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  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • discussion (which wilt~ be reported separately) when he charged Vice President wi~ "delicate mission" of thanking President Kennedy for sending Vice President to Senegal. Afterwards I suggested to Prime Minister that as Ambassador it might be easier for me
  • , 1938-1952 incl. (Correspondents include: Tom Gambrell; Conde R. Hoskins; Morris Roberts; Frederick B. Isley; John H. Mohrmann; Maurice Dowell; Alfred Petsch; George H. Sheppard; Truman Holladay; Frank B. Voigt; J. T. Ellis; James V. Allred; John E. Lyle
  • Folder, "Korea ‐ December 1963 ‐ March 1966 [1 of 2]," Files of Robert Komer, NSF, Box 38
  • Files of Robert W. Komer
  • See all scanned items from NSF Files of Robert Komer Box 38
  • ;V.J..J IJ/ - on ~ I operi FILE
  • NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS SERVICE WITHDRAWALSHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORMOF DOCUMENT CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE DATE memo for the ~resident memo for Robert Weaver and Robertfiood from John B. C~inton w/cover memo to Levinson CR C
  • to be not enough. And he wanted to become Under Secretary of State very badly and he had his strong supporters for that role--[Arthur] Goldberg and [Robert] McNamara were two of them. But the President wouldn't listen to that. B: By "left too early," did Moyers
  • attempt to build a structure in Washington, and we were not getting very far. It was not long after Dallas when, sitting in my office, it dawned on us that this rightly should be the Kennedy Center. You can say, "God, you were a bunch of ghouls sitting
  • : You continued in that capacity until what--1963? B: Yes, until 1963, when I was appointed by President Kennedy to be the Commissioner of the Federal Housing Administration . M: I see . Were there any particular problems with the Veteran's
  • obviously either talked to him on the phone or someone who was calling in his behalf, and invited me down there, and at the same time invited Senator Robert Kerr. So I remember, and I referred to that here, I met Senator Kerr some place, and he and I
  • Working for three Kennedy brothers; housing finance management his expertise; Dick Goodwin set up eleven task forces for LBJ; contacted Haar; task to get ideas to beautify cities and states, to clean rivers, zoning, save the environment; LBJ would
  • was, in housing, finance, and management. F: You had worked also, as I recall, for Teddy Kennedy in that campaign against Edward McCormack. H: Yes, that is right. I was one of the three or four academics, with Sam Beer and Robert Wood, who had seen merits
  • Conference of the United States; Frank Wozencraft; a history of the Conference; Williams appointed to head the Administrative Conference; the nature of the Conference; Charles Brannan testifies for the Conference; Robert Graham helps save the Conference
  • in 1964 and had not been implemented. And Bobby Kennedy was ready to make a blast; in fact, had made one. Frank told me that they were gravely concerned that they were really going to get after the President on this, and they needed somebody and needed
  • . Mr. ·George Reedy, Special Assistant. 13. Col. William· Jackson, Aide. 2 14. Captain L. A. Lajaunie► 3 Aide. PART lI 15. Mr. Robert Waldron, Recorder. 16. Mrs. Ashton Thornhill, Secretary. STATE DEPARTMENT'S PARTY 17. Comdr. Pickett Lumpkin
  • Oral history transcript, Robert Bennett, interview 1 (I), 11/13/1968, by Joe B. Frantz
  • Robert Bennett
  • Bennett, Robert LaFollette, 1912-2002
  • See all online interviews with Robert Bennett
  • � � � � 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/show/loh/oh INTERVIEWEE : ROBERT
  • Folder, "INDIA - 1966 (to March 31) [1 of 3]," Files of Robert W. Komer, NSF, Box 24
  • Files of Robert W. Komer
  • See all scanned items from NSF Files of Robert Komer Box 24
  • ~ete IEor11e1 ~ 3/IJ/13 puNL~/AAC12-2. JstAC l, , C s e~~~~ei Sa 9 ~,'-47'86 Olti) 3}11/1~~rNLJ"/RI\C12-2 In,· &~ ,(k ~ -A Collection Title National Security File, Files of Robert W. Komer Folder Title "INDIA - 1966 (to March 31
  • remember him going to Cotulla, though, that one year. B: No, I d o n ' t . I read that in the [Robert] Caro book [The Years of Lyndon Johnson: The Path to Power. But I had no recollection of it. G: Apparently he certainly did do that, though. B: Oh
  • he takes off his shoes and gets up on the chair, stands and raises his voice, his face up directly into the chan­ delier. He said, "Buzz, if that outfit doesn't get this room cool by the time I get back from lunch I'm going to call Jack Kennedy
  • Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs - Robert Sayre Harry McPherson Charles Maguire ^ .- Liz Carpenter Mr and Mrs. Steve Martini : ™ ™ WHITE HOUS E Dat JUL IDENT LYNDO N B . JOHNSO N , DIAR Y U . S . Ambassador' s Residence
  • the inventory and sale of the Elms; evening social gathering of Johnson and Kennedy staffs; Ted Sorensen; Abe Fortas' interest in art and music; Jacqueline Kennedy's work; [Nancy] Salinger; LBJ's tour of the White House; civil rights legislation
  • it to start looking like the Johnsons lived here. I put out a picture of President and Mrs. Kennedy--no, I believe it’s just the President--and Caroline, and the pony, the little pony that Lyndon gave them. And then I put out a picture of Daddy with Tommy
  • F. Kennedy and Texas state politics and government. • • • • 07/03/17 Date range of collection: 1963-1983 10 linear inches Available for research. (Open 10/1/2012) 1 series 1 National Archives and Records Administration http://archives.gov
  • SYKES, ROBERT H. and Haydon David Jones v. U.S. 23,571 MOODY, PATRICIA LOUISE v. United States 23,588 WATTS, EDWARD S. et al v. M-K-T Railroad Co. 23,608 IDEAL STRUCTURES v. HUNTSVILLE DEVELOP. CORP. 23,668 N.L.R.B. v. Security Guard Service, Inc. 23,894
  • in my book, and McCarthy deserved him. I mean, they deserved each other. Then I also remember Bob Kennedy being there, which I thought was sort of funny, because he never commits [inaudible]. But back to McCarthy. I think the way he used it, it didn't
  • it. So then we moved up to the seventeenth floor where he had a better room. And then people like Juanita Roberts, and Mary Rather, and I think Ashton Gonella was around some then, and Willie Day [Taylor] and quite a number of people of course gradually
  • p.m., just before Lyn- only one belated, curt and inadequate don was to call on Jackie Kennedy at comment. This time he waited for 24 her new Fifth Avenue apartment, a hours before •saying anything publicly. newsman called Press Secretary Reedy Finally
  • p.m., just before Lyn- only one belated, curt and inadequate don was to call on Jackie Kennedy at comment. This time he waited for 24 her new Fifth Avenue apartment, a hours before •saying anything publicly. newsman called Press Secretary Reedy Finally
  • Okamoto, Yoichi R. (Yoichi Robert), 1915-1985
  • with a personally picture, I will be indeed grateful. OfFICERS JOHN MORLEY, President DR. DIXE STURGIS, Vice President DR. WENDELL L MILLER, Vice President 9~:esident States W. M. NEIGHBORS, Secretary C. E. JONES, TreHurer DR. ROBERT GALEN CHANEY, Scribe
  • Folder, "Iraq - December 1963-March 1966," Files of Robert Komer, NSF, Box 28
  • Files of Robert W. Komer
  • See all scanned items from NSF Files of Robert Komer Box 28
  • and map from intelligence report S 2 11/20/64 A ~~ le"ei; Reee~ 6 . Strer1gte Bel, l~e1,1e1 8 g ~9H-:/-1'-Sf A 22a letter Robert C. Strong to Bob Komer - exempt per RAC. 09/00 s 1 10/19/64 A leUer Robert C Str= ORStg PRilli~e Taleot -s
  • ; press leaks and staff members talking to the press; believing in what you write; 'crisis mongering'; changes in socioeconomic conditions for Negroes; presenting statistical information to the President; the Kerner Commission; Robert Kennedy speaking out
  • Kennedy called The Boy's Life Of John F. Kennedy, which I thought of and then the guy wrote it and did sort of a crununy job. So I re,vrote it and it turned out to be sort of a best seller kind of a thing. After about a year and a half or two years
  • : Did Sargent Shriver favor community action right off the bat? There's some suggestion that Robert Kennedy persuaded Shriver to favor the program. W: I would say that Shriver specifically was suspicious of community action from the beginning. G: Why
  • a good agreement. Ambassador Robert Anderson, who was in charge of the negotiations overall, had done a superb job in working this LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org out. ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral
  • Carleen Roberts [?], and Carleen [had] lived next door to me in Oklahoma City and I'd been sort of a beau of hers when we were going to school together . She became vice president of American Airlines--she was the only woman executive--and Lyndon sort
  • of Felix Lonsorie ' s Kennedy , tho O\mC."' r uncrel arrangom:. nt s . Nir . of tho f un_ral ho11c et Throe Ri vo_ s was tha only person who had the opportuni'ty to disc.:•ininate , and I shall concorn myself sololy witn his words and actions
  • on the other hand probably the candidate that I most closely identified with because of my own personal background was Hubert Humphrey. And you know if you had just given me the choice ideally, I think I probably would have picked Humphrey. Kennedy in the early
  • Stevenson; Senate seating case before Justice Black, 1948; McNeil’s relationship with President Johnson; Senators Russell, Walter George; Robert Kerr; LBJ’s love of gadgets; George Reedy; Walter Jenkins; Arthur Perry; LBJ’s secretive nature; assessment
  • : No. No, I thought that when he started to run for the nomination he not only had Kennedy, but Stu [Symington] was running at that pOint, wasn't he, and Bob Kerr was a candidate, it seems to me. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL
  • Vice President? The year President Kennedy beat Richard Nixon. HW: We must have been at the ranch. EW: What was that question? MG: In 1960, rernember, when he was elected Vice President, the night of the election, I was wondering if you were
  • How Rosenblatt became involved with Southeast Asian affairs in Robert Komer's office in 1966; Rosenblatt's duties under Komer; Rosenblatt's work with the Agency for International Development (AID), the Office of Civil Operations (OCO) and Civil
  • the Kennedys making a big to-do about that? R: Yes, indeed. In fact while I was out there I met up one day I think we had breakfast in Can Tho with Kennedy's refugee staffers. There was a fellow by the name of Powers. G: Dave Powers? R: No, it wasn't