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  • are trying to, right now, tailor a program something like the Youth Physical Fitness Awards Program, only tailored to adults, and see what we can do. M: Do you think that'll go? L: I don't know . . I hope so. I hope it gives an incentive. The LBJ
  • --· •• and sonic boom ~~e-s, and the initial six months of prototype con­ struction.-·· We hope to conduct first in late 1969, and,ntroduce flight tests of the supersonic it into commercial service transport by mid-1974. \ Advanced After years other
  • would pro\·e n1ore dan- the prlce for obt:i.l:unir the illus: :.n :· - • ln·,,tion?.lity. A.'ld for the vmrlcl, It olrcrs • gerous to th~.u.s.n:i.tlonal security than known- a.~ the l',"?T. A further pd-:;: ls the hope of 3 :sa!_erand ~nnrr 1.t1murrnw
  • saw it. It was hilarious. Not really hilarious, but everyone was getting so uptight that it was unbelievable. So I said to him sort of calmly, I hope calmly, "Mr. Johnson, please calm down. You can't go Christmas shopping two days before Christmas
  • of his chest pain. I believe he was playing dominoes or some game with his friends there, including Brown, and began to have chest pain. Now, I'll interject some interesting notes, at least notes I hope are interesting along the line. Mr. Brown apparently
  • about social issues. How would you vote if you were in Congress today on cuts on social issues? BARBARA: I would hope that I could vote on a plane higher than politics. Now, that is asking almost the impossible for a politician to vote on a plane above
  • proud he was of him - the young boy was so pleased and honored The President mad e a general remark to the boys that he hoped we would be in Vietnam that much longer - but he was proud to know that these kinds i of men were out there doing their job. 11
  • o f twenty years. I hope I wil l som e day b e abl e t o giv e m y countr y i n retur n fo r wha t i t ha s give n me . I would b e honore d t o serve m y countr y a s I am sur e yo u are. Is ther e an y other wa y other tha n loving and supporting m
  • Presidents hope and believe will be a diminishing food deficit. Both Presidents expressed gratification at the inauguration of the Mangla Dam and the prospects for other such projects. The two PresidentS then reviewed the world situation with special HHH
  • educaother matters, but he surely hoped he would not fail to talk about the Presidency, he would help the President in any way that he could M.J. y T.I . 9:20pm . 9:25p On 1968 Wheel y s down at LaGuardia Airport, New York City the ground at La
  • the chairman. And you have to understand his relationship in Congress. A man is in Congress, but he wants to run for the United States Senate in five years--he's obviously going to do different things than if he isn't. If he ultimately hopes to be speaker
  • recording, he has been retained by the Nixon Administration and I hope therefore the health programs that have been worked on so diligently over the Johnson Administration will be implemented. The very fact that as of today there still is no assistant
  • . While I haven't always agreed with the action taken, whether it be Roosevelt or whomever, I've always felt that they had information I didn't have and I had to go ahead and salute and say, "Sir," and hope for the best. So that looking back, I don't
  • , you see. And so later on, as soon as there is even a slight possibility of having another solution, the Nationalists tried to stick to it, hoping to improve the solution--I mean, for instance, the Bao Dai solution--for having a legal basis, some kind
  • the bull calf, although I'm still hoping that one day I'll get that bull calf. W: Well, you've still got a chance because they way he's talking now, he's more or less retiring down there, you know, to the ranch. Oh, by the way, in that connection, here's
  • a moment ago. And I'm hopeful that it has helped to contain, to some extent, the enthusiasm for other powers to get into the nuclear weapon business. But none of us are in a position to say just how much more assurance we might indeed have if we were able
  • navy aircraft will have swing-wing and I hope in the future other aircraft will have the enclosed canopy. When one introduces major changes like that, one also comes upon surprises, and we've seen some in this aircraft. I don't think they're the kinds
  • on the committee hoping that they would make this a worthwhile matter. M: Thinking of that first session, are there some that stand out in your mind as being one of 6 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson
  • who went down ahead of the train as advance people. We set up committees everywhere we went. We hoped that in showing them how to set up a committee to get a great crowd down to the train that they would stay organized and get people to the polls
  • . The data are encrypted. The system now has the capability of transmitting 25 inches of a strip, like that attached, in one hour. General Steakley hopes to double the capacity in a month. This system now makes it possible for the President to receive
  • th ey b e g a n to r in g 1 h o u r b e fo r e L u c i's w e d d in g ? I w o r k e d a t m y d e s k fo r a w h ile . c in p r o g r e s s . 7 :0 0 p a s s e d . I knew the m e e tin g w a s B ut th e r e w a s no r e p o r t o f w hat to hope fo
  • and to in v ite them to sta y at the W hite H o u se . I hope by now that th ey know th ere is alw ays room for th e m , M arilyn und ertook to r e tr ie v e th em from N ew Y ork . to w ork on sea tin g and ju st how w e w ould handle i t . And B e s s and I
  • . He concluded by asking me to convey to the President his ... • 2 ::. $Ec:IlE1' , : • '.. t. _ .. - -. personal hope for the President's success in this matter. A. J. GOODPASTER Lieutenant General, U.S. Army 3 J
  • i o n . h o m e c o u n t r y to C h u c k . F o r Lynda, F or me, showing o u r And for Lyndon I hope, p e a c e a n d re la x a tio n . H e ’s b e e n g o n e tw o m o n t h s . A b o u t 1 0 : 0 0 , t h e f o u r of u s - - C h u c k a n d L
  • e x p e c t th em to do i t a n y m o r e . B u t I hope th e y w ill c o n tin u e to b e a p a r t of m y life - - M o l l i e a n d A d ele. I w a s fig h tin g to f in i s h m y shopping so t h a t I c o u ld c a t c h th e l a t e p la n e ton
  • e n in g . I hope th e y w i l l . T h e r e w a s m o r e to it th an m a n y I 'v e c ro w d e d w ith e x c ite m e n t and b ig n a m e s and im p o r ta n t e v e n t s .
  • should have another meeting. "Our side, your side" approach is a good one. We should not pull our punches. We should not understate our own case. I hope Averill will start off with a firm position. We ought to press for more than the Clifford
  • ,,, r- ,..... -J. , 0.I,.J..· ·. u~.'a ·,;,r :v. TD . ~. Jtl, . .. .. .- . PAGE 32 Co THE SAIGON 37d2~ . lJ.rl2'+0Z HOPES TO MAINTAIN A CERTAIN MILITARY ~NEMY '! ·: ~ ~ i_;_,.;·· :~ . : . ·­ I : P~~SSURE DUR! NG .. :-.~T nE
  • -day pause well. It was undertaken on the basis of pious hope. This is undertaken on the basis of three points. The President: The Soviets said they needed at least 12 days and no more than 20 to get serious talks going. What about the Soviets
  • to try to explain my hieroglyphics. I hope you will convey my warm regards to the President and my apologies for this untidy contribution. Sincerely, ·1 I J I •l Mr. W. Thomas Johnson Executive Assistant Office of the Honorable Lyndon B. Johnson Austin
  • to persuade the General to issue a statement clarifying French policy in Southeast Asia. The hope is that de Gaulle would issue a statement that his support of neutralization applies in the future and not the immediate present. b . USSR • Khrushchev•s current
  • gnm ent . The Ame rican people have a feeling of impati e n ce a n d, over tirne, the y may demand a quick e nd to the war as the price for the ir continued support. Thi s restlessnes s is evident in the public op inion polls . Opinion ab r oad hope s
  • :::-ecious in light of recent Gerr.1&.n pol i tic a l sh i fts ; and 3 ) p oliti c a l influen c e - the NJ'.TO consul tation p.i:'ocess is seen as the best hope of secur­ i ng US attention t o Europe2n interests ~ nd objections . Conseq uently , the Fourteen
  • i s , a f t e r n o o n w i t h Mr. S t . Ma u r t he and I hope I ' l l g e t e n o u g h c l o t h e s i n t h e s e y e a r s n e v e r t o have to go b a c k a g a in ! But w h i l e I am h e r e I w ant t o l o o k a s w e l l a s I can f
  • e r n e r ) w a s the C h a ir m a n , and M rs . N o rm a n V in c e n t P e a le w a s th e m a in s p e a k e r , I hope I ta k e a le s s o n fro m h e r b o o k . A la r g e p a r t o f h e r s p e e c h w a s th r e e s t o r i e s - v ig n
  • in g of p a p e r s , a g o o d ly a m o u n t of w o rk done a n d th en b a c k fo r a 6:30 a p p o in tm e n t w ith L iz a nd Doug C a te r in the W est H a ll, to r e a d , w h a t I hope to h e a v e n , is th e fin a l d r a f t of th e A la b
  • l o n e ! of th em in our lif e th e s e d a y s . A nd th e r e a r e fe w P e o p le a s s u m e th at w e a r e v e r y b u s y , that w e d on 't go out to s m a ll p r iv a te p a r t i e s . A t l e a s t th a t's w hat I hope th e y a s s
  • in a l m o s t a y e a r . c: w a s c o n s u m e d w ith V ie t- N a m , a n d the h e a d l i n e s r e a d : M o st of it. . "Johnson Sees R ed V i c t o r y Hope Gone - B ut P r e s i d e n t Says U. S. M ay Send M o r e T r o o p s , E q u ip m
  • . On th e w a y b a c k to th e a ir p o r t w e ta lk e d abou t th e a p p o in tm en t. I hope th e G o v ern o r w ill go to th e S en a te h im s e lf . W e w e r e t h e r e a lit t le o v e r an hour and a h a lf and a t 7:30 r e a c h e d th e W
  • m y day in a n u tsh ell, hoping so m u ch that it w ould do so m e good for th e P ilg r im a g e fo r w h ich I have s o m u ch a d m ira tio n . F o r on ce p u b licity w a s a to o l and not a burden. V And th en , le a v in g it ra th er