Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

416 results

  • # # # # . -(.J ,I­ f~> Talking Points 1. fo.f Intervlew July 10, 1968 with Virginia Prewett ls there anything new on Cuba -­ No, Castro continues to exercise Hght control over the i9land through his security apparatus; The economic situation continues
  • .? MEETING NOJES eeP¥&GHTED ~bliculioo Re~11ires H PerfftiHiun 1~ W :1:: of eeppight o &err. T1iOrikii Jalinaon CIA Director Helms: He is leader without question. The level of subsistence is not yet back to pre-Castro level. All the intelligent people left
  • by pro-Castro group. Last year was the first year in Latin American history that there was not a coup dLetat. The Speaker: Any agression from North Korea to South Korea. Secretary Rusk: No real step-up. There is still guerilla activity
  • . Thomas T. Adams Mrs. W. Vincent Astor Mr. Reuben K. Barrick Mr. Ralph E Becker Mr. John Bell Mr. J. Carter Brown, Associate Director, Natl Director of Art Mr. Franklin R. Bruns, Jr. Senator Quentin Burdick Mrs. Elizabeth Carpenter Mr. Nash Castro Cong
  • as suggested by Mr. Cherne; -- handling of second inaugural Soviet flight to the U. S. 4. Sugar Conference (Sect. Rusk) -- UNCTAD World Sugar Conference scheduled for Sept. 23. Likely sugar agreement that would emerge would double Castro 1 s income from
  • # Date Avail. Folder Title open 11/01 6/01 11/01 3/04 3/04 (Leopoldville) Costa Rica Dahomey Ecuador France President Kasavubu Orlich Apithy Jijon Castro President DeGaulle, vol. 1 President DeGaulle, vol. II 7/7/64 - 8/6/65 12/17/63 - 1/6/66 8/64
  • in what they call the Sabbatino Case. (Banco Nacional de Cuba~. Sabbatino, Receiver, ~ al.; Q.~. Reports, 376 (1963), 398- 472). That was the case where Castro had expropriated a shipload of sugar in Havana, had taken it to North Africa, as I recall
  • ] dollars [inaudible]. Nash Castro, although he was technically not a member of the committee, he was there. He could tell you [inaudible]. G: What is the key to Mr. Castro's ability? It's clear, as you had occasion to point out to me, that his role should
  • ; how Wilson began to work on beautification-related correspondence; members of Mrs. Johnson’s beautification committee; Nash Castro.
  • . From lhat moment on I was a partisan. But I can't honestly say that l believe that we still have all the answers. I know that when I came in as President, l heard that we had sent teams into Cuba to try to assassinate Castro and those people
  • in considerable advance as may be shown by the extensive proposals for nuclear disarmament advanced by the Chinese Government in Peking Renew. !t has further come tom:, notice that Premier Castro would welcome lessening of tension with the United States and I very
  • July - w/ Mrs. Johnson Malechek - LBJ Ranch 12:30a retired NOMINATIONS SENT TO THE SENATE: Harold Francis Linder. of NY. to be Amb of USA to Canada Today announced his intention to nominate Raul H. Castro of Arizona to be Amb to Bolivia Today issued
  • mans Navy Mess 1.24 Friday P. 7 9-4-64 Nomination sen Soundtracks: Music in Film: Soundtracks and Synergy (Short Cuts) - Pauline Reay (FAL M Raul H . Castro , o f Arizona, t o b e Ambassado r Extraordinar y an d Plenipotentiar y o f th e USA
  • Johnsons to National City Christian Church; LBJ back to work; Lady Bird discusses the Rose Garden and South Lawn with Nash Castro; Lady Bird mentions future retirement; Lloyd Hand has dinner with the Johnsons; Lloyd Hand reports on Japanese
  • (CIAP ) : MEMBER SO F THE. COMMITTEE _ e . __________ Carlo s SAN Z d e Santamaria , Chairma n ________ _ Briefing memo s preparin g th e Admira l Francisc o CASTRO , o f Argentina , Exe c Directo r o f Inter-American Developmen t B k e ROMER O
  • CASTRO INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ 25 February, 1969, Washington, D. C. (Tape 1 of 1) F: This is an interview with Mr. Nash Castro in his office in Washington, D. C. on February 25, 1969. The interviewer is Joe B. Frantz. I suppose, Nash, we might
  • See all online interviews with Nash Castro
  • Castro, Nash, 1920-
  • Oral history transcript, Nash Castro, interview 1 (I), 2/25/1969, by Joe B. Frantz
  • Nash Castro
  • CASTRO INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ 4 March, 1969, Washington, D. C. (Tape 1 of 1) F: This is the second interview with in Washington, D. C., on March ~tr. Nash Castro in his office 4, 1969. Nash, you made one of the two trips to the Tetons
  • See all online interviews with Nash Castro
  • Castro, Nash, 1920-
  • Oral history transcript, Nash Castro, interview 2 (II), 3/4/1969, by Joe B. Frantz
  • Nash Castro
  • to the top and overflowing. Jim Ketchum, who was White House curator in the Johnson years, Bess Abell, social secretary, and Nash Castro, liaison between the White House and the National Park Service, with humor, affection and seriousness discussed life
  • Beautification tour of Washington with Nash Castro, Mary Lasker, and others; Social Office meeting; Lady Bird meets with Dorothy Territo about the Johnson City house; beautification meeting; Lady Bird swims; LBJ and Lady Bird skip dinner; Lynda
  • : the quail shoot with George Brown 18 letters from Harold Stehling Correspondence between M. C. Winters and Mrs. Martha E. Denniston re: newspaper stories by N.C. Chriss Nash Castro Reedy, George – File Schneider, Father Harvey, Herbert A. File LBJ Trips
  • A Barnhill, John T Bell, Gerald R BeMiss, Hon. Fitzgerald Boatner, Charles K Boutin, Bernard Brownridge, John A Bush, Monroe Cain, Stanley A&xxk Carlin, Paul Carver, John A Cassidy, Lt. Gen William Castro, Nash Clapper, Louis S Coston, Dean Crafts, Edward C
  • to control rural areas serving as access routes or bases for insurgent activities in neighboring countries; Venezuela needs to expand its security capability aga i nst the likelihood of a sustained Castro-supported subversion threat. S_Ee~EI _ SECRET 5. 3
  • ' i t ' 'i ( • !t ; ~ r \. '~ ';• ;r 11. In response to a question of the President, as to the involve­ ment of Castro - · 1.S{c) Mr. McCone recalled a report 3.4(b)(1) warned of a move in December 19 3 - January 19 The President requested
  • 7 on Cuba;** that is, 11 . we believe that Castro does not intend to force the issue until after the US elections, when he will seel( UN action. If this fails, there is con- 8 9 10 siderable danger that he would order a shoot-down, calcu- 11
  • week were the notable progress toward elimination of the rebel zone in the Do·m inican Republic, the labor difficulties in Uruguay requiring emergency security measures, and the favorable _..: though qualified - - response of Castro to our proposal
  • for Europe our Cuban policy . He explained to them that our economic denial program was not expected to result in Castro's downfall, but wa s an effort to prove that there was no future for Com­ munism in this hemisphere. He said he explained how the standard
  • of the committee? I'm thinking particularly of Bobby Kennedy. M: Not that I know of, no. F: Did you get the feeling that this blunted Castro's subversion in Latin America? M: Unquestionably it weakened Castro's stature throughout Latin America. Whether
  • addition to being one of Lady Bird Johnson's closest advisers­ and closest friendsash Castro is the former Director of National Parks in Washington, D. . On August 27, 2006, he came to de­ liver the address at the laying of the wreath at President Johnson's
  • on in. - Sates Ambassadors: J.WesleyJones, Amb to Peru MauriceM. Bernbaum.Amb to Venezuela RAUL H. Castro,Amb to El Salvador JohnW. Tuthill,Amb to Brazil Claude Gordon Ross, Amb to Hait Bowdler Sayre Amb James Symington Hon. Covey Oliver, Asst Secy of State fo r