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  • l/D ~ ................... IUMO&ANDOM l'Oil THE PRESII>DIT SUBIECT: &Siu Geaera1Almama 1 Dl ....... ........ Alla eel are twe doc ■ ate lo.- ,.._,. etpe•n ••---1111• el._ ed••'•" Semce Medal• .. Wlaea NIia an •-cl. •• ..-.m•te 1 wai1iwallu
  • ^ e f o r t Expend! Activit oL D Cod 12:00n T y i y (includ e visite d by ) tur o th e Cabine t Roo m t o meet wit h the National Wate r Commissio n : Charles F . Luce , Chairman , Consolidate d Ediso n Company , Ne w York Russell E . Train
  • IN BATTALION STRENGTH THE lST COMPANY OF YOUR REGIMENT, USING MORTARS,IANTI-TANK ROCKETS, SATCHEL CHARGES , HEAVY AND LIGHT MACHINE GUNS, AND SMALL ARMS. 52 ENEMY WERE KILLED BY YOUR INFANT­ RYMEN, AND THER E IS EVIDENCE THAT MANY OTHERS WERE KILLED BY MORTAR
  • of the LCRA board. 3/17 National Gallery of Art officially opens. Late March – Early April 07/2024 1 lbjlibrary.org 4/9 REFERENCE: LBJ CHRONOLOGY Drafted by LBJ Library archival staff from oral history transcripts and other sources as a service to our
  • was in Chiria. in May, in company of the triumvirate of Lin Piao, Teng Hsiao-Ping, and Chou En-Lai -- not looking moribund. The ever­ supple Chou En- Lai has been acting as exponent of the Cultural Revolution and has just been entrusted with an important mission
  • to the established procedures? What were your reasons about it? 5: Well, it would have given one oil company a singular advantage. G: Was that also the view that Hale Boggs held? Boggs opposed it? S: I don't know why he opposed it. Was that the reason
  • ; Cabinet officers and the campaign; LBJ and HHH; Fortas appointment; Maine foreign trade port; LBJ and western art; LBJ and the Library
  • [NAID 40039019] http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/personal PERSONAL PAPERS OF BELL HELICOPTER TEXTRON Creator: Bell Helicopter Company Organizational sketch: Bell Helicopter, founded in 1935, is an American aerospace manufacturer headquartered
  • Bell Helicopter Company
  • Folder title list, Personal Papers, Papers of Bell Helicopter Company
  • Bio: Editor, Snyder Daily News, 1952-1954; President, San Antonio Standard, 1956-1962; Vice President, Express Publishing Company, 1962-1966, President, 1966-1972; Chairman of the Board, Harte-Hanks Newspapers, 1971-1972
  • Bio: (1913-2002) Staff, Indianopolis Times Publishing Company, 1937-1942; CIA, 1943-1973; Deputy Director for Operations, CIA, 1965-1966; Director of Central Intelligence, 1966-1973; U.S. Ambassador to Iran, 1973-1977
  • LBJ Connection: U.S. Army infantry company commander, 1942-1945; Army Intelligence Officer, 1946-1967; Senior Analyst at the CIA in the Office of National Estimates during the Johnson administration; Professor of Russian history and Russian
  • LBJ Connection: Executive Vice President, U.S. Steel, and Chief Negotiator for the Group of 10 (steel companies), 1959-1968.
  • and board member of the J.C. Penney Company.
  • Bio: John S. Hayes (1910-1981) was the U.S. Ambassador to Switzerland from 1966 to 1969, and an executive for a number of communications companies.
  • president of Standard Oil Company.
  • subject 18 f or wire. ray estern Union clerk for subscription or when billed by pubhsher. change without notice. ALL MESSAGES TAKEN BY THIS COMPANY ARE SUBJECT TO THE FOLLOWING TERMS: To guard aira,lnl'!t mistakes or delays, tho sender of a message
  • the following in­ vocation: Rabbi Gersten!eld's invocation: "We bow our heads and tum our hearts unto Thee. "O Thou who art the peace of the world: Save our generation from the terror that cometh by night and the arrow that ft1eth by day; from the pestilence
  • that a most effective key to the manpower problem was . on-the-job training, where men were #rst put on the company payroll ~nd then trained on an assembly line a specific job. I also knew private industry. t~at 01'. factory bench or in an office
  • ST BE GREATER ACCEPTANCE OF RESPONSIBILITY OF HIGHER OFFICIALS FOR ACTS OF THEIR SUBORDINATES. HE SAID THIS FIGHT HAS BEEN ST ARTE D, SOME RESULTS HAVE BEEN OBTAINED,AND THEY ARE DETERMINED TO GO AHEAD. HE CLOSED BY R~ITERATitJG THAT HONEST LEADERS
  • are familiar with people who are the partisans of departed virtue, but are afraid to defend an unpopular truth today. Mrs. Roosevelt neve r stood with this timid company. Her con­ science was her counselor, and she followed its commands with unfaltering courage
  • -filled lot and put i n tr ees, benches and walks. A b:>st of community volunteers helped the youngsters scrape, plaster, paint and plant. Today Anacostia Neighborhood Museum is a meeting place and l earning pl ace, with a busy program of art, drama
  • Training Medicare Mental Retardation Military Nurses Recruitment National Crime Commission National Endowment for the Arts National 4-H Club Week National Guard National Recreation and Park Association National Teachers Corps open open open open empty open
  • some of those shirts and so on. (Laughter) I contacted I believe it was Cluett Peabody [and Co.], the company that made those shirts, and they agreed to make up a batch of shirts for him to his size. He was very pleased at that. G: These were military
  • IV l 8 9 10 Pay lost Amount In Balance Column ART DISPLAYCO., INC. -0- This 1 to be press later mittee de on Sat. , Oct. 3, 1964 used on Sun. , Oct.. 4, 1964 to entertain the on the whistle stop t ain prior to its take off 1n the week. I
  • in for this session his Presidential Medal of Freedom and his citation to show me, and I thought at this point that I might read into the tape a description on both the citation and the medal. The citation is on a piece of paper--I suppose it's paper, thick paper
  • Receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1969 as a recruiter of talented persons for government service; setting up the guidelines for executive branch presidential appointments; evaluating and recommending appointees; generating appointment
  • , And when that enterprise sort of collapsed, I went into book publishing with a partner, a guy whom I had knmro, ~.,rho financed a small book publishing company \vhich did very well, and which published, curiously, the first juvenile book about John
  • · SEC :i ·~ ov I NS~~ IN THE COMPANY OF F' I RST SEC NAUMOV AND ANOTHER EM3ASSY EMPLOYEE NAMED LOGVINOV PURSUED WIT~ TWO EMB u!='FS TH~Pfc·_7vIET -NAM IN SOME. DETAIL ANO WITH 0 : \ \. . PIGE. e R1a•nm1a 11985 \,• . 6 g UP' I 0 ! It TI:: L
  • that it would "actively move by the Goodyear Tire Company to integrate its plant tacilitie1 in Gadsden, Alabama. Mr. Peterson 1n bii Rrtutcit -ill •~ ~ t.t?M -~ , ~~% '!'be ~1dcnt baa asked me to thank JOU ftQ' mc1l for- ;your recent letter concerr.illg
  • CONSOLIDATED OIL COMPANY 620 HAMI LTON BUILDING T£LEPHCNE 2 •21 36 WI CH ITA F'ALLS , TEXAS June 11, lstal O FFICERS W, A, S, E, T, H, V, F, KNIC3HT, CHAIRMAN OF' BOARD HERRON , PRES, ANO TREAS, WHI TE, VICE PRESIDENT FR UE CH TE, SEC , ANO
  • during the campaign . Obviously I don't know whether he would have asked me to stay on had the election turned out differently . The press' judgment was that Art Ok was safe in his job if Humphrey won . I would have been glad to serve, although I'd
  • : Is that Art McCafferty? Who did you deal with there? LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits
  • of applying te-chnological advances tiban do the Europeans. 2. The :maip causes of the gap lie in Western European pr.a etic:ea; small companies, too litUe investment, leas ekilled labor for·c e, less efficient management, inadequate research and development
  • -@e forces gas!') f) a,man.d to avoid -casualti®a 9 which. can be drfflfn. o:n in ff!!:~ world forq:ees art'! assisting aga:lt$t following aggr~si©n 4$ by North intematienal Republi~ Vietnam,. law and praeti£:eo March 28si,1966. GVlfl
  • to be especially care ful when costs are so high and skille d labor scarce. 11 (A soup company. ) I' . '. "I feel that all these great efforts of the President to counsel with the private sector to try to work by guidelines and voluntary programs
  • parties were the White House Country Fairs, complete wnh a ferris-wheel am! a merry-go­ round. cotton candy and a fortune teller's tent. I called a company in Nev. 'ork lo rent a crystal ball. and the man taking the order said ... Where do you want me
  • that they are two young white females who were in the company of two Negro males who were suspected and charged with assault with intent to commit murder. Of the two, Judith Kunesh is known to be white. Her companion Martha Krintz (Krantz) is also thought
  • ?" In my travels the past couple of years, 1 have seen ex.amples of that "kinder treatment. 11 They demonstrate that the arts and the sciences, civic conviction a nd old-fashinned pride, can overcome blight, decay -- and even traffic jams. - 3 ­ MORE
  • for the American people. So what I try to do in this book is to see the war from LBJ's eyes." Katharine Graham, long-time publisher of the Washington Post and now chairman of the executive committee of the Washington Post Company, was interviewed by a panel