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  • Director, Chicago Teachers Union, Harry E. Cayl Organization, Chicago, Illinois Gordon H. Cole, The Machinists, Intl Assoc of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, Harry F. Conn, Press Associate, Inc. , Washington/ D. C. Ray Davidson, Oil, Chemical and Atomic
  • Cliris1ia11. Frc111ce.1 Lc:winc. Jim ./011,•s: Follm1·i11g are I/ugh Sieler: Li:: Carpl'nl!'r. l'.\'Cl!f'JJIS/iv111!hat mllicki11g exl!l'cisc in noswl• gia. (Ti!li's are.fi'mn 1!,e si.r1ies.1 id Davis (White House cunespo11clen1. Westinghouse Brooclrnstin
  • THE WHIT E HOUSE WASHINGTON MRS. LYNDO N B . JOHNSON, Daily Diary Mrs. Johnson bega n her day at (Place) The White House Entry No. Time Date Monday, July 15, 1968 Activity Dictated July 1968 in Texas 8:45 Breakfast in room. 1. 10:03 To Truman
  • "UNCLASSIFIED" l • 4 , THE PRESIDENT'S TO THE FUNERAL Mrs. Lyndon Former DELEGATION OF KING PAUL B. Johnson President Harry S. Truman Archbishop Iakovos of New York City. Archbishop of North and South America. Born and educated in U.S. Close
  • THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON CO~fFIDEHTIAL April 20, 1967 MEMORANDUM TO: Secretary of State Secretary of Defense Herewith extracts from a memorandum done especially for the President on U. S. policy towards Is rc;iel. The President would wish
  • 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.
  • and things of that nature . So to that extent, the answer would have to be yes, but this constant carping about trying to invade the Highway Trust Fund is, in Harry Truman's phrase, a real "red herring ." And I'm convinced that a lot of it comes from some
  • See all online interviews with Alan S. Boyd
  • Boyd, Alan S. (Alan Stephenson), 1922-
  • Oral history transcript, Alan S. Boyd, interview 3 (III), 1/11/1969, by David G. McComb
  • Alan S. Boyd
  • M O ND AY , N O V EM BER 2 8 , 1966 M onday, N o v e m b e r 2 8 , th e f i r s t d ay of m y W a sh in g to n in te r lu d e w ith o u t L yn d on , I a w o k e and th e c lo c k s a id te n m in u te s o f t e n . The m o s t jo y o u s f e e
  • Lady Bird is at White House without LBJ; Lynda Johnson to Truman Capote party in New York; Lady Bird views large photos for "Living White House" book and party; Lady Bird selects wedding photographs to be sent as Christmas presents; lunch; "Living
  • • F r o m th e O f f ic e of S e n F o r R e le a se : r C lif f o r d P . C a s e ) 1 0 5 -M P . M . N e w s p a p e r s , T u e s d a y , S e p t e m b e r 2 6 , 1967 / ^ P A R T I A L T E X T O F R S M A R K S B Y SE ^fA T O R C L I F F O
  • 'Objectives . . United :States grant military assistance has been provided to Greece since the Truman Doctrine of' 1947 to enhance U, S ~ security by maintaining Greece's corrmi.trnent to the Free World; to- a$sist Greece in developing and maintaining
  • HARRIS INTERVIEWER: STEVE GOODELL May 19, 1969 S: This is an interview with Patricia Roberts Harris, presently with the law school at Howard University. Today's date is May 19, 1969. I'd just like to begin this interview by asking you to state
  • See all online interviews with Patricia Roberts Harris
  • ; LBJ’s speech at Howard University; Moynihan Report; race problem; LBJ’s release of Kerner Commission Report; ambassador to Luxembourg; protocol incident; re-ranking of spouses; Harris ruling; ambassador’s staff and running of the position; position
  • Harris, Patricia, 1924-1985
  • Oral history transcript, Patricia Roberts Harris, interview 1 (I), 5/19/1969, by Stephen Goodell
  • Patricia Roberts Harris
  • signer of t e ps. per oontracta fo r t he subsidiaries. of 2--Investigate t h e possibility of GNI being the buyer throu gh n bond i s sue oleaml ing up everything i ncludi ng Mac on stock . could have maximum bond i sl\ es on p ttin Carmnge 1uould
  • The donor(s) of these records transferred their copyright to the U.S. government and their writings are therefore in the public domain. This file may also contain materials from other sources that may retain copyright.
  • 11 11 I | Jacobsen, Austin . . | S went to the President's room as he was completing his dressing to relay an from Mrs. John H. Hill for the President and Mrs. Johnson to come_to Mills to join, them for church them for lunch. The President said
  • M: What about Truman and Eisenhower? Did you do any travelling with them? B: I didn't do any travelling with Eisenhower. But with Truman the only travelling I did was in the campaign trip in 1951--is that when it w a s - - ' 5 2 , when
  • Duties at the White House; Judge Rosenman; Eisenhower and Truman Administrations; Charlie Murphy; Bill Moyers; Joe Califano; meeting LBJ, 1935-1936; Johnson Presidential years; met FDR at Warm Springs, GA; Marvin McIntyre; Grace Tully; working
  • since that memorable day in 1947 - -when President Harry Truman set forth the historic doctrine that bears his name. 2­ Freedom, liberty, justice ---since his school days, every associates American~ these with the name of Greece. In the final
  • 1965 r' T U E S D A Y , J A N U A R Y 12 The J a p a n e s e State V isit. a little b it b e fo re eleven. coat and fur hat. I w o re m y new Navy d r e s s and fur P e r h a p s it w ill be R o b in 's l a s t State v is it. We w i l l m i s
  • State dinner for Japanese Prime Minister Eisako Sato; Lady Bird explores storerooms to make inventory; Lady Bird to beauty parlor; Lady Bird describes ceremonies and exchange of state gifts; Lady Bird mentions several guests; Roosevelt and Truman
  • 108 S. 18th St, To Lincoln, Neb -- see travel activity Spoke to University of Nebraska in Lincoln Public reception at Hotel To Kansas City, Mo -- see travel activity ar Kansas City Dinner with President and Mrs. Truman and others 11. Spent night
  • HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 2 S o after the war, he came back to Texas. And after living in McAllen about ten months, he
  • model. Johnson w,b certain that in act111g a~ he did in Vietnam he wa~ doing only \\ hat Roosevelt 1\ould h,ne done It seems dear that no one will any longer live in l·DR's ~hado\\, as each in their fashion, Harry Truman, John Ken­ nedv, and Lyndon
  • VICE PRESIDENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON DAILY DIARY The Vice President began his day at (place) Entry No. Time Telephone f or t Institution: 1776 Mas s Activity (include Tuesday Date February 13, 1962 visited by)* Lo LD 1. 10:45a 2. 12:15p 3. 1
  • with Robert Kennedy and with others, to some extent, that he would have been far wiser to have discharged them and taken the fallout. There would have been fallout, but taken it, as Harry Truman took it when he discharged Jimmy Byrnes on his right and Henry
  • See all online interviews with William S. White
  • White, William S.
  • Oral history transcript, William S. White, interview 2 (II), 3/10/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
  • William S. White
  • to the appointment. G: Who contacted you? S: I think Lou Harris. He had done, you know, the polling work for the Kennedy people in 1960. to me about it first. I knew Lou, and I think he was the one that talked Yes. Then I think one or two of the people who
  • Biographical information; Bureau of the Census; Lou Harris; Luther Hodges; 1960 census; invasion of privacy; survey techniques; Select Commission on Western Hemisphere Immigration; President’s Commission on Registration and Voting Participation
  • Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh You're Judge Oren Harris. You served as Democratic representative in the House of Representatives in Washington from 1940 until February 1966, when you became a U. S. district judge
  • See all online interviews with Oren Harris
  • Harris, Oren, 1903-1997
  • Oral history transcript, Oren Harris, interview 1 (I), 9/3/1973, by Paige E. Mulhollan
  • Oren Harris
  • that Senator Byrd's going to support me." "Senator, I'm afraid he's not going to support you." how he did Harry Truman." I said, I said, "You know I was Attorney General then and I campaigned in the State for Harry Truman and he called me on the mat
  • LBJ as a congressman; civil rights as an issue in Virginia; the 1960 Democratic Convention and the selection of LBJ as a candidate for VP; Senator Harry Byrd; JFK as President
  • Franklin D Roos veil'· m•'C lings with thc pre ·s as "loo cozy and one sided," yet with enough give-and-ta k t he called th first mod rn prl'ss c nference. "Roosevelt mast red the pres a. has nu other President I have ever known." Harry S Truman was "salty
  • G/ COPY LBJ LIBRARY ....... ■ o ^ - ..-r' ‘ '•V f,/) , A ,; V ! *' '' T H E W H IT E H O U S E V W A SH IN G T O N 5 /I"' A p ril 26, 1965 MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: .% - r- ^ . '4 Cable from Max T aylor F o r in form
  • process and by free elections. All this he has said in the shadow of continuing aggression fran the North. In all this he will have the full support of the United States of America. And so, President Truman, as we dedicate today in your honor the Harry s
  • official involved, on the 6 S D F H & R X Q F L O and on the Marine Council. 6R I have to deal with problems dealing with the sea bed, with matters affecting space, but then primarily my work has been in the Russian field. To prepare I was told by Secretary
  • 4 Broadway play; m y own m in ister B ill Baxter and his pretty young wife, from St. M arks; M argaret Truman Daniel and her husband Clifton Daniel o f the New Y ork T im e s; Abe F ortas and Woody and Mary Ellen Woodward. This is the firs t time w
  • on which Douglas wanted to go on ·the Finance Committee, and Harry Byrd didn't want him on the Finance ·conunittee. S: This was a way of keeping him off Finance. In those days,-there were a lot of reasons for assignments, reasons of that kind
  • S E C R E I I ----- A u g u s t 14, 1964 Mac’^H a ve y o u c aug ht up w ith s ig n s th a t In d ia m a y p ro p o se a n e w lin e f o r L a o s / V ie tn a m , i . e. th a t U N re p la c e IC C and a c tu a lly p u t tro o p s on L a o s
  • Mr. Griesedieck is an acquaintance of the President and a relative of Harry Jersig of San Antonio, Says MW in his briefing material for the President. -- handsha To mansion for lunch w/ Secy Rusk Secy McNamara Walt Rostow Mr. Rostow's agenda
  • : Sugar Bill Bryce Harlow, re: Sugar Bill Lunch in P-38 $1.50 Bryce Harlow Joe Kilgore Speaker President Truman, Sen Jackson, General Vaughn, Sen Dirksen, Bobby Shook hands with Jimmy Fortuna Senators Mansfield, Kuchel, Dirksen, Bobby, Cong Casey and Mayor
  • be malntained by the U.S. misslon to ensure that routine, day­ to-day U.S. advisory- efforts do not cut off the high priority program objectives. a. The following criteria have been used t:o establish a suggested list of prlority program o'bjectivt!s: a. U.S
  • 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.
  • or five weeks in which to get about. So Mr. C. N. Avery of Austin, a well-known person over the District, and Polk Shelton, another well-known attorney in Austin, and Merton Harris of Smithville, and of course they all had more funds than I had
  • January 8, 1965 Friday White House Myer Feldman Bill Moyers Leonard Marks Leonard Marks Clark Clifford Senator Mik e Monroney President Harry Truman, Independence, Missouri Director John McCone, CIA McGeorge Bundy George Reedy Director Kermit
  • at desk with Ashton. 11:40 Ashton left. CTJ to the West Hall to see Max Brooks re: fifth floor, KTBC. 1:15 To the Solarium for lunch (buffet) with house guests. 2:00 Met with Liz and Simone, Harry Middleton and Robert Sibley (re: ABC script). 4:00
  • on June 4: “There is no enthusiasm here for the General’s visit....do not believe he will have any of the Eastern seaboard hysteria.” 6/19 LBJ and other congressional leaders are present at the White House when Truman signs S.1, the draft and Universal
  • conservative stance in his votes on domestic issues. He was always an internationalist and he strongly supported the foreign policy of Harry Truman. But I observed after the war his changing position on domestic issues. This was in keeping with his
  • . Irene Loredo, Archives Specialist May 9, 2014 COPY LBJ LIBRARY C ei«rtD S N T tS lr Jtma IS. 1965 MEMORANDUM TC: Secretary of Defetxss r Tb® Presidont mer.ticnod to trsB yesterday h is desire that w« find more dramatic and effective actloca la
  • consisting of Harry Middleton, Elspeth Rostow, and George Christian (right) about her memoir, Personal History. Among her observations: • She does not know who ''Deep Throat" of Watergate fame is. • The Nixon administration was the most dangerous in her