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  • Congress and Federal Government housing administrators in imposing restrictions and by localities in their slowness to take action--to provide enough adequate housing for poor people, especially poor Negroes. With respect to specific difficulties facing
  • : "The Challenge of America's Metropolitan Population Outlook - 1960 to 1985," research report no. 4: "The Large Poor Family - A Housing Gap," and research report no. 6: "Local Land and Building Regulations."
  • Tet actions going on, but the local commanders took care of them, and that was followed shortly, not too long thereafter, with the problems at Khe Sanh and Lang Vei. G: Yes, I want to come to that. enemy assault? L: What was the provision at Lang
  • ~~~:~i t~i~s~~rob~f J~tv1S~~'h~"?~vsei:,t~fP~J>~~~l~~8rtlgna~liali8;;'it1~~~ troec~~,~ \~~~~~=:~~o~e~i~~fie!~W~1~i~t~~!vfe~th~f :~~fo~alf saiierh:~o::iu°;fl~ cations Act of 1934. · • 7. It Is agreed that In any action by the Company to recover the tolls
  • Folder, "NSAM # 243: Survey Mission for the U.S. Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands [2 of 3], 5/9/1963," National Security Action Memorandums, NSF, Box 1
  • National Security Action Memorandums
  • was t'eferring to, I told him that I personally doubted any action would l.>etaken that quickly on anything Sec~etary Fr~eman had in mind. simply because there WO\ud not e time for the ne.cesaary di.•cua1i0neJ here. 1 At 3:30 1 had ,an hour•s talk with Iftikar
  • service, and of course he was also motivated by a desire to stay in the action. Now the motivation underlying his appointment, I have heard speculation on from many quarters, and certainly the fact that he was a prominent Republican was a factor
  • to be, you know; it was where the action was. Then it was in 1955 that Diem had his finest hour, and that was when he cracked down on the Binh Xuyen. They'd lobbed some mortars into his front yard at the palace, and he had to do something or else throw
  • ■ of tlut fac .. alMI pr•••at policy ae &bey met. I cumot ••e llow Commerce can aay further In MWldoo. Juab capacity eompater equipment or &ecluaolo1Y to Fraace. tiler• le a proltlam of wlaat enforce.meat action ■11.ould be taken aaaiut CDC. A Mm&D.d
  • NOTE: ' . ADVANCE COPY TO S /S -O AT 1 : 3 0 PM, 6 / 1 8 / 6 5 . PASSED WHITE HOUSE, DOD, CIA AT 1 : 4 5 PM, 6 / 1 8 / 6 5 . —TOP SECRET COPY LBJ LIBRARY INCCM li^G TELEGRAM Department o f State T O r SECRET ¥o Action Info vvMJA063JIA465 00
  • was degenerating pretty rapidly in South Vietnam, was there active consideration of some type ~ of military action to perhaps forestall further degeneration? Such as bombing, for example? F: No, we were very bad about that in 'retrospect. I say we were very bad
  • is going to carry? And don't they even tell you the route to come in and the evasive action to come out?" And, of course, the answer to all these things was affirmative, yes. He said, "Well, General, don't you feel kind of useless out here?" They were
  • nistrative a.n d legisla­ tiv action are ne e ded so that efforts in teacher training , fo r inste..nce, are r el a ted to the efforts of local schc ol districts in educating ;,d is­ adv]nt a.ged children and so that curricular refor m a.nd other me a sl!.res
  • delegation, to continue on my delegation. There was considerable discussion of this back and forth, the White House politi­ cal staff in particular, get a,greementon that. because Paul was a Democrat. But I finally did Paul and I both agreed, as well
  • : Seeing you ln operation ls evidence that eveiy Democratic function in Oklahoma necessarily begins with "Grace. " You axe Indeed a blesslng to the party. Thant you for the kind \VOnls you said about me -- not once, but twice. I loved every minute
  • ; LBJ's frustration with press coverage of his trip; LBJ's meeting with Greek prime minister Konstantinos Karamanlis; LBJ's trip to Italy; meeting the Pope; LBJ's ability to relate to poor people; Reedy's work and LBJ's actions during the Cuban missile
  • dated October for inforaatlon SiQCerely, i) Z) Mlanich'1 A•18S ln'ata re• the "Nu.-der Stat1at1c1'' to you on Septeaber kloaurHt 2, Frederick I. York, Depertaent Liahon of Stat• Officer 13. 1968. ORIGIN/ ACTION DEPARTMENTOF STATE ..s/s
  • , will you consider this: man work out his tax? why can't a I said, as a child in Denton, Texas in the United States of America, they had road taxes, and I presume they still do. But in my day and time, if people didn't have cash money handy
  • d ^ ■b^-t^ihey have compounded t h e ir b ru t a l conduct by p u b lic ly bragging about t h e ir a ction and making th re a ts to c a rry out even more outrageous a c ts. ¥e in America and people around the w orld cannot help but be appalled
  • of Felix Lonsorie ' s Kennedy , tho O\mC."' r uncrel arrangom:. nt s . Nir . of tho f un_ral ho11c et Throe Ri vo_ s was tha only person who had the opportuni'ty to disc.:•ininate , and I shall concorn myself sololy witn his words and actions
  • and political problem requiring coordinated, effective action at the local, State, and Federal level. Concern for the problem must not remain within the province of compart­ mentalized government bureaucracies and professional disciplines involved. 1-8
  • into actionable form. When I said that many are useless, I was referring rather to many of the commissions and task forces brought in from the outside. Many of these consist in getting either creative people or elder statesmen to shoot from the hip, to draw
  • , about state and local programs, trying to figure out what you do. Because our problem was, how do you get all this philosophy--a man like Eiseley could write so beautifully, and at times he talked in the room about the kind of America that we were
  • of them were about platoon size or squad size that would do all the infiltrating. I think the first time we noticed a Viet Cong battalion in action was at the. Battle of Ap Bac-I used to call it My Aching Back--but that's when they did use a battalion
  • out, I went to I told him what my physical condition was and what the prognosis was and so on, and the fact that I was going to be out of action for at least another six weeks, and it could be considerably more than that. I suggested to him
  • several times since he became President. I remem- ber one occasion when I sal.;r him in action as Vice President at the LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781
  • . UKP!RE WI!l.'H lLll ACTIVE AHD :WT.AIJ..ED .KNOWLl~J)(H~ .AS ~o lffmHE !l!JIF; S~RADI nr~fS I HAVE 7ATCHlID ADA>J2 IN~DfA!?El'X Ill ~tE J?.A..'Jf ~ ·',O 11::F-KS IN ACTION AND WOW HE IS THE JJATU'.UL LEADER FOR ~I 8 BAT~~ GROUND S~l.> THIS I S !I'm
  • . I do not think the .Me.rshall Plan is tough. I think it is reali stic. I oelieve under Marshall there is lit. better ' ohanae for p~ce than under Wallace or Dewey. I oelieve that under a democratic con­ tinuance l.lnder Marshall l&it.dership, we have
  • to be more research and writing about the Mormon society, partly because of the way they produced a new type of society in America, partly because they were a "mixing bowl of immigrants and section­ al migrants," and partly because they were a parent region
  • analysis Joe was saying, "Mr. President, I think really you should take a second look at this and you should send it out to the departments for review and for action." MG: With regard to the financing, was there any difference of opinion within
  • of action who got things accomplished. That was certainly the LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org
  • and as we kr.ew how in ·putting together a presidential p~ogram. that carried over in terms of the implementing and the policy ir::plications that flowed from the various programs. If I were picking a piece of the action, that is the one I would have
  • police-type action, and perhaps that's the wrong choice of words, and 10 and behold, here the Vietnamese who were running down that--what did they call that Laos--? G: The Ho Chi Minh Trail? C: --the Ho Chi Minh Trail, claiming they weren't, and we