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  • THE DENVER POST September 28, 1965 .\ .' . American ' political motivations, ·. India had no alternative but to WASHINGTON-The United accept the offer, for without the · States has offered India 500,000 additional shipments it would tons
  • materials on using loans to administer the program, international repercussions of famine in India, and the need to include farming equipment and supplies as part of the aid package.
  • leadership assumed by the United States for balance ot payment reasons. As a re.s uit • the Title I runendment signed with India on May 27 to_provide 2 ,'750 ,,000 !_tons of -wheat and 750 ,ooo tons of grain sorghum included enou5h ·runo.s .. to ship only 2
  • Details of restriction(s) may be found on the withdrawal sheet in the first folder of the file unit. Withdrawal sheets refer to file units and are not necessarily applicable to all individual folders.
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Walt Rostow, Vol. 14, October 1 - 31, 1966"
  • as the assistant director of the Department of Cultural Activities of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America (ACWA). In this capacity, she worked to get African-American women into the labor union. In 1944, she became the ACWA's first legislative
  • LBJ Connection: Consumer adviser; Washington Legislative Representative, Almagamated Clothing Workers of America, 1945-1948; Legislative Representative, Industrial Union Department of the AFL-CIO, 1958-1961; Director, Women's Bureau, Department
  • on Equal Opportunity in Housing 12/3/65 Home Builders Association Banquet, Gainesville, Florida 11/18/66 22 League of Women Voters, Concord, New Hampshire, April 21, 1966 22 22 Migrant Farm Workers Conference on Antipoverty Programs 1/18/66 22 National
  • to as the donor. hereby give, donate, and convey to the United States of America for deposit inthe Lyndon Baines Johnson Library~ ·'lnd for administration therein ·by the authorities thereof, a tape and a trans
  • LBJ Connection: President, United Steelworkers of America, 1965-1977
  • ; Mbr., Naj:'l Council on the Arts, NYC ~ £ } Mr. Karl F. Feller Pres., Int'l Union United Brewery, Flour, Cereal, Soft Drink & Distillery Workers of America, Cincinnati, Ohio Mr. George P. Garrett, Jr. /; . Poet, Univ. of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va
  • should feel that developed to help them adjust them­ there are available, in the United States, selves to the painful realities of diminish­ in Latin America, and in the British ing demand. There were the Stevenson Dominions, tremendous quantities
  • LBJ LIBRARY DOCUMENT WITHDRAWAL SHEET Doc# DocType Doc Info Page 1 of 1 Classification Pages 01 report The White Crusaders of the North C 01a report The White Crusaders of the North C 06 report United Klans of America , Incorporated
  • See all scanned items from file unit "E3-Office of Investigations - Organization Files, 1965 - 1968"
  • , United Automoblle, Aircraft and Agricultural Workers of America, 8000 East J e1rerson, Detroit 14, Mich. Implement Tbe Very Reverend Francia B. Sayre, Dean, The Washington Cathedral, Wisconsin and Massachusetts Avenuea, NW., Washington, D.C. William F
  • See all scanned items from file unit "President's Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity (FG 731)"
  • 3,300 smaller islands. They lie at approximately the same latitude as the United States. The total area of Japan, 147,000 square miles, is somewhat less than that of California. About four-fifths of the country is covered by hills and mountains, a number
  • Details of restriction(s) may be found on the withdrawal sheet in the first folder of the file unit. Withdrawal sheets refer to file units and are not necessarily applicable to all individual folders.
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Japan - Sato's Visit Memos & Cables, 1/11‑14/65"
  • and essays. a time when the new Republics in Africa and Madagascar are taking A their place in the United Nations, the Press and Information Division of the French Embassy is pleased to present an overall picture T of these countries and their peoples
  • Property and Administrative Services Act of 1949, as amended (44 U.S.C. 397) and regulations issued thereunder (41 CFR 101-10), I, W~ C't)~, hereinafter referred to as the donor, hereby give, donate, and convey to the United States of America for eventual
  • service; land consolidation and mechanization; chemical farming; desalination of water; OEO; Farm Bureau; Consumer's Interests
  • from more recent history that rural problems were neglected. I just finished writing a book about migrant farm workers, and in the course of writing my book I talked to Sundquist, then at Brookings, and asked him about how come we didn't do anything
  • to recognize that the way American people were living had changed pretty much in the 1950s, so that by 1961, as I say, 80% of the people living in rural America didn't farm, so they didn't have access to either of these two types of institutions . We created
  • Committee for an Effective Congress; George Aiken; biographical information; Resettlement Administration; changes in FHA; needs of rural communities; loans; social purposes of agency; American Farm Bureau Federation opposition; dissemination
  • greetings ~o the American people and our··warm thanks for the aid , and assistance we have received over the years. Ladies and Gentlemen - I ask you to join·m~ in a toast for the Vice President of the United States of America, for the American people
  • See all scanned items from file unit "V.P. Johnson's Trip to Northern Europe, September 2-17, 1963"
  • contribution to our country -- and I want to say on behalf of all the people of this Nation that we, the people of the United States, are deeply in the debt of the people of Okl ahoma for the quality o f the men that they send to the United States Cong ress. I
  • to the United States in 1959. D: Well, it was quite fascinating because I had been in Washington for only two days. I had been working in Ohio as a television reporter and news director at a television and radio station, and had applied for a job
  • - A. L D. OVERS~AS OPERATIONS IX Near East and South Asia- X Latin America XI Africa ... XII East Asia XIII Vietnam . . . .. . . . .. .. .. .. .. . . ..... . . . ... .. . . .. ... . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . • 177 233 310
  • of unit. That is, actually, a majority of our present- day farmers are now earning most of their money off the farm, but they have the benefits of rearing their children on a farm, giving their children experience with growing things and taking care
  • -tion ot typea, ot liberals a11d ll.941wn1. \o the p oint wlwre I do A t ae• how there oeA be ~ 11ne up which ould be anti" , baaed: oa ·t he Rooan•lt w port~ Kt, la there a ap.cit1• Garaer aeo.timentt Ya Paid -worker,, but 110 r eal s-entiaent
  • WASHINGTON September 16, 1966 CONFIDDH'PIAE. MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT Subject: ·Recognition of Botswana and Lesotho · and.Establishment of Embassies at Gaberones and Maseru Recommendation: I recommend that the United States. rec~gnize the Republic
  • Details of restriction(s) may be found on the withdrawal sheet in the first folder of the file unit. Withdrawal sheets refer to file units and are not necessarily applicable to all individual folders.
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Walt Rostow, Vol. 13, September 15-30, 1966"
  • agricultural legislation that was being considered by the Congress. B: You were presenting it to Congress? G: No, actually I was still in North Carolina with farm program work, and my congressman was Harold D. Cooley who was Chairman of the House LBJ
  • . Johnson. F: Who's Carlton Smith? P: He was at that time on the board of trustees of Baylor University, deacon of Highland Baptist Cnurch--he still is, I believe, a local lawyer who has always been interested in politics and my partner in our farming
  • ; long term effects of farm-related issues; LBJ as a hard worker.
  • Latin America
  • PEARSON'S FARM; FERTILIZER FOR LADY BIRD JOHNSON'S BEAUTIFICATION PROGRAM; DAIRY FARMING; LBJ TELLS PEARSON THAT JACK ANDERSON'S STORY YESTERDAY ON LBJ'S DIFFERENCES WITH SENATE LEADERSHIP IS INCORRECT; STATUS OF CURRENT BILLS; LEGISLATIVE
  • agents, "fifth column" will spread through Latin America and set up their political system there . The United States and Canada will have to unite to defend the North American continent (and we may have to take cha rge of exioo and Cent r a l America
  • of this organization be instructed by the national office to promote similar demonstrations in other cities throughout the United States. Another source of this Bureau advised on June 7, that a small number of civil rights workers in Chicago, Illinois, reportedly left
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Demonstrations (August 1965 to December 1966)"
  • AMERICA HAS JUST HEARD THE..J · - -- T" ~..............~. .- - -'..::.- - - ··* - - ·- - -- - - - -- - -. ~ VOICE OF CHURCHILL SAY.lNG THAt BBITAIN WILL HELP RUSSli~ IO _ · ,. ·- ~ -- - - .,. •·s. A..:cfEAR ·STOP BI TLER .CHURCH I LL
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Pepper, Claude (Senator) - Notes [1940-1943]"
  • this place ,and otber·5 in this area of rats. His demonstration and instructions go a vsry long way in getting us farmers to eradicate the rats on the farms. Without the assistance or the county Heal.th unit assistance the rural .areas would be in a rather
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Agriculture [1958]"
  • was formed, I came east and was one of the early organizers working for John L . Lewis . Later on I worked for other unions, at one time was southern director of the Textile Workers Union just before the war, and I forced myself to be drafted . I had
  • EDITION GSA FPMR (41 CFR) 101•11,IJ UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT Memorandum TO :AA./NESA, Mr. Maurice J. Williams FROM :NESA/PL, Richard J. Ward DATE: ~,.A, SUBJECT:Measures for Absorbing Arab Refugees The attached paper deals with means for absorbing
  • Details of restriction(s) may be found on the withdrawal sheet in the first folder of the file unit. Withdrawal sheets refer to file units and are not necessarily applicable to all individual folders.
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Middle East, Volume I, 6/65-3/68"
  • framework for the Food for Peace Programme, under which the United States shares its agricultural abundance with developing nations. U.S. Farm Re.volution Public Law 480 is a fruit of the remarkable revolution encompassed American farming in recent
  • See all scanned items from file unit "India Food - January - March 1966"
  • to be with the members and friends of this organization -- one of the first to champion the beautifi cation cause. I hate to contemplate what America's cities and countryside would look like today if your organization had not attacked this problem the se many years. All
  • Press release, "Remarks by Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, 12th Annual Meeting of Keep America Beautiful, Inc,. New York, New York, 10/7/1965"
  • state Senator after Wirtz had moved to Austin and aftet Welly Hopkins, who succeeded Wirtz as Senator, became General Counsel of United Mine Workers in Washington. Then Wirtz moved to Austin in 1934 and I moved with him and became a member of the law
  • such as district organizers were also in attendance. ANTI-VIETNAM WARDEMONSTRATION The Socialist Workers Party, a group designated as subversive by the Attorney General of the United States, was represented by over .75 members who came from areas
  • Details of restriction(s) may be found on the withdrawal sheet in the first folder of the file unit. Withdrawal sheets refer to file units and are not necessarily applicable to all individual folders.
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Demonstration – October 20-21, 1967"
  • election in 1964; and speeches made while a member of the House of Representatives, a U.S. Senator, Senate majority whip, Senate minority leader, Senate majority leader, vice president and president of the United States. There are also of clippings from
  • Juvenile Delinquents Narcotics Truth in Lending Meat & Poultry Inspection Migratory & Farm Workers Natural Resources Nursing Homes etc. T.F. on Nursing Homes and other Institutions for the Care of the Elderly 1966 Nutrition and Adequate Diets Pipeline
  • in spra.y pro3ra.m fo"X the general r;oc(L rah , SCREWWORM ERADICATION USA APRIL 1, 1964 STATUS REPORT [1 of 67] FOREWARD The enclosed material concerning screwworm eradication in the United States will, we hope, bring you up-to-date on this program
  • Details of restriction(s) may be found on the withdrawal sheet in the first folder of the file unit. Withdrawal sheets refer to file units and are not necessarily applicable to all individual folders.
  • See all scanned items from file unit "PEST CONTROL (AG 5-1)"
  • File unit description: Material on animal and plant diseases and parasite eradication programs, such as screwworm, scrapie, grass-hoppers, brucellosis, cotton insects, dutch elm disease, rabies, mosquitoes, etc.; control of animal pests
  • , of course, was a free worker and so were the wives of a lot of his staff members. We enjoyed it. I learned so much. That was where I first found out that America was a melting pot, was to address the poll tax list of the Tenth District. Because you would
  • ; LBJ's and Alvin Wirtz's continued interest in the Lower Colorado River Authority (LCRA); Welly Hopkins' work with United Mine Workers and John L. Lewis; visits to Harold Ickes' home; hosting other Texans; Tom Corcoran playing the accordion
  • countries or else sold it to them for local currency, but that was not a direct--his position at that time was not directed toward any national effort in hunger in America. G: Any insights on what directed his interest to the United State's problems? D