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  • interpreter at the Teheran Conference of Stalin, Churchill, and Roosevelt. After serving at the Washington conference at Dumbarton Oaks on international organization, he became liaison between the secretary of state and the White House until Roosevelt took him
  • RUSK REPORTS ON DEFECTION OF STALIN'S DAUGHTER SVETLANA, CONCERNS ABOUT HER SAFETY; RUSK'S MEETING WITH PATRICK DEAN ON VISIT TO UK BY US OFFICIAL; PRESS LEAKS; RUSK'S SCHEDULE; SPACE TREATY; U THANT'S VIETNAM PEACE EFFORTS; CONGRESSIONAL PEACE
  • ban treaty; military intelligence; air and satellite reconnaissance; anti-missile defense; guerilla warfare; foreign elections; budgets; peace groups; student unrest; espionage; biological tests; defections, including that of Joseph Stalin's daughter
  • basic friendship with Russell was such that Russell wouldn't turn on him on Fortas. A terrible miscalculation. It's almost like, you can think back to [Joseph] Stalin saying, "The Pope has no troops. So what?" And look at television this weekend and see
  • See all online interviews with Joseph A. Califano
  • Califano, Joseph A., 1931-
  • Oral history transcript, Joseph A. Califano, interview 63 (LXIII), 4/17/1990, by Michael L. Gillette
  • Joseph A. Califano
  • , JFLA. WALLACE H. WHITE, J R,, MAINE THEODOR E FRANCIS GREEN, R. I. HENR IK SHIPSTEAD, Ml.... ALBEN W, BARKLEY, KY. GERALD P. NYE, N. DAK. ROBERT R. REYNOLDS, N. c. JAM ES J. DAVIS, PA. JOSEPH P. GUFFl!Y, PA.. WARREN R. AUSYfN. YT. GUY M. GILLETl"E
  • Stalin, Joseph, 1879-1953
  • aiaple one • .At. Waeh.illgtoa a ua 1 who ueed to be a judge in Kann.a Ci\7 and 'lfho had a Iii.nor politiOll as a Captain 1n t.h• tac1ag lo• Stalin, an aged and di ■ u.aed tir■t rld War, battler agalnat. th• dupotiaa at a tol'lll.er Cea
  • has been more generous or more worthy than that of Joseph Stalin, the world's greatest general, who speaking of that magnificent assault said: "The histery of war does not know of any such undertaking so broact in conception, '11., so gradiose
  • and dignitaries; the defection of Joseph Stalin's daughter, Svetlana Alliluyeva, to the United States; meetings with the President; and Radio Free Europe. Some of the numerous geographic regions represented in the material include India, Vietnam, Laos, Cam Ranh
  • : “Last night the House passed the Work-or-Fight Bill.” 2/3 Big Three conference (FDR, Stalin, Churchill) opens at Yalta. 2/4-11 President Roosevelt, Premier Stalin and Prime Minister Churchill met at Yalta and agreed (1) to crush Naziism and German
  • defection of Joseph Stalins' daughter, Svetlana. . : : rHiTE Hous e Dat CNT LYNDO N B . JOHNSO N e Marc WA "Y Tl 'resident bega n hi s day at (Place ) Th -i-- Telephon Tune f /In Ou tL o| e Whit e Hous e • e £ ^ Expend, . Activit LD . Cod Day
  • , but in March of 1953, just before the June 17 uprisings in East Germany, Stalin died, of course. And the commanding general immediately wanted to have the political intelligence officer, who was a rather young and somewhat inexperienced captain at the time
  • Hagerty’s military and intelligence background; 6/17/53 uprisings in East Germany; Joseph Stalin’s death and replacement by Nikita Khrushchev; the Russian Foreign Area Specialist Training program; estimating Russian intentions and capabilities while
  • Meredith who is federal judge now, a Symington manager, flew down and talked to me and gave me advice. They knew that in 1956 and in 1960 that Symington and Johnson would be conflicting, first favorite sons and then conflicting. Joseph P. Kennedy
  • .c olumn. MARCH 9, 1946 - NUl!BER 48 I TOM CONNALLY, WALTER: P'. GEOIIGE, GA. ROBERT F . WAGNER, N. Y. ELBERT D. THOMAS, UTAH JAMES E. MURRAY, MONT. CLAUD&: PEPPER, FLA. THEODORE FRANCIS GREEN, R. I, ALBEN W, BARKLEY , KY. JOSEPH P'. GUFFEY I PA
  • the day in 1964--maybe it was 1966 [1967]--when out of nowhere I got a question in the briefing as to whether Stalin's daughter had asked for asylum at the American Embassy in New Delhi. Now, I will admit to you frankly I did not even know that Stalin had
  • in the Middle East and where the phrase came from; the Liberty incident and whether or not it was accidental; preparing for press briefings; Joseph Stalin's daughter seeking asylum in the U.S.; an attitude of secrecy in the Foreign Service; McCloskey's
  • by the Soviet leader, Joseph Stalin, given on the twenty-fifth anniversary of the October Revolution. I quote: "The program of action of the Anglo-Soviet-.'.\.merican coalition is: Abolition of racial exclusivenes s; equality of nations and integrity
  • place on the world front. One, [Joseph] Stalin died in early March with repercussions and uncertainties that concerned the whole world. And two, [there] began to be discussions about a truce in Korea, about exchange of prisoners. You felt
  • in the Senate; Ed Weisl; Senator Joseph McCarthy and Charles Bohlen's nomination as ambassador to China; social events; Styles Bridges; Lynda's ninth birthday; Amon Carter's heart attack; LBJ's early struggle being an effective minority leader; LBJ's reaction
  • of living for the German people. Mr. President, we may have different opinions in America about the policy of Generalissimo Joseph Stalin, but I be· l!eve all Americans generally will agree with one remark he made to me in an interview in Moscow in 194.5
  • to monopolies, cartels and agreements in restrant of free enterprise and emphasis upon individual freedom. "8. Retention of control, in the 34th Street and 5th Avenue, WL 7-7000. tor Joseph H. Ball of Minnesota as a spokesman, and what he called the "Grandsons
  • , Truman declares he would welcome Stalin to the White House, but would not enter into any negotiations with the U.S.S.R. bilaterally, or jointly with other powers, outside of the U.N. The trial of Joseph Cardinal Mindszenty opens in Budapest. Mindszenty
  • visit to Moscow, his talk with Stalin. Of course the man went to . Moscow and talked with Stalin. We think a man charged with the responsibility of being a member of the Sel1kte Foreign Affairs Committee should have made this trip, man
  • , my Grandpa [Joseph] Baines, you know; he had the ingredients. But when Daddy wasn't around and [was] dead and Mama was around, the decisions that led--let me show you one example now. You haven't gone into his war record, or at least you don't
  • himself and this is what he said, I memorized it. It leaked out, just like this thing in the paper this morning. And it wasn't denied, nobody denied that he had said this, same as [Nikita] Khrushchev made his speech criticizing [Joseph] Stalin
  • himself and this is what he said, I memorized it. It leaked out, just like this thing in the paper this morning. And it wasn't denied, nobody denied that he had said this, same as [Nikita] Khrushchev made his speech criticizing [Joseph] Stalin
  • along Wine Creek. They forgot the Labadists performing their rites under cover of the thick Mary­ land night or the angel Moroni revealing the gold plates of Mormon to Joseph Smith in the hills south of Lake Ontario. Critics smiled too at the Winesburg
  • he laid off [Joseph] McCarthy, who was chairman of the Government [Operations] Investigating Committee, and that brought a lot of unfavorable comment from Drew Pearson as "Lying-down Lyndon." Because Pearson was urging Lyndon to attack McCarthy
  • , McGeorge [Empty] OFFICIALS, Bundy, William P. OFFICIALS, Bunker, Ellsworth OFFICIALS, Califano, Joseph A. OFFICIALS, Clifford, Clark M. OFFICIALS, Colby, W. E. OFFICIALS, Cooper, Chester L. Papers of William Westmoreland 4 National Archives and Records
  • REVOLUTIONARY ACTIONMOVEMENT as RAM's "Black Stalin·. 11 FREEMAN served as RAMChairman, with MAXWELL STANFORD,now of ·New York City, formerly of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, serving as RAMField Chairman. This source stated ln May, 1965, there has been no formal
  • Deathe, Bolton, Elmo Brown, Chuck Brooks and Charles Howell. 2/14-2/25 At the 20th Congress of Soviet Communists Party in Moscow, Nikita Khrushchev proclaims a new party line, including destruction of Joseph Stalin as national idol. The rush to “de
  • Lima Clyde T. Ellis Oscar Ewing Marion B. Folsom Rev. Dr. Ray Gibbons Bishop A. Raymond Grant Dr. Dana Mclean Greeley Dr. William Haber Edwin G. Halperin Ernest A. Hayes Miss Dorothy I. Height Dr. David R. Hunter C. E. Israel Dr. Dumont F. Kenny Joseph
  • appreciate the intere ■t and cooperation you ue, and hope that you will find the conduct ot rq re1pon• eibilitiee satisfactory. gave Sincerely yours, U.RaKTB T,-,11111,tt Harry Woodburn Chase Mary Ellen Cba,e Ward Cheney Mn. Artbm 0. Choate Joseph H
  • hello from the air. At the end of the day LBJ returns to Austin. Time magazine carries a story on LBJ’s helicopter campaign. 6/28 Monday. LBJ makes campaign stops at Llano, San Saba, Goldthwaite, Lomita, Lampasas, Belton and Temple. The Stalin-Tito
  • -man army. Because that was the only way to get peace, what we all wanted. To sit down and do nothing was to play right into [Joseph] Stalin's hands and he would take just as much as he could get without fighting for it. We began to have real good
  • Among Bob Hope's daughter Linda opened the exhibit honoring her father at the Johnson Library. Story on page 23. Photo by Charles Bogel. An Evening With Joseph A. Califano, Jr. Joe Califano was LBJ's top aide for domestic legislation. He oversaw
  • find a vassal state. Italy is already in collusion with Hitler . The Balkans are already trembling in th eir boots at every word and command he utters. Over there is a giant of Europe and Asia, Stalin, whose own bloody hand is a part of the bloody