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  • Natural Gas Company for approximately a year. By this time it was fall of 1966. Then I got a call from a guy by the name of Bill Bates, who had been Senator Russell's press secretary since the mid-1950s. By the It/ay, he might be able to make
  • -market economy (e.g. tobacco and match monopolies). Association under the GATT is flexible, nevertheless, and the Contracting Parties as a group have the following relationships with specific Communist countries at present: Czechoslovakia remains
  • can do for the time being, unless you feel the matter is worth the President's attention • Perkins is not pressing for this, and only you will know whether it might be a wise thing to do. Samuel E" Belk By ...........-CO~tFIDEf~TIAL v (').S H
  • sat a t hi s usual chair . H e asked Georg e Christian to bring i n a press poo l - - an d e wen t t o th e mai n passenge r compartmen t o f th e plan e an d selecte d a larg e group . Th e entire fron t sectio n o f the plan e wa s fille d w / member
  • 12:55p • 1:14p ~ Tuesday (include visited by) tur To Oval Ofc - stopping in mjdr's room to read George Christian's morning press briefing. As he read questions/answers, he gave instructions to MW who was with him -- one being to call Gov. Rhodes
  • it. President, MW and Bill Moyers - to Fish Room for Telephone call inaugurating the new submarine cable linking Venezuela w/ U. S. REMARKS of both President's released to press in press releases (see p. 3 for more there) The cable links Venezuela w/ the U.S
  • was on July 7. Following Gray's earlier call, I was visited by two Secret Service agents in my suite at the Fountainbleu Hotel in Miami. We were in the midst of preparing then for the convention. One of the agents was Paul Rundell, associate director
  • and Howard Hughes; Drosnin's efforts to get O'Brien's associates to do interviews; Drosnin's criminal activity, including stealing files for his book, Citizen Hughes; an episode of 20/20 on Citizen Hughes; Geraldo Rivera's efforts to get O'Brien on the show
  • him and the First Lady. _ I Also at this point it was discovered that the press buses were lagging behind, and the motorcade was slowed for several miles enabling them to catch up, _ t - » c '. I r 8:47a : r TPrr__f T •_ Force One pulled up
  • that you got later? H: Not the slightest. Nobody was worried about that at all. F: The ultraconservatives hadn't become quite as flagrant then? H: No. And it was a wonderful reception that the two candidates got. I remember the press car was driving
  • classmate of mine, a doctor who, after he pressed it in my hand, said on the way out, "I want to be on the Medical Care Commission," so I sent it back to him. I later put him on the Medical Care Commission, but I didn't take his money. So I didn't want
  • The Ilonorahle Thurgood Marshall, Associate Justice of the Left to right. former Secretary of Commerce Alexander Tro\\­ bridge, Mrs. Charles Engelhard and Associate Justice Thur­ good .Marshall await the luncheon ceremonies. 2 Dr. McGill. IeH, and Mrs. Johnson
  • to the front j crew area where George Christian was sitting with a Press Pool of I Mr. Jack Southerland--U. S. News and World Report j Mr. Forrest Boyd--Mutual Mr. Max Frankel -- New York Times j Mr. Frank Cormier -- Associated Press I Mr. Merriman Smith
  • !z February 15, 1967 EXDIS MEMORANDUM FOR MR. GEORGE CHRISTIAN THE WHITE HOUSE Subject: CIA-NSA Flap Here is the general press line the Acting Secretary has approved concerning this matter: l,e>. We will discuss it only in response to official
  • about specific telecasts? H: I think twice in all the years, indirectly through his press secretary, we got word that he was something less than happy with something that had been said or shown. F: Do you remember what it was? H: I'm sure both
  • Biographical information; first meeting with LBJ; 1960, 1964 Democratic conventions; association with LBJ during the vice presidency; NBC’s handling of the news after the JFK assassination; meetings with LBJ; credibility gap; Georgetown Press
  • it and it was twenty-eight seconds. Twenty-eight seconds and, boom, you're president. Lyndon took the oath. Mac [Malcolm] Kilduff, who was associate press secretary, was crouched down on the floor and had a microphone in his hand. It was a dictating-machine
  • Coverage of 1959 Khrushchev visit; Khrushchev's dislike of the press; Mesta Machine Tool Company tour; JFK's choice of LBJ as VP; reflections on JFK's trip to Texas in 1963 and the days following the assassination; experience as a witness to LBJ's
  • were there you may know something about them. First question concerns the Hhite House Communications Agency. Can you tell me anything about how that functioned and what its connection was with you as press secretary? CHRISTIAN: It supplied our
  • Special telephone interview regarding the impact of television on public policy; White House Communications Agency; use of videotape; White House Naval Photographic Unit films; LBJ's close relations with the press; television news reports; effect
  • Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org More on LBJ Library oral histories: -2­ http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] We gathered up a press plane, which we chartered
  • in beautification project; demonstrators; Head Start project; Women Doers Luncheon; Earth Kitt; press relations.
  • : That's essentially correct. monographs. M: There are numerous articles and several I have two books now in press. What are these books in press? LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org R: ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson
  • the President departed the Shoreham Hotel, accompanied by U.S. " U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE : 1967 OF—256-957 •""^ Governor Price Daniel, Governor Dewe y Bartlett of Okla. , MW , Bill Blackburn, and PRESS POOL: Merriman Smit h of UPI and Doug Cornell
  • and/or the Library, there is a pressing need for a major modification of several ar as of space ... in order to make those areas more usable and effective." I ' Along the north wall of the building on the first floor will be 11 new !>etof display cases
  • the Biggs Chair in Military History at the Virginia Military Institute; author, The Years of MacArthur WILLIAM J. JORDEN, Correspondent, Associated Press, 1948-1952; Correspondent, New York Times, 1952-1955; U.S. Ambassador to Panama, 1974-1978 Panel
  • 15. 3/30 Press Club stag dinner. April 4/2 Mrs. [Ed?] Cape is visiting in Washington until April 21. 1950 Chronology ● p. 4 of 12 07/2024 4 lbjlibrary.org REFERENCE: LBJ CHRONOLOGY Drafted by LBJ Library archival staff from oral history
  • would make the offer of the vice presidency to Senator Johnson, and two, that Senator Johnson would accept it? M: Let me tell you my association with that. The balloting ended at mid- night, and we got all of our workers together. In a very
  • staff from the Public Health Service, and began a very intensive--far more intensive than we had up to that time--educational program, and a program of working with hospital associations. the American Medical Association. We made an effort also to work
  • , 1964, Roy Wilkins, Executive Secretary of the National. Association for the Advancement of Colored People, at his request, made a hurried trip from New York to speak with Assistant Director Cartha D. DeLoach about a matter which he indicated concerned
  • . • A source of this Bureau who has furnished reliable information in the past advised that James Haughton, Director of the Harlem Unemployment Center in New York City, at a press conference.on February 18, 1968, called for "rebellion or jobs'.' and announced
  • friends. We were neighbors. So we used to drive back and forth to Andrews Air Force Base a lot. I was not one of the pool members, but Frank gave me wonderful fill-ins on what happened. Frank Cormier, I guess, of Associated Press had to be among them. I've
  • LBJ's visit to New Orleans with Louisiana Governor John McKeithen; LBJ's relationships with Mexicans; White House press conferences and how they changed in the television era; LBJ's use of television; LBJ's response to civil rights-related violence
  • -dragging on the part of people who could have been more helpful. They were known to be close Lyndon Johnson associates. And Hubert Humphrey, with concern about his relationship with the President, would from time to time try to focus on it. Clearly over
  • ., N.W., Washington, D.C. This is Dorothy Pierce McSweeny. Mr. White, I want to begin our interview with a brief backgrounder on your very long journalistic career which began in 1927 with Associated Press. It was through AP that you first came
  • Day or t Expendi- Y Robert Haack, President of the National Association of Securities Dealers and Manuel Cohen, Chairman of the Securities Exchange Commission _ OFF RECORD _^ Appt requested by Mr. fcbaaxx Cohen for the purpose of introducing Mr
  • by Charles Taunadi of the Associated Press, won Honorable Mention. AMONG FRIENDS OF LBJ is a publication of the Friends of the LBJ Library Editor- Lawrence D. Reed Research Assrstance: Charles Corkran, Cary Yarrington, Marlene White Photography: Frank Wolfe
  • to the telegram from Mr. F. R. Brush, Secretary, American Association of Nurserymen, concerning the proposed importation of Japanese flowering cherry trees. Sincerely yours, 1'hcroa ~· R. hectl.tive Ass istant tiL: .; ':e S secretarY to tb e Enclosures
  • people. Perhaps it would be of interest to relate how I did become involved in this. As we have discussed in the two earlier interviews, I had had association with Lyndon Johnson during the Vice Presidential days and a rather early association
  • -38 with Ambassador Carrillo Flores, Mexican singers, the Miguel Guajardos, the Henry Gonzaleses, others. Attends Ed Shelton and Show publishers and editors party at National Press Club. Stops by Philippine Embassy to say goodbye to Amb. and Mrs
  • Association the fil m i s aime d a t al l schoo l teacher s t o stimulat e thei r involvemen t i n politics. 11:40a Bac k t o offic e w / JR J — , Fe WHITE HOUS E Dat e . DENT LYNDO N B . JOHNSO N DIARY ' th President bega n hi s da y a t (Place ) Day
  • as ^ _/'/ Hon. J. Walter Yeagley. Assistant Attorney General * " "~ "^ \ j^ _& " "*" a gift. i S , Hon. J. Edgar Hoover j\ Clyde A. Tolson. Associate Director. FBI j Hon. Thurgood Marshall ! .I i Cartha D. DeLoach . Assistan t to the Director. FBI — 3:11p t 3
  • by the Chairman of the American Bar Association Law Day Sub- Committee) --for Armed Forces TV Network - re employing returing veterans To the Cabinet Room to meet with the President's Committee on Consumer Interest Miss Betty Furness. Special Assistant
  • . Valenti - until To Cabinet Room for unannounced press conference To office w/ J Valenti G Reedy Myer Alfred E. Perlman, President of New York Central Feldman and off System, New York; G. E. Leighty, Chairman, Railway Labor Executives until Association
  • -- where a press conference was held for the Prime Minister. During this, Mr. Robert Komer took a message from mjdr to the President RE: The Prime Minister playing golf at Burning Tree Issued Joint Communique To office Bill George Reedy (pl) Governor John
  • statement Fowler is to make at his press conference today re circular financing Walt Rostow Jack Valenti to President's bedroom 10:17a Director Schultze t Gardner (b.5) re prices being paid for land for national parks results of speculation. Ackley