TH
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 112: Dec. 26‑31, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 44
(Item)
- Requirements for Imports of Fertilizers and Fertilizers RawMaterials 1961-62 to 1970-71 67 Foreign Exchange Requirements Associated v."i.th Fertilizer, 1965-66 to 1970-71 68 Projected Foreign Exchange Requirements of the Agricultural Sector, including
- he raues· in hi• year-end report. 1..S(,~)(c) 3.4(b)(i )(~) Ben also sent along some mementos o! your visit to Karachi: a collection of all the ~overage of your visit by the (government-controlled) press; a copy 0£ Ayub'~ official 1968 calendar
- and Vice-President: As you know I worked for the Kennedy-Johnson Ticket with all I had~- of money and time. I still write some for the press locally in Texas. So many of our friends say, "Whats the use, you wre wasting your time~ But th.ere is one fact
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 112: Dec. 26‑31, 1968 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 44
(Item)
- JJW'.l.'HER. SEVERALMUG SHOTSWERETAKEN. I WAS ACCUSEDOF BEING A MEMBEROF THE CIA. I HAD MY FIRST PRESS CONFERENCE I THINK THE SECONDOR THIRD DAY WE WERE 1'.HERE. THIS WAS A SCREAMI_NG. PRESS CONFERENCE ~nIICH THE GOVERNHENT OF THE l I UNITED STAIES
- ST SEVERA L MONTHS, (CU&/A». AW^ASSADOR WHO W ITN ESSED ACTION AT HON GAI WAS IM PRESSED BY CALM METHODICAL MANNER IN WHICH BGTf» M ILITA R Y UNI: I S AND CIV) L I AN5 REA C TED TO a tta c k ,) L I T T L E S P E C IF IC INFORMATION HAS BEEN REVEALED
- President Last Friday I spoke to the National Newapa.per Publishers Association in Omahaand then The Grange in Topeka, return ing that night. I bad press conferences in both towns and found it ironical that for the first time in five years, rather than
- . [inaudible] When did you become involved, let's say, in politics to the point where it led to being associated with people like LBJ? A: It started really with Dr. Everett Givens back in about the 1940s, the early 1940s. Dr. Givens was a very personal
- to get involved in political organizations; financial stability of UPO; negative press for LBJ; Anderson's visits to the Ranch; LBJ agreeing to be JFK's vice presidential running mate; LBJ's civil rights speeches; Mack Hatter's political work in Texas
- development and training and many, many more acts too. numerous to mention. "We will continue to press for laws which would protect our citizens from violence, like the Safe Streets and Crime Control Act now under consideratipn in the Congress and the Gun
- .on would have started '-'Ct ~ n it di a :if the arti.fid.al flc....,«:!r fitTi! had acced:::d to the laborers demands. but it ic probable that d2~and3 would have been pressed upon other e:riployers and in oti-t~t· ways until at s;:.w~ p o int the British
Oral history transcript, John Fritz Koeniger, interview 2 (II), 11/17/1981, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- -- II -- 19a *My memory failed me here. The Ludlow Amendment was rejected in 1937 before I went to Washington. Herbert Henderson, my roommate and constant associate, evidently described the events related to the matter so graphically that I thought I
- into the offices of journalists, fellows sitting in green visors, and to the boys working the press, and talking quietly with people in small lunch groups. He was not as good as some of the other gentlemen standing at a podium talking to a thousand people
- that require exposure to the press, exposure to the people. A lot of foreign service work is not public work and doesn't necessarily produce people that do such work well. I think that they cross their fingers, no matter who gets that job, in hopes
- /oh 2 T: I graduated in January of '59 from law school and went to Washington in June of '59; served up there for just the one year, which is the tenure of the clerkship; returned to Austin in July of '60; and became an associate with a law firm
Oral history transcript, Charles L. Schultze, interview 2 (II), 4/10/1969, by David G. McComb
(Item)
- simply drive Hanoi into the arms of Peking.I think this may be one of those points where the Russo-Chinese rivalry led to a frustration of the Geneva accords on Laos, and led to the inability or unwillingness of the Russians to try to press Hanoi
Oral history transcript, William B. Cannon, interview 1 (I), 5/21/1982, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- . Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Cannon -- I -- 12 G: I think it was January 31 or February 1; the press conference was the first. C: It was a Saturday
- unethical. People didn't know that because this press group, particularly the television crowd, would keep playing that up by just a word or two here and there, and just kept dropping coconuts on the heads they stopped, you see. ever~vhere And actually
Oral history transcript, Clifford L. Alexander, Jr., interview 1 (I), 11/1/1971, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- in this society as they ought to to read the black press when the Kerner Commission Report came out. It was said that the President ignored the Kerner Commission, didn't like it, didn't like what it was dOing. What he didn't like was certain ways
Oral history transcript, Clifford L. Alexander, Jr., interview 3 (III), 6/4/1973, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- with a But they're human beings too so those frictions sometimes came up. F: Did you press for cease-and-desist power? A: Oh, yes. years. And so did Johnson. And we didn't get it. It just didn't come through. A couple of Then as I left-- F: Was this a kind
- in the wind on a key subject -negotiations with the allies. It is a Cabanes piece ·from Hanoi (reporter from Paris AFP transmitted in English, February 5) which analyzes a February 5 Nhan Dan article on President Johnson's February 2 .press conference
- . forward this inquiry to expedite To the Foreign Claims Commission Re? Barbara Gamarekian - 1930 Bilt~ore Street, Washington 9, D. C. February 1, 1965 Mr. Milton Kilduff Assistant Press Secretary The White Bouse Washington, D.C. Dear Mr. Kilduff: I
- Baldv,1n should contact King and Associated Press, and Charles Green should contact United Press at Austin. The editorial which Baldwin has is the bads of the int'orme.tion which should go in adve.nco to the mind of A. P. and u. p. people
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 77: May 15‑19, 1968 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 34
(Item)
- EXAMPLE OF PRIVATE CITIZENS WHO HAVE NOTIFIED THE POLICE OF SUSPICIOUS ACTIOHS. HO! AN !HE h'ZAD Or THE UNIFIED BUDDHIST ASSOCIATION, WHO FRE- IN ( . IN 11789 . PAGE 10 Of 10 PAGES . \ • -C-0- >f#,,. !- SIDED AT THE BLOOP.AEIRTJJDAY
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 78: May 20‑24, 1968 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 34
(Item)
- told Kuznetsov that the US was not in agreement with the Brazilians on their proposed amendment regarding peaceful nuclear explosive devices (Pineds). He said that the Brazilian Foreign Minister had told him that the Brazilians would not press
- , recommendations Wheeler reviewing press memo, 19 -- Ginsburgh communist briefing Clarke's memo, in "Second Wave" of Rusk-Clifford target possibilities ------- target ----------- report------------------------------ talking points deployment N
- of carrying television to population centers in the eastern and northern regions of the USSR. 6. In early 1966, authorities in Moscow disclosed through the press that central TV coverage of the . fiftieth anniversary would be extended to the more remote
- . 1964, OFFICE OF THE WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY THE WHITE HOUSE STATEMENT BY THE PRESIDENT THE FISH ROOM (AS ACTUALLY DELIVERED) My fe llo w Americans: As P resid en t and Commander-in-Chief, i t i s my duty to the American people to report