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  • . Orleans have told him that agents of Bureau and non-Bureau Juctice Department represen­ have in­ tatives, including a man named (FNU) Voight, terviewed them.about the assassination. Sari~r took me to meet Pat Lyons who, according to Sartor, is a petty
  • with his personal r e lations with them. F: obo dy that h e k i n d of d e v eloped an instant a n ti pat hy towa r d, o r vi ce versa ? C: Oh, h e a nd Pr ime Min i s te r Pearson of Canad a rea l ly d idn' t ge t along too well. I think t he re
  • publicised such a thing and that even Pataskar had not heard from any • responsible quarters about it. In fact Pat,~skar lived just opposite to his own residence in Delhi and he had asked Kamaraj whether his name was being considered~ Of course 1 he- had
  • ? Is there time for the Vice President to catch Mr. Nixon? How would the President view Mr .. Nixon's pre·sidency if he is elected? . I . 2. What is the President• s present thinking about Vietnam, and • . the Paris talks! Does the President feel the military
  • Permanent Representative States my to Nations. I have taken time and energy the election this step so that I may devote all my between now and November 5 to help assure of Hubert Humphrey and the defeat of Richard Nixon. My decision has
  • of OEO's most serious problems was that aggressive program people, particularly the top people like Bennetta Washington of the Women's Job Corps Program, and Pat Ferguson, VISTA, all had their own little Hill constituencies. Ted Berry of Community Action
  • . The War on Poverty was designed to take a person who is dependent and turn him into an independent person by health, by education, by training, by discipline, by community action, et cetera, anything we could think of. Yet when Nixon came into office one
  • of say, "Well, we expect you to say that," you know. But you know--while the "New Left" calls the New York Times and the Post the Establishment press, Spiro T. Agnew doesn't. Nor does Richard Nixon. Maybe we've come a long ways when the supporters
  • , and we s till have a relation s hip. I'm going to try to go to England next summer and going to stay with Ray Shearer, who' s now with NBC in London. Pat Reffern a~ , ~~ 2 Reuters bureau chief in Washington, is a particularly good f r i 2nd of ours
  • replaced, I believe. The Nixons said they thought they were getting shabby again; well, that's seven or eight years, eight or nine. F: Yes, and a lot of use. G: But you've seen those. Every single affair that's happened in the East Room has seen those
  • president he came to the church, and he brought his visitors and company, or even the family, Lynda and Luci. Then, of course, Luci got married. Oh, yes, Luci got married in Washington. I wasn't there, but Luci and Pat used to come to church when they were
  • Department guy talked about the Asians being small people, and Johnson, I remember, said, "These State Department people think I'm going to go out there, and pat a little guy on the head and say, 'Little man, do this. "' He said, "They don't give me any
  • . Prealdeat : TOIi will wi ■h to reacl, I belleYe, till• tlloqbtflll exclaaap betweea Sect. .a...k aad Amt.. B . . . . r. ID pldla1 Bar_.,- McPIMtr■ea. l empluw.Nd that we ■hoald pat the Soath VletllameM •- tbelr recndtla1 alld moderal...Uon of eqapmelll
  • dot.com boom of the 1990. Photo by Charles Bogel Professor Divine chats with docents Pat Oakes and Barbara Merello. 12 An Evening With Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison Kay Bailey Hutchison grew up in Lamar. Texas. She graduated from The ni,·ersity ofTex·1s
  • presidential selection. Jester also scored in Waco. Pat Neff, Frank Oltorf, Caso March and Bill Kittrell attend. 1948 Chronology ● p. 9 of 45 07/2024 9 lbjlibrary.org REFERENCE: LBJ CHRONOLOGY Drafted by LBJ Library archival staff from oral history
  • Sat, Aug 10 Dictated at the ranch August 2-17, 1968 1. 10:30a Secretary Rusk, Director Helms, Amb. "Vance arrived to front lawn w/ Pres 2. 12:00n Mr. Nixo n arrived 1:15p LUNCH - Mrs. J Nixon, Agnew 3. Rusk , Helms , Vanc e Nixon aides: Bob
  • , FR I !:NOL. Y FORCl::SCONT I NUEO TO CUNUU~T U~rcNSlVE SwEtPS TO KEEP THE E:NtMY OFF BALANCEANUTO SECURt fHi~NDLY LUC. UcLTA BLACKHAWK OP~RATlONSlN BORDER .. PROVl~CtS LOCAlt:D ANO O~STROYEDSEV~RAL LARGE ENEMYCACH~S1 3. PAt-
  • remember correctly. temperament for it. bruising. He didn't have the I'm afraid that he would have taken a very bad The Judiciary Committee is a tough committee. It had been headed by Pat Mc Carran for many years, and boy, oh boy, Pat Mc Carran had
  • prevailed, Khrushchev, Castro, Sukarno, and others would not occupy the powerful and threatening positions in whieh·they are•. today~ Pat McCarranism would.be so mueh more desirable than Khrushchevi sm._ ·.,:·• .. ·. • With best wishes, .. :· • Sincerely
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Laitin -- III -- 15 Actually he had a very, very good relationship with the President. He had almost total access to everything, including the bedroom, that Nixon's photographer, Ollie Atkins, who died a few weeks ago, told me
  • , Clifford for a briefing in 1960-61. notified me that Franklin Lincoln, a lawyer been appointed by Mr. Nixon ae hi• chief if Mr. Nixon le elected. Lincoln ha ■ a•ked on how he -- Clifford -- handled the transition Ia 1t okay for Clifford to dlecu
  • Wilson understand the Congressional picture; .while they are grateful for Bob McNamara's willingness to I help on. th,is. one, they are wo j ried about the future. . , r, . , . , . , ~ ~ ~- ~ ~ . I , Brown wiU 1:?e cLccompanied by Pat Dean and Paul
  • at au • i "; ,... ~- .• I 1 spent Tueaday, March 16 rieitl11g key potnta iu thft 11 Corpe_where we ha• been pat"tt.c~la ly eoncerned over ibe de
  • ~-$-01 C:QJI MEIC !tire It wW be more ia kNplq wUh ou.r ■ ea•• of re•poa•lW. cooperatloa &ad Bollmn realltl•• to tell the BoUYlaa• that ll they pat tllroap the Import 8U'CMr .. , we will mo•• forward rlpt awa, with the SA aad pnjfftloaa•. I reqaa•t JOU
  • ~~ JJL'j''h--i.a-3 (s:/'ii /I #71a cable Intelligence CableJ.. / ,o-'3'2..1 s1 ~.i.m~ 1;•/l·o1n 'd pat, A ~ B-11-98 AIL ~'i7-~k3 ~----2.....,p,- ~rm---+--•TnnmJliomsofooITars:-:." C 4/25/68 ~ µ.{_fq1-a..B73(s/1~ undme-tt--t----4l... __ - FILE
  • •. rllaed the can tut le nqarN to add.aft le•• fa..-able oatcome fnm tbs Pre••••• Iba CialtMr ComrDIUN Nport. He ... aet1 ■1 tllie He a•kad U l woald pat tllle ,-lllWllty for thla ,-n of yev .Adralalflft.de&. tlal• dopeo of NClll'ity, pelllt of Ylew
  • before in our history, but it was clear that something like 60% of the people were for Nixon or Wallace. I could not predict what would happen if there was protracted frustration in the movement towards peace. It was my personal judgment, however
  • be watching a Kennedy fighting a Nixon for the have been Democrats who dislike President Johnson as a man · presidency. And this· in turn will have its effect on Mr more than they dislike the Vietnam war. Others may have Nixon's position. The swing against
  • Nixon when he goes through London. W . W. Rostow WWRostow:rln Tuesday, February Z8, 1967 -- 7:10 p. m. Mr. President: Herewith the editor of PANORAMA -- the biggest news show on BBC -- proposes an interview session with you £or broadcast