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  • conference in P-38 at 3 p.m. Attends dinner for Sen. Russell given by Jim Webb. 3/23 P-38. Meets with Drew Pearson at 10:30 a.m. Has lunch with Goldberg and Ted Kheel of Urban League. Meets with Jack Bell and Bill Theis. Calls Conrad Hilton in NYC re
  • a wait and see attitude . - Inouye Bayh Montoya Harris - Tydings REPUBLICANS Cooper Fong Boggs - - Pearson ... ... - -- ~ Murphy• -- - T ---- HIGHWAY SAFETY .,, SENATE COMMERCE COMMITTEE DEMOCRATS Magnuson Pastore - Monroney - 0
  • that at I think Smith has seen his office as gathering all the White House contacts into him. I still talk to Ernie Goldstein about foreign trade, I still talk to DeVier Pearson quite a ·bit about a Hhole host-of matters, that would include foreign trade
  • ; ' Secretary Rusk believes your direct intervention with Pearson is our only chance. He suggests that you send Prime Minister P...earson the letter at Tab.~. . " ·I support this recommendation. • ( I rt •. W. W. Rostow ~TlAL-. ...1ti
  • Kefauver was ever a prime mover in the Preparedness Subcorrmittee. He went along, he joined in, but he was never a leader in the corrmittee, not like [John] Stennis was. G: Did Kefauver tend to leak infonnation to Drew Pearson or others? J: Probably
  • . Also, Drew Pearson charged he was ''laying down." and I called him "Laying down Johnson, F: I used to call him "Landslide 11 teasing him. When he first entered the Senate in '48, was there much indication that he was going to go on to be the Senate
  • came and went by train, which said something about the times--he had a press conference for the Texas press in his hotel room. Jack Anderson from Drew Pearson attended. I don't know how the Stevenson people let this happen. As a matter of fact
  • , or to Eunice Shriver or some other Kennedy and we'd get into a Drew Pearson column fight or something of that sort. I didn't go back over there. I did talk several times to Macy. Macy was not entirely clear as to what this was all about. John could never
  • ; three guest speakers; Lady Bird records diary; LBJ & Lady Bird to Georgetown Club for reception for Speaker McCormack; to Hale Boggs' garden party; LBJ & Lady Bird have dinner at White House; visit from Hubert Humphrey, Drew Pearson & Frank Sinatra
  • Connally said, lIyou are just going to tell him that he is like everybody else. II Zephyr said, "l know he is like everybody else, but I ain't going to be the one to tell him. II That's the story that I think Drew Pearson had, and it got mixed up
  • . G: Why do you say that? P: Well, Bess Abell's father [Earle Clements] was governor of a state. She was married to a successful young man. Wasn't he Drew Pearson's son? G: Stepson. P: Stepson. There's something about Bess Abell. social
  • for him. Drew Pearson was always writing stories about the guy from C i t i e s Service. I don't know whether he was a Texan or not, but they were always giving him something. Eisenhower had never had any money; he'd been a military man. I guess
  • was a ranch, it was the Raymond Pearson Ranch. And this other land was just there. M: Was that land owned by Humble Oil? T: Yes, I think part of it was and different people--I'm not familiar with who owned all of it at the time, but I knew that Humble did
  • hour. During the fifties about this time, we would go out every spring to George Vournas' annual Greek party. He was a neighbor of Drew Pearson, had a lovely farm out right close to Drew's, used to have a roast lamb and those marvelous little pastries
  • is available. I am reminded that you never sent ·me the material of Henry and th~Library of Presidential Papers so I could · orward it to the IRS. Mr Devere Pearson called me and LN,PS'fifii"ea to know about it. " 1 X I'm seriously thinking of writing
  • PRES! DENT WASHINGTON SEPTEMBER 18, 1963 CONVERSATION -- THE VICE PRESIDENT AND DREW PEARSON DP: Welcome home from a very fine trip. LBJ: Well, same to you. By gosh, it looks to me that you've got the two nations together now and you
  • on the up and your slashing attack on Johnson~in your mind, was merely that of one serving the public welfare, and from your political level attacking a. "tired liberal." It is not important who told the ta.le to Carr--who told it or wrote it to Pearson's
  • Rockefeller has invitations still out to Prime Ministers Pearson and Holt, President Ayub Khan, General Suharto, President Marcos and a few others. :Mr. Rockefeller has arranged with the Secretary­ General to release the names of the additional signers
  • recognize his power as he did and he kept him around, but I don't think he ever trusted him--and he'd use him--anymore than I think he would trust Drew Pearson, but he used him. G: Was the FBI resistant to the ban on wiretapping? C: I think that the ban
  • . He said, "Yes, Drew"--it was Drew Pearson calling him on the phone. And he put his feet down and looked at me for a minute. I nodded my head as if to excuse myself and he waved me back to my chair where I was sitting by his desk. After he hung up, why
  • part of the spring for me. I met her at a cocktail party, I believe, at Drew Pearson's, as I was later to meet another well-known person, Mr. [Aristotle] Onassis. Drew Pearson had an interesting salon. But by sheer chance, I'm sure, and somebody
  • I know. That's Willard Pearson, [who] took them up into Ban Me Thuot, that area up in there, closer to the--I think it was Birmingham. But anyway, no, the great thing Harry Kinnard did, there was a fight on the top of a mountain out
  • t ua t i on and he di dn 't know whe t he r he wan te d t o run off to Canada with th is about to happen. Ye t he a so f el t i t would be good t o calk to Le s cer Pearson Mini ster-Canada ] , who had wo n a Nobel Pr ize fo r a r ea . He a nd Pea
  • ] Pearson and Anderson. I took great pains-- this had to be in 1963--to emphasize what was the truth, that the Vice President didn't have the slightest connection with the selection process. In fact, he didn't know on the Saturday that we made
  • of the genuine thoughts of the Vietnam military personnel, that we should give this Vietnam mail the widest dissemination in keeping with the rules of good taste and good sense. There were some other occasions where a columnist such as Drew Pearson would