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  • to the l 760's to chronicle the astonishing transportation. ago there were Today there 31 million are 90 million. motor vehicles in the United By 1975 there ·will be nearly 120 million • . Twenty years streets ago there in the United States
  • of that nature, kind of abstruse types. If you analyze this documentary, those are the two outstanding things about it. G: Did he see Goldman at all as a potential chronicler of his presidency? R: I doubt it. I really doubt it. I think he brought Goldman
  • rapidly as the evening wore on. All of these Detroit events have been rather fully chronicled in Mr. Vance's Detroit report which is public and although I could talk about it in great length, you'd get more precision, one would LBJ Presidential Library
  • with the American Association for Higher Education and through it the Chronicle of Higher Education, column called "So They Say" about higher education--and then I also was invited to do an annual review of the literature of higher education, and then Change
  • at that time, and then turned around and tried to be an objective chronicler of what happened. G: That's interesting statement. In what respect was he an actor? S: He was an actor in the sense that with the New York Times as his outlet, and his reporting
  • . [Inaudible]. F: It inheres in the office. T: Inherent. Look what's happened in the past--well, since the FDR era we can really chronicle it, and probably even long before that, throughout our history. Vice presidents have not exactly been put
  • : International Organizations [NAID 591581] http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/pres/whcf President of PAR Congress in November of 1968, -1”. IT 42 PAN AMERICAN UNION Processed. Box 9 Contains copy of OAS Chronicle of 1966 and material on the Pan American
  • that appeared in the Ho u ston Chronicle amazed me. There is not a scintilla of truth in it. I have not even seen Mr. Shivers in a number of years. I have not sent any emissaries to him for any purpose whatsoever. I have absolutely no plans to intervene in any
  • "CHRONICLE" they had sold enough to break even. Their biggest deal was the purchase of the CAPITOL TRANSIT CO., (bus and street car) of Washington, D. C., by buying up the controlling stock. This deal cost them and associates about $5,000,000 to swing
  • Games. QUOTE Dear Mr. Prime Minister: Now that Japan has added a bright Olympiad chronicle new page to the world I wish to extend to you and the Japanese nation on behalf of the .American people our congratulationa admiration and for your splendid
  • (•rance belwt:en two great inslilutions," Pulitzer Pri1.e winnm journalist Willi, m fi. Whitt. n0\\ a prolcssor of 1ournalism, key no c- the scs,.1on with a chronicle of his C>,.perien es covering the Presidency from RoosevC'lt to Nixon. While labe ed
  • , but it is a cookbook that is a good read too. Lynn Boswell ofVillita Productions produced the DVD specifically for the exhibit, to chronicle how electricity changed the Hill Countrv., and LBJ's role in that transformation. We are proud that it features one of the LBJ
  • even get a taste of the -called Johnson Treatment, LBJ's unique and highly effective style of persuasion. The exhibit covers LBJ's Senate career from his election in 1948 to his elevation to the vice-pre idency in 1961, and it chronicles his rapid rise
  • 13, 1965 The President The ~·Jhite Ho11 se '1am ington, D. C. Dear Mr. President: 110ff' the Bench, I am writing in re~ onse to a letter, ap)edring in the ::Jan Francisco Chronicle of this d.s.te. The writers sign themselves a.s three 2ttorncys
  • ) Record Chronicle of this woman 1s truly high level problems April, 1964 and responsi• her ability to solve them -- must not be underestimated. ia of a high calibre, and it is bang applied successfully of deep significance are involved. 11 interests
  • to chronicle U1e aotonlahlng growth of Amerlc:an tranapo1·tatiou. Twenty year• Sta.tea. ago there were 31 million motor vehicles Today there are 90 million. Dy 1975 there in th" United will be nearly lZO million. Twenty years streets ngo there were
  • over coffee and that I avoid his superiors (especially Marx). (Reference is made to interview conducted with Bush December 21, 1967). is 2. made Carol Schmidt, Michigan Chronicle. to interview conducted by Perry). (Reference 3. Clyde Cleveland
  • education. F: There was a lot of diversity about that. The issue that was beginning to raise its head at that time was public vs. private and public finance-- T: In the universities? F: If you look in the Chronicle this week, there it is on the front
  • , North Carolina Comments I Criticized those present for failure to create interest in the NSRPo S·TATarENtS BY CONNIE LYNCH ",\ugusta Chronicle-Herald : Augusta, Georgia, issue of J-uly 31, 1966 . This article stated that LYNCH, who was a speaker
  • : That's correct. I basically was a newspaperman. I was labor reporter on the San Francisco Chronicle, and in the late fifties had been given an American Political Science Association congressional fellowship for a year in Washington. During that time I
  • and Economic Committee, the six cabinet secretaries and I. We were all on the plane, along with Pierre Salinger. As a matter of fact, I kept a little chronicle of the events on the plane which Manchester, as I recall, used in his book. And is Manchester's
  • , conflict and difficulty with the Department over any issue or over any instruction. It really was quite an exciting chronicle of events, and I suppose I won't remember it all correctly, but I do remember after several days when the Department had been
  • Dear John: 18. You cannot know how moved I waa by your letter of January I am deeply grateful and evocative description to you for your brilliant of the idaaliam of our men in Viet-Ram. And I muat add that in you they have found a chronicler
  • eoodwill effort, and as Gesture of reassurance to Phllippinea that the u.s. was not bac,tlng away from 1·ta .. Asian oor.m1tments. Preas, with exception of Chronicle, and. • individual reactions, laudatory or Johnson and what he sold with reservation
  • a ise." F: Do you have a certified list of papers that can be represented. In other words, to use a paper that we both know, the Denton Record Chronicle, would they send a White F..ouse correspondent? C: Oh, sure, they could cover him every day
  • there like Wick Fowl e r from the Denton Reco r d ­ Chronicle as a fu ll-t i me Was h i ng ton corre spond en t , would I b e admit ted . C: Yes. Anybody who 's a ful l-ti me Wa s h i n g ton correspondent. It 's ac t ually e as ier t o get ace r di ted
  • . The Israeli Prime 1 Fro~ Cairo, tel. 7660, May 18, 1967, secret. 2].~. Monthly Chronicle, vol. IV, no. 6 (June 1967), pp. 3-5. 3 To Tel Aviv, tel. 196541, May 17, 1967, secret/nodis. : d ZECidili' /NODIS A SLCH!T /NODIS -14­ Minister said
  • of Kiev from the peace, have been added York Herald Tribune what to tending any other system. When the old Russian Chronicles of the tha_t Is no longer true, lreedom by Sir Bernard Pares In the ftfth print. By a process of reasoning so subtle that I am
  • of the Committee for a More Beautiful Capital will serve as models for many cities across the land• T hey are chronicled as they happened in the pages that follow: Mrs. James Rowe, Chairman of the National Capital Planning Commission, and friend of the First Lady