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  • , we· can decide later if NE\VSDAY le the best fo:ruxn. My personal preference la ,silence. On the other hand. I know the Importance·ol the battle for domestic opinion. W. W. Jlostow WWRostow:rln Newsday Garden City, Long Island, New York 11530
  • it for trips to Philadelphia and New York--short trips. We have helicopters--white-top helicopters that are roughly five minutes from the lawn here at all times when the President's in residence here at the White House. A telephone call will have one sitting
  • , and winner of an American Institute of Architects Gold Me.d al for "distinguished achievement i n an a11 i e d fie 1d . '' A native of New York City who studied at Cornell University, the University of Wisconsin, and Harvard University, he spent two years
  • IMMEDIATE RUQMGU/ AM EMBASSY ANKARA RUEHDT/USUN NEW YORK RUDTCR/AMEf1BASSYLONDON _ RU7NCR/AMEr1BASSYPARIS RUQTAWk1ilEr1BASSYTEHRAN STATE GRNC BT 9 & (4 P I 91 I! II T I a\ l BAGHDAD 2146 t. ASKED TO CALL ON DIR GEN PROTOCOLSHAIKHL Y AT 11130 ~M. JUNES, AD
  • , 1982 INTERVIEWEE: ARTHUR KRIM INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. Krim's office, New York City Tape 1 of 3 G: You were saying that you met with the President a good deal during the period from April through June, [1968], I believe. K
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • with the White House in the first place. B: I was born and raised in Argentina, in Buenos Aires and Patagonia. I was educated in New York and Virginia and Massachusetts at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. During my last year at the Fletcher School I
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Johnson decided he'd run for the Senate. Lyndon knew that. And, of course, He asked him if he could carry Colorado. Johnson was a wonderful man, a great old man. that some new people had come in. Well, the trouble was A young New York sort of lawyer
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Public Hearings on Medicaid held in New Orleans (December 27, 1968) Series/Sub-Series Availability Series I Series I Open Open 1 Hearings: U.S. Dept. of HEW Public Hearings on Medicaid held in New York City (December 23, 1968) Series I Open 2
  • . . . . It was toward the end of his presidency. Mrs. Johnson had invited me and my successor Pulitzer Prize winner, Harper Lee, who won it in 1961 for To Kill A Mockingbird, to MarijaneMaricle,who studied music at the Universityof Texas, went on to New York
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • ............................. 5 Bomber Destruction ............................. 6 Non-use of Nuclear Weapons ..................... 6 Observation Posts. .............................. 7 Reduction of Forces............ ................ 7 Reduction of Military Expenditures
  • -Trust Cases" open Contains lists of individual and corporate defendants in pending anti-trust cases before the Department of Justice, 1965-1967, and material on the merger of the New York Herald Tribune, New York Journal American and New York World
  • Asia and Europe fights its way out. Here is a p1eture of three d•ys before the last session of Congress opened. The President of the Japan Senate called on House in New York the day after he had called upon Roosevelt and Hull in 1ashington. I happened
  • fit, so I gave it back to him. I made a fatal mistake, because I've never gotten paid for that bet. F: You'll have to remind him again some time. Q: Lady Bird was here and she had some reporters with her. One of these reporters,the New York
  • ; changes in Post Office in the last 35 years; Equal Opportunity Employment Act; Vietnam War veterans; LBJ Ranch visit; Dr. Frantz's additional notes
  • date. that he had beeri hired· ·by the "New York Times" to :t11terview ROY FR.A.:t~Iffi:CTJSF~o LEON clait!!ed . that . he had taped a .. seven..:hour· inte~1iew, dur.. ing which time FR.JUIB:HOUSER cla:tmed he· 1tra,s in charge of the M."l.:nutemen
  • of conflict and noise. And if we hit the front pages of the [New York] Times or the Washington Post, then Shriver was going to hear from the President in the morning after the President read his paper. When Shriver heard from the President, I would hear from
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • "'bite House ✓ AFC DOD At lunch today, and again at dinner, Foreign Minister Nogueira expressed himself with great bitterness with regard to the role and attitude of the Upited States Government in the recent Security Council session in New York. He said
  • nist hands and all the rest . happen here?" it was important That the whole government struggle, was just busting out completely, and Ky's my interview shy about seeing correspondents unless he New York Times or the Washington Post he'd some
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , in London, in New York, in Moscow, and innumerable less formal consultations, with anyone and everyone who could help find the road to peace. to find here, the the not ful And all of these a solution. have failed -- failed But it doesn't mean we were
  • sort of going alone with a general atmosphere of academic defense and indeed I had signed with Pool, and Bloomfield Kaufman and Lucian Pye a letter to the New York Times in support of the President's policy earlier that year that occasioned a response
  • York. Lyndon usually attended both things, quite often with Johnny Runyon and the Dallas Times Herald people. The American Legion had a big dinner. G: Did you go to that event in New York with him, the newspaper--? J: I often did, and I think
  • governess; LBJ's support for working women and daycare facilities; LBJ's smoking and stress; Gene Autry at the 1953 Texas State Society barbeque; a British Embassy celebration of the coronation of Elizabeth II; seeing the Trumans in his post-presidency
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • the Post Presidential documents are in this section . Contains WWR's summary memo (5/14/73) and two copies of the full chronology . most of the news clippings are in this section 3. Documents fastened to the right side (#64-114) . These documents date
  • , understand, I'm an Independent. M: All recent appearances to the contrary! F: That's right. In New York, I was a registered member of the Liberal party, and now I'm a 4 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • and I have talked about Harry Coles and speculated about on where he might be. He's from New York, isn't he, or lived in New York? R: Yes, he was from Washington, D.C. Then after his naval career, term or service, he went first I think to Philadelphia
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • : Rayburn, yes, oh yes. And Johnson was working with a lot of different people. Rayburn helped raise money, yes, he did. D: And was it money from Texas? C: Most of it. But it was from New York, it was from California, it was from various places
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • appointment to the Redevelopment Land Agency? H: I remember that I was driving back from New England and that I stopped in New York to see my wife's parents, Mr. and Mrs. N.A. Ross. We were on the beach in Long Island when I got a call to call the White
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • in these appointments. Each state in the union has at least one appointee, with the leading states being the District of Columbia, New York, Maryland, and California, Virginia, and Texas." He was pleased to note for the Cabinet that Texas was in sixth place
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • /oh or maybe it was Bowdoin [College] up in New England, and had had one summer as a copy boy at the New York Times and so on. He was a very active, very energetic Vietnamese whose family or wife ran a big English school. He understood the press
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • was when he was in the Senate back in the fifties. How close did you actually cover him personally during that period? S: That was a very close relation. I remember the first time I met him. I came down from New York here, and I was here in this bureau
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • of efforts to establish the endowment. A program featurmg performances by Hel­ en Hayes and Kirk Douglas wa attended by more tha 1,000 persons. The ribute was co-chaired nationally by Henry Ford II of Detroit and Mrs. Albert L sker of New York. Amb. Ed Clark
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • -sawmill-farming community west of Jacksonville, which was where I grew up . I attended the public schools there, and I also attended the public schools in New York and Massachusetts . M: Your family must have moved some then? B: No, I had a lot
  • -:-1 VED '-, ·•-. ' r,,,'JY '· 'SOFF 1E February 11, 1966 IN REPLY REFER T01 MEMORANDUM FORMR. McGEORGE BUNDY THEWHITEHOUSE Subject: Invitation to the President to Attend Ugandan Mission Ground Breaking Ceremony in New York Ambassador Apollo K
  • ://www.discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/prepres/lbja Box No. Folder Title Dewey, Thomas E., New York, 1953 Dillon, Douglas, Under Secretary Of State, 1956-61 Douglas, William O., Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, ca. 1939-61 Dulles, Allen, 1959-60 Dulles, John
  • together. G: You mentioned, I think, something about Henderson going to New York? K: Well, Lyndon told me what Herb was capable of. I don't remember how long before that had happened, but Herb had got on a binge and held gone off to New York and held
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • •• aot alrelMly. w. w. WWRoatow:rla lleetow MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON November 30, 1967 Memo to Walt Rostow Press Contact David Breasted, New York News. called to ask me about rumors that Goldberg was resigning the first
  • is strong and his opponent is weak. Polls are designed by a candidate to show that he is strong. (The President showed Mr. Carroll a recent New York poll showing him rwming far ahead of his prospective opponents.) Mr. Carroll: You must envy Mr. Kosygin
  • a conservative from Arizona, [Paul Jones] Fannin, to [Jacob] Javits of New York. It ran the gamut. The first paragraph of the "minority views" said we voted for this bill. The second section said this is a hell of a way to run a railroad, pushing through a bill
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • '\\~ ,,,,,::.~· ':or- , FROM: Public Relation Department The National Founda.tion~March of Di.mes 800 Second Avenue New York, New York 10017 THE 1965 NATIONAL MARCH OF DIM.JJ;S CHILD BACKGROUND DATA NAME: Michaeline Lea (' 1:t1.ickey11 ) Heinicka.1>age 4 (born 9/21/60
  • , and the role of the cities became considerably different. Today we have, for instance, in the New York metropolitan area, as the most clear-cut example, situations where New York and Connecticut and New Jersey simply cannot act independently of each other
  • of Businessmen (NAB) and compensation of its members; how OLC helped NAB and a housing commission avoid a conflict-of-interest pay problem; subsidizing new businesses in low-income areas or offering tax incentives to business owners to involve the poor
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • look forwar,d to meeting thing on Tuesday morning to see when we can you. War..m regards,~ -~i~ Thomas B~~:~ton 'i Mr. Jack Valenti, President : Motion Picture Association of America~ 522 Fifth Avenue New York, N~ Y. 10036 I Inc. TBM:jd
  • to full strength when you left to take the new post? M: Yes. As we brought it up to full strength, then President Johnson proposed an increase in the department of a thousand new positions approximately. Congress approved that so we have brought it up
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)