Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

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

3217 results

  • • .JRJ:djb i Thank yo _ for your·l•U. ot J.aua., 18 ,.., die " ••idat ............ ,... hope that ae w&U be ~ to- acc.e pt Dr. Da1del. an...--. IA.nation to acldre•• 68 ..-am.au~a clan of ae~n Collec• n ,Jurae s. You·~ ia vny macb ~pprectated. 1.un s
  • too, although a much smaller program, has given youngsters new hope and opportunity. So, one can go on. These were programs that were by no means part of the tide of the times. It took creative, imaginative leadership, and I think President
  • is not willing to put a sales representative down there, as far as we're concerned they're not worth the amount of time we have to put in to make it go; and we hope the next show they will be willing. Our work with the show takes two years to prepare
  • of 1967, while we didn't get everything we had hoped for from the Congress, really was the nation's first major effort to come to grips with air pollution. The Educational Opportunity Act of last year is a major one; the JOBS Program and the National
  • there had been Some hope that your position on the ticket might appease some of the Southerners who were at least on the fence regarding the Democratic party. Texas then broke away from the party. Allan Shivers from Do you recall what Lyndon Johnson
  • , the effects of this interaction on the American public and, consequently, on national policy. These phenomena are going to occupy the attention of sociologists, historians, politicians and, I hope, military career officers for a long, long time-as indeed
  • a ski resort where there wasn't one . B: Yes . So we are very much interested in the tribes' developing and being owner of these resources, and we hope they can attract more and more � � � LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL
  • :i.. ..} J . ·f .{ Thieu hopes to foster su~h moves, but his plans are va~e and in the hands of poor \ •• executors.. . . . Jn the meantime. Thieu has been having useful meetings with the le8:ders of all significant politic?-1elements
  • Embassy in Kingston. I hope that when your representatives have had an opportunity to examine these details, they will be able to report to you that the actions taken were reasonable and necessary, in the circumstances, and . that our authorities have been
  • to Pre ■ident Bosch vhioh I vould appreciate :,our aigmnc, and also one to the torllfr t:.~ ~ ~z,::, J. Chief of Protocol(+~~ 7. I ba"f8 talked to ::,enator Hmphre7 and his plane are BOlle­ vbat uncertain tor toaorrcnr. He hopes to aee President Boaoh
  • in the hope that a transaction old friend. me that Lady Bird joins me in our good talk at the Karachi a close eye on your negoti you will be able to arrange informed it is to be cooped up in a sick work to be done. hope that your recovery I have
  • that someone had told been willing. I am sorry you will be leaving so shortly after my having taken over here. It was a pleasure getting to know you and I hope there will be other opportunities in the future for us to meet. I look forward to them
  • Gaetano Martino (then President of the European Parliament) here in 1963. We maintain our firm commitment to a united Europe. We hope that the European Parliament will play an increasingly important role in Western European affairs. · We are grateful
  • , went to see a man that he thought could and would help him. I think maybe it was Mr. [E. S.] Fentress; I can't say for sure. He walked in, began giving him the best sales talk he was capable of, his qualifications, what he hoped to do with the job if he
  • a peaceful settlement, North Vietnam had a serious intent and that he hoped we also had a serious intent. He said North Vietn~m knows how to look at the problem r~alistically and so sp.ould we. And only in this way could the matter be settled peacefully. He
  • to see the NPT approved -- but I would hate to see the Senate in town. I hope they will do it the first of the year. I have misgivings a bout a special session. The President: My general inclination is "no. 11 We have: Budget problems
  • in this process. We believe that, in embo.rking on these tnctics, the Soviet leaders hoped to work Henoi be.ck to'Wtlrd c. middle position 1n the Sino·Soviet dispute, to discourage the US from broadening the war, and to IJEl.X'ticipate in the Commun.1st
  • the FRG. He noted general agreement that the allies were not committed to any particular text. He hoped that any treaty provlsj.ons resulting from talks v/lth the Soviets v/ould again be discussed before they v;ere tabled,, and he assumed ^ r'v
  • added that he hoped they would have time to reach a stalemate. He said that he could not find the weapons allegedly stored by Ne·g roes in Detroit, but "knew" that they must be there. stories· There were other told and general statements made
  • later did we learn tha t coffe e i s Haiti' s largest export . ) Th e President chatte d with all o f the Ambassadors , mentioned the hopes fo r th e upcomin g conference o f foreign minister s with th e Colombia n Ambassador an d was ver y gla d t o
  • . Symington and Bill Moyers were sitting behind the President. PM warmly welcomed the President saying something like "Mr. President, I hope you realize that although we have our differences New Zealand does not resent America expressing her views even though
  • the armed tor_, ve wou1d hope tllat ~t vu more a rhetorical question than a real one oc It the ling llbould Ntum to tld.8 question, M artT ..-"Ml:I rt hope on th1a acoreo sf 70 MIJBQs J'011 ahou1d cliMbuae him ot F!1 We are trankl1' alarmed
  • of this personally. B: What was his reply to that, sir? M: He stated that he recognized we had problems and various different parts of the country had different problems to cope with, and that he would hope that we could work out our differences and that we could
  • too much over to the discretion of the executive department. I hope to see the Congress get back to the saddle and do more of its own work and not shove so much responsibility on the executive department. tive department has become entirely too
  • know that at my age, of course I'm not. In the kind of acrimony that you get in the intellectual circles of Massachusetts and with the Kennedy organization behind it trying to make all the trouble it could possibly make and hoping that maybe Lyndon
  • is terrible. I hope you're doing something about it." And I'd say, "Well, Dick, I'm doing the best I can. I don't know how you measure these things but as far as expenditures are concerned, we're just going overboard. That is something that concerns me very
  • Foundation. It probably wasn't. It might have been called the Johnson Foundation or it might have been called something else. But I'm sure they had their own ideas about what they hoped it would be someday. I know it was later changed and I don't know where
  • in it. Then too, the President established the wild rivers concept in the National Park System. Additionally, he pushed for a Potomac National River, which one day we hope to achieve, after we acquire some 66,000 acres of land. The Potomac is one of the least
  • personality and method of operation. At that reception, which was I guess the day before he left office, he said to me, "John, I'm going to be in the Federal Building down there in Austin. We're going to be in the same building. Hope I can drop in and see you
  • by the TWA New York counsel, appeared, and then I was hoping to have ten or fifteen minutes for rebuttal. However, they questioned my colleague, the lawyer from the supplemental airlines, so much that it cut me down to seven minutes. In my own presentation
  • for his own father-in-law. I felt so sorry for everybody around me. There's nothing you can do in that situation except hope, and it's pointless to hope because people will excuse you for being very, very late at the next place or even canceling it. 3
  • " will be established by attitudes, 2 comments and reflections on the President s program, work and goals -- rather than by Presidential self-analysis of personal state of mind. I would hope the President would be advised against dis­ cussing his own mood or feelings
  • FOR YOUR ME$SAGE OF CONGRATULATIONSON TH~ ANNIV~f~SA~Y OF. OUR NATIONAL INDEPE:NDENCE• - THE. PEOPL~ OF THE UN I TEO STATES SHARE MY HOPE Tl'iAT THE RE~lA TI ONS, BETWEEN OUR, rWo·couNT~IES WILL, CONTINQE f6.~ROS~E~: (N-T~E YEARS IO COME• SI"iCERELY
  • suppoee, primarily, because he is go ing to run for the Senate and wiehee the Truner forcee not to oppoee him a.nd hopee to have them on hie eide. Politieal Notes---2 Creekmore Fath told me that the Democratic National Committeeman from Louisiana, during
  • , enforced Where once war was and is no longer, hope of Peace. considered , today we conceive must and does recognize their status War as an honorable Big nations gobble maintain peace to of of defense. Our Foreign ceivable. We must strong
  • are and for the next predictable whatever it was, after 1965 it was four years to predict, barring dying or something--you begin where you are and you hope it has ripple effect, set some kind of chain-reaction, of standards maybe, anyhowthat's excitement
  • then considering signing that you hoped they will join you in signing. You also suggested that Mr. Rockefeller might make further efforts to get Chairman Kosygin to sign. Prime Minister Wilson and Prime Minister Sato wer/" informed of your decision and hope
  • " Henry Ford II, Preston Jone!!, Ed Clark, Linda Tobias, Helen Hayes, Jake Pickle, Mrs. Johnson, Kirk Douglas and emcee Cactus Pryor, after the program. This hope has he n made a reality through the activities of the Friends of the LBJ Library, and now
  • not a war of etrateg . but a way of power , machines . It ' s won only bJ' the poor bloody doughboye ete adil.7 and alow:cy p1L"lh.1nglike an old t,urt,le . I hope mqba t.hat you wUl under3tand how that it con' .t be wvn by sa,ing ",rell , everything l
  • at Bergstrom AFB "Congressman Pickle will have several people at the airport to meet the President. Mayor Harry Akin of Austin will be there. Congressman Pickle hopes you can give the group some attention on arrival. had cup of Sanka left the State Room