Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

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

2296 results

  • ; George Christian and Chancellor E. Don Walk r, co-vice pr sidents; Harry Middleton, xe­ cu1iv ct·rector; and John M. Barr, secre­ tary-I reasurer. Above top: Clark Clifford and Arthur B. Krim. Middle Row: Harry .J. Mid­ dleton and Henry H. Fowler. Bottom
  • fellow class winners. "There was Walter Cronkite, Letitia Baldridge, Wesley Clark, John Eisenhower (son of Ike) and Dr. Ruth and me," Hanny says. " ... So it really catapulted me in a whole new career." After the success of "Secrets," he wrote a thriller
  • fellow class winners. "There was Walter Cronkite, Letitia Baldridge, Wesley Clark, John Eisenhower (son of Ike) and Dr. Ruth and me," Hanny says. " ... So it really catapulted me in a whole new career." After the success of "Secrets," he wrote a thriller
  • . A fellow who was from Texas, the Ambassador-- G: Ed Clark, wasn't it? A: Yes, that's right, Ed Clark. A very nice gentleman, mustache you know, a very congenial fellow. He and his wife received the press out at his ranch. He had a little barbecue
  • ; malfunctioning public address systems; foreign trips; Ambassador Ed Clark; Southeast Asian Conference in Manila; Tyler Abell; secret trip to Vietnam; examples of LBJ making last-minute decisions; problem in Seoul with setting up for a public appearance; Jim Adams
  • of 18] Dear Wa.yo.e: lt was ,good '°' b.eu from you aad l appr«da.te yoq; ~!ting me. ln behalf ;o f Victar._. ·coUDtf'a application tor Federal .D.lsaater· Relief UAder Pu'bll.; law 875. In a&-t odatloa. with CoDgreseman. Clark Thompson. .lam tlds
  • /exhibits/show/loh/oh 21 out." He had sent the letter to Clark Clifford. letter to Abe Fortas. Rowe. He had sent the He had sent the letter, I think, to Jim I forget whether Dean Acheson was in it, but there were four or five members of what
  • don't know the reason that Fulbright was in the Cabinet Room, but I know that the heavies were in there: [Walt] Rostow, Rusk, [Richard] Helms. sure whether [Earle] Wheeler was in there. I'm not No, Wheeler couldn't have been in there, but Clark
  • Voting Rights Act 1965; Civil Rights Act; Mansfield; McCormack; Hale Boggs; Russell Long; LBJ’s feelings about open housing; differences between Ramsey Clark and Katzenbach over civil rights; LBJ’s consideration of legal problems raised by open
  • [jewelry]. The writer came down from New York, Champ Clark, the grandson of the old Speaker, the son of Bennett Clark, the senator. Lyndon knew him. Champ Clark was the writer of that story, and he came down and he had one of those sessions
  • at the request of Senator Joe Clark, who had just been elected to the Senate in 1956, the year I lost. He called me one day in desperation, I guess in December, saying that he was going to be sworn in as a senator the following week and he hadn't even begun
  • Biographical information; how Quigley became a Democrat in 1949; family political history; Quigley's congressional campaign in 1950 and election in 1954; Quigley's campaign losses in 1950 and 1956; Quigley's work for Senator Joe Clark and Quigley's
  • one, and the functions of the job, just briefly, because we will be touching on these as the interview develops. C: Yes, Miss Pierce,· just a general outline first, if I may. We became friends through a mutual friend, Ed Clark, inAustin. turned out, I
  • Phil Graham [publisher, Washington Post], who had come in and was waiting and said, "Phil, I've got to get out of this. Can't you help me?" And he said, "No, I can't, but there's only one man in town that can, and that's Clark Clifford." So when we came
  • said to me that they are fully conscious of the fact that with a combined military ticket, they must take added precautions to see that the elections are clean. In the meeting which Clark Clifford and Max Taylor had yesterday with Thieu, Ky
  • with Lyn Nugent; Ramsey Clark; Tom Headrick; Wilbur Cohen; Cyrus Vance; John Gardner; reasons potential candidates might not be interested in the dean position; Frederic Cleaveland; Livingston meeting John Gronouski; Gronouski’s attributes and how he became
  • be happy to infon11Governor Daniel. RaymondTelles i\mbassador XEROX CO.PY - FROM - - - QUICK - -· - -- ---:- , GONFIDENTIAh Monday, Mr. October 7. 1968 -- 5:30 p. m. President: Clark Clifford ha• well known to hbn, ha• man for the tran•ltlon
  • Court or to any other •P'"• ■et el J•..•• aacb •• one repreaeatadft of the Ualted Sta.tea, one of North Korea, -d a third party to be aamed l,y the Prealdeat of the World Court. ''' 59 1968 -- 1:30 p.m. huacll wltb the PreaWeat OFF THE RECORD Clark
  • for a number of jobs, and the people who know his quality cover a wide spectrum -- like George Ball, John Connor~ Clark Clit ford, and myself. He is a man of real energy and strong liberal sentiments -- a "can do" type, as his work for both Kaiser and the drug
  • and military involvement in the “other war”; the State Department’s lack of interest in the Other War; management of the Other War; Komer’s Vietnam reports; regrets regarding Komer’s work in Vietnam; Clark Clifford’s goals and plans; Komer’s idea for a war
  • . This, then, called us to the attention of many of the groups that were working in this field, including some that were close to Secretary Ickes, who had set up a racial advisory office under Clark Foreman--a white Georgian but had worked with the Roosevelt-F
  • dleeked erou Um.ea wltll .1acoD1e11. .Fur. Sober, Clark amt BOB •taff. a.ad ao one 1'ae eald a aood • fo• la tbe beat we it ,-. My ee- • formula HHS DECLASSIFIED E.O. 13292, Sec. 3.4 NSC Memo, 1/30/95, State G i:lelines By . NARA,Oat
  • . Clark Clifford and Gen. Taylor have copies. Bromley Smith WW~ August lZ, 1967 MEMORANDUM FOR CLARK CLIFFORD The President asked us to send you this afternoon the following documents which are attached: 1. General Westmoreland' s military
  • and said, "No, [president of the University of California]Clark Kerr can't have them" and "McGeorge Bundy can't have them; no one can have them." G: Yes. K: I asked a minute ago--I don't think you have a chance to answer, but why do you think
  • about political decisions? J: I think Johnson consulted him on just about every political decision he made. G: Did he and [Clark] Clifford advise Johnson together? 15 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT
  • recall? E: I think Ed Clark was in there quite a bit and John Connally. I can't remember who else. But I remember as a secretary thinking, ugh, these yucko lawyers from the . . . . G: Did you as a liberal have a problem with his supporting it? E
  • the most work in was when he was running on the ticket with President Johnson for vice president. B: With Kennedy? G: (Laughter) With Kennedy, yes, for vice president. He was the vice presidential nominee, and Mrs. Edward Clark and I were co-chairmen
  • Services--the Defense Department---wouldn't tell him a damned thing going on in the war. M: And you had been a friend of his in the Senate? A: Yes. And so I finally got somebody to go down there. They got General Carter Clark over there and finally
  • been killed in an airplane crash in St. Louis--I believe it was St. Louis, anyway it was in the Mississippi River--Tom Clark's brother, and this had haunted him quite a lot. And it affected his feelings about flying for a number of years. He finally
  • ARE ON HAND AND CAN iBE'.NANNED 3Y A VNAF P IL O T AND A USAF IN STR U C T-O R /P ILO T. 1 D. a n y OR A LL OF 3 - 5 7 ’ S AT CLARK CAN 3 E MANNED-3Y Iu SA F P IL O T AND VNAF NAVIGATOR CREW. GP-4 r3 T . ■ N O TE: ADVANCE COPY TO S / S - 0 , 3 : 3 0 A .M ., 8
  • Johnsons & Clark Cliffords drive the ranches; Lady Bird describes wildflowers & birds; helicopter to John Hill ranch; to St. Luke's Church; to cypress grove along Pedernales River; to Hill's for lunch; Lady Bird to Fredericksburg courthouse