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  • it and he would forget he had asked and so i·t wouldn't ~ome up again. But also, after a reasonably short period, he had me start monitoring the I evening news shows and those memorandums that you saw were the daily product of those. I couldn't tell you
  • Daily summaries of TV networks to LBJ; Bureau Chiefs set up TV control room at White House; Bill Moyers and Peter Benchley leaving the White House; Jack Valenti; monitored 11:00 to 1:00pm TV news shows for LBJ; LBJ believed Texans were resented
  • heeded George Reedy's advice, Reedy never saw himself as a policy maker. He saw himself as the press secretary. G: How did it change when George Christian took over? D: Well, there again, you had a--I think that George Christian had played both
  • regarding Vietnam; LBJ's efforts to keep the budget under $100 billion; LBJ's credibility gap and LBJ's claim that his grandfather fought at the Alamo; LBJ's visits to Australia; Bobby Baker; George Reedy, Bill Moyers, and George Christian as press
  • . Furthermore, earth orbit would have put us closer to a space station which would have allowed us to do earth observations in science and so on earlier . I think this is going to happen anyway, but it would have happened earlier the other way
  • in as meaningful a way as possible. ~ William M. Roth \ PRESS STATEMENT OF CHRISTIAN A. HERTER THE SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE FOR TRADE NEGOTIATIONS AUGUST 9, 1965 The United States will table its agricultural offers on September 16, 1965, the date agreed upon
  • of tJiesel problems." he said, ''a larp number of undt-rground tests :wel't' conliu1·1,,dand very signi!­ :icant advanr i.", made in thej area nf W!'apons tec:hnology1 de\·elopniert, new and radically! different weapon design con-i cepts, and In the science
  • Sihanouk would find offensive. I recommend you approve the guidance. W . W. Ro etow Att --- Approve Disapprove_ __ ---- Call me cc: George Christian STATE:MWright:wpt EUGENE BLACK TRIP Pr••• Guidance for Vhlt to Cambodia The announcement that Mr
  • Baltimore Sun Boston Globe Miscellaneous Rockefeller Chicago Daily News Chicago Sun - Times Chicago Tribune Christian Science Monitor Columbus Dispatch Congressional Quarterly Courier Journal and Times Democrat Chronicle Denver Post Des Moines Register
  • in November to study and report on poa•ible projects for subttantive cooperation with the Soviet Union on outer space. The report represents a cona-e ns\le among NASA, State, Defense, CIA. the Science Advisor; and the Exec:uti ve Secretary of the Space Counell
  • Christian and Moslem sects arc per• help of Soviet-and Czech elimination of our slums. mittcd central organisations a?d . exte1:1al experts.-Yours faithfully, What puzzles me most about your editorial, representation, even abroad: this 1s denied Prague
  • and Technical Research. Long. Confidential. C. Research on Military Implications of Arms Control. By Evan T. Sage. Confidential. D. Political Research. E. Economic and Behavioral Science Research. By Alexander T. Liebowitz. Confidential. F. Legal
  • TO DISCUSS GENERAL WHEELER'S TRIP TO VIETNAM Vice President Secretary Rusk Secretary McNamara Clark Clifford General Taylor Under Secretary Nitze Director Helms Walt Rostow George Christian Tom Johnson .... SfRV\C£ scr ~ DECLASSIFIED NOTES
  • will not be re­ of the laws and the Exec­ to equal opportunity. ccThat responsibility s ti 11 rests with the cabinet members and the heads of agencies. We will monitor and coordinate and expedite and occa~ sionally we'll be a gad­ fly stinging people into action
  • and would help develop a program, including arrangements for training young scientists under NASA-sponsored fellowships. NOTE: The Philippines are working on a ground monitoring station for weather satellites. You might encourage them to push this and ask
  • in the real estate business, managing apartment houses in syndication in New York City. I had gotten into interpreting quite accidentally, at first for the Carnegie Foundation; subsequently the Young Women's Christian Association, the national board
  • . For example, I believe that the period of the Northe a st monsoon, during the winter months, .is ju.s t as propitious as the summer monsoon, but I must still check my facts. Donald F. Hornig Special Assistant to for Science and Technol esident PRESERVATION
  • of the founders of the Christian Democratic Party. Credit: Reni Photos His Excellency, Konrad Adenauer, (l.) Chancellor of· the Federal Republic of Germany with Lawrence E. Spivak, reg­ ular panel member of NBC's "Meet the Press" program on the occasion
  • November 23, 1963 - March 13, 1964 1963-64 November 23: First live TV conununication across the Pacific Ocean, from Tokyo on Relay I. November 26: NASA's Explorer XVIII, the interplanetary monitoring probe satellite, launched by Thor­ Delta from AMR
  • we're back. I guess what this really reflects is--I just remember we got back in the business of-G: Monitoring the--? C: Then Johnson gets this letter signed, I guess, by just about every southern senator on May second, which--do we know what he did
  • TF Memo ,r-------t October 7, 1966 EYES 0.1YLY iEL !ORA DU ;1 TO Hon l"'-1ble D n·ald F .. Horoi Direct0r Office of Science and Technology T is r.-. mor ntlu.r--;;eEit bli-- e_., under your chairn~anship a Tast· F vrce to ev uat ....th~ aa
  • ; the additional war damage claims bill now pending in the United States Congress: the steps which could be taken together to develop vigorous science programs for the Philippines and United States; the possible Peace Corps projects which will be discussed later
  • Administration. of the several PL 89-670 assigned Agency, the Bureau of Public Government agencies, gated by the Secretary of the functions Advisory of electronics the responsibility Highway Administration, Aviation Science technology Actions
  • of refugees increase. But, we are off to a good start. The situation requires careful monitoring. Secretary Gardner's task force is now set up to do this. Meanwhile, Castro continues to show signs of his discomfort over our having taken him up on an offer
  • : The President Secretary Rusk Secretary Clifford Walt Rostow General Wheeler Harry McPherson George Christian Tom Johnson I \ ' I Meeting ended: ~ ... MEETl~~G ~JOTE& bORYRIGtfTED .PvblicotioA Req•UI•• f!.ermi11ion of Ce p'Hgftt Kafd&t. W Tbomaa
  • to evoke ·t, Did 1t \\Ork? Well. whn Lh play opened at the Kennedy Center. Luci Johnson went bac •!:,tc1gtcqfter lh
  • undergraduate work, and after World War II, at the University of Texas for my Ph.D. F: What did you get your Ph.D. in? H: Political science. F: Whom did you work with? H: Emmette Redford, who figures in this tale, really, very much. Because
  • for about fifteen minutes when the news came through. This involved a number of people on the White House staff as well as Kermit Gordon, who was Budget Director, and myself, and members of our staff. There was Jerry Wiesner, who was the science advisor
  • Committee, a real nice guy named Dick Sullivan, work with us, not in the sense of helping us frame the permit, but in the sense of a channel of communication between the committee and us and the SCLC [Southern Christian Leadership Conference]. On the day
  • ; Congressman Ken Gray's involvement in issuing a permit; Congressman John Marsh's effort to stop a permit from being issued; Senator Robert Byrd; Congressman Wayne Aspinall; laws governing demonstrations in Washington, D.C.; Castro's and the Southern Christian
  • . But I would guess most of the time we were in there, Paul [Glynn] and--I can't recall who the other valet was there now; they have two air force--Ken [Gaddis]. Paul and Ken seemed to be monitoring the thing, and we would normally whisk in and whisk out
  • ADMINISTRATION NA FORM 1429 (6-85) FOREIGN POLICY GROUP MEETffiG \~' ~ .:·· October 29, 1968 THOSE ATTENDING: The President Secretary Rusk Secretary Clifford General Abrams General Wheeler Richard Helms Walt Rostow Harry McPherson George Christian Tom Johnson
  • • - - - .... ,_ ~ - ·--. - - ------, -_. -~ - - -- ~- - - - WIIIMIII" ~ ... .. - ~ ._ - symposium The Presidencyand The Press Lined up on one side wer the President 'men from the last three admmislral1ons: Tom Johnson. A sistant Pr ss Sccn,tary to President Johnson; George Christian, Press Secretary
  • ) . SURVEILLANCE, INVESTIGATION, AND ENFORCEMENT ACTIVITIES FAA monitors the operational safety of the civil aviation environment through a variety of surveillance, inspection, investigation, and enforcement activities. Some of the more notable occurrences
  • Report (Implementation of) (Quesada Operations) 3. Air Coordinating Committee 4. Airways Modernization Board (Organization of) 5. American Political Science Assn: (APSA) 6. American University Lecture-Problems in the Management of Natural Resources 7
  • TITLE LIST National Archives and Records Administration http://archives.gov National Archives Catalog https://catalog.archives.gov Folder Title Gromyko - Vance Talks Helsinki Accords Helsinki Monitors - Nobel Peace Prize Human Rights Organizations: AFL
  • ' Studies; the National First Ladies· Library; and Nova Science Publishers. It will include scholarly articles on each modem First Lady and on the primary responsibilities and duties of the First Lady. The project is under the direction of Dr. Robert P