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  • of renunciation if he appeared to renounce as an American to do so and that for the necessary in the electronics he had offered he had acquired an act Class his citizen, operator. the Soviet Govern­ operator. The a letter citizenship. at from
  • in the '41 campaign? H: That's right. So I sat down and wrote a letter where I did my best to describe what the mother had said to me and asked the senator to do something about it. The one who happened to receive the letter in the senator's office
  • ,THE CHINESEREDS WOULD THENASSASSINATEKHRUSCHEV ANDTAKEOVER CONTROL. 3. THE WRITERSAID HE WORKED FOR THE "DEPARTMENT OF STATESECRET," BUT NO DEPARTMENT BY THIS NAMEIS KNOWN IN THE CHINESECOMMUNIST GOVERNMENT. OURSTATIONIN STOCKHOLM JUDGESTHIS TO BE A CRANK LETTER
  • , the guidelines we had for the candidates, not to ride in an open car, not to get into an area where there was no avenue of evacuation, which is consistent with our policy. ~1: What about things non-public, like crank letters, and crank telephone calls? R
  • very amusing incident that might be worthwhile as an insight as to how a new President comes along and worries about the role he's going to have to play. Almost the first major action that I had to take for President Johnson was a letter to King
  • Libya and its effect on the Middle East crisis; Wheelus Air Force Base and U.S. military bases in Turkey; declining U.S. military presence in the Eastern Mediterranean; meeting with LBJ after the JFK assassination; writing a letter to Saudi Arabia
  • division of the Internal Revenue Bureau. F: In Washington? P: In Washington. And I wrote letters to all my friends and acquaintances and told them about Mr. Johnson and urged them to get active in his LBJ Presidential Library http
  • and the trauma of the moment and be a reporter? D: Well, I think that in my little note pad you could tell. You could look at it and see the stress I was under because my words turned into straight lines. I was not writing letters, E's, R's and T's. I
  • JIily 31• 1973 Mr. Jla Garrlaoa triot Attorney 2700 Tulaa lev Ori•••• Dear Mr. , __ Loulalaaa 70119 Garrl. ■ oa1 la re ■poue to ymr letter of My u. repr4lq Mterlal which yaa haw ant to the atteatlae of the Bou.. JNiclar, CClllllittNe pl
  • So we sold our business of '53. B: You've mentioned your partner several times. M: Gerald Cullinan. Who was he, sir? I believe hers assistant to the President of the National Letter Carriers Association here now. He was in the Post Office
  • , and I enjoyed them, and I would tell him stories of Kentucky politics which he seemed to enjoy. And he would read me letters he had gotten, or he would tell me about some encounter he had with some other politician. As you will see in this file
  • . Johnson regarding the Billie Sol Estes affair? There was an attempt at the time to link him personally with-­ Bi : There was a letter which had come from Mr . Johnson's office, although I'd have to refresh my recollection . Ba : Bi : My recollection
  • things had to do with Vietnam, I can't remember specifically what they were. But he never said anything himself and I think we stayed on rather good terms. I had several nice letters from Mrs. Johnson because I was a great admirer of hers and all she
  • that occasion, where you It was a Sunday, as you say. I had gone to work for some reason, I don't remember why now. And other people came wandering in that day to either get caught up or do something. Mary Rather came in to write some letters. Marie Fehmer
  • and 1960 campaigns; Democratic National Committeeman; Los Angeles Democratic Convention; JFK’s meeting with Houston ministers; LBJ’s running for Senate and VP; LBJ relationship with John Connally; LBJ as VP; reasons for the 1963 Dallas trip; wrote letters
  • note Marvin Watson to LBJ (summary of #17a) PCI 1 6/20/67 A 17a letter J. Edgar Hoover to Mildred Stegall s 2 6/20/67 A 278767 A.- 1 2/8/67 A 2 9/13/66 C 1 7/2/64 A °' SC\t'\~Ud 19 letter f>~ 19a 1epo1t \\·~ 'Cb f\Wc:6"--5
  • ) to Ferrie In view of tho foregoing I do not recommend release of the I have prepared and am attaching withheld material at this time. a propoaed letter to the National Arc~ves a.nd a proposed memo• randum to the Director embodyina thia recommendation
  • a two- page letter, single-spaced, and never use a period or a comma or semicolon or anything from the first to the last, yet it made good sense. You could read it and understand it. very sincere person. But he was a hard worker and a Dick Kleberg
  • letters when I was in India, suggesting alternatives in Southeast Asia . I remember one series of letters particularly in which I said that if the government of Vietnam would offer every peasant family fifteen acres of land--this was done in Taiwan
  • the man, I became one of his enlarging circle of supporters in Houston who were available for volunteer chores of one kind or another. B: Did you hear from Mr. Johnson about the column? V: Yes, I did. I got a letter from him, expressing delight
  • : Very rarely. I received a few letters from members of District committees 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
  • : \.Jell, the Chief Justice sent a letter to the President saying that he intended to retire and he placed the timing as being at the pleasure of the President. As you kno\V, the President then replied, saying that he regretted th8 Chief Justice's
  • on the best end of it. B: Did you get any support from the a d m i n i s t r a t i o n , moral support or otherwise? A: Yes, I had a wonderful letter from President Kennedy. the wall out here now. It hangs on A very gracious letter of appreciation. I
  • . As you have found in your research, I don't know of any president who wrote more letters. G: God! He was incredible. When people write in, they got a reply. I guess the rule of handling his correspondence was one of the number one rules that he had
  • and Cliff Carter. I started off the way anyone starts off, handling correspondence. F: Writing warm, friendly letters? S: \~arm and friendly letters to politicians all over the United States, with a lot of guidance from both of those individuals. I
  • about Luther Holcomb." As you know, the FBI never divulges the pOSition, but it's all related to whether one is trustworthy or in those realms. I mention all of that to say that I had written a letter to different individuals that I felt that I wanted
  • : That was taken when Lodge presented his letters of credence, some days before the McNamara-Taylor visit--that was the first time I met Diem. See him shaking hands. G: You're shown shaking hands. F: Yes. Was this in the presidential palace? That was several
  • of the pict\1re Ruby. when they turned I again geaognized it over. aa,1 him ehoot: Oswald, 'I!V it a aid she could the words and then !t goas but it doesn't Her t-.nswar is the driver door, in blncl~ letters,~ she saw the driver, In a &aparate
  • Gove:RNOR WILLIAM EXECUTIVE L. October 25, 1968 The Honorable Fred M. Vinson, Jr. Assistant Attorney General Department of Justice Washington, D. C. 20530 Dear General Vinson: Governor Ellingt'on has directed me to acknowledge your letter of October 22
  • -- I -- 7 N: She was stunned. I mean, she had meant no harm. [It was] a little dumb to say what she said in a post card--if she had put it in a sealed letter ~t would have been better. mean, it was a rotten place. was a fact. What she said
  • , it's nice to have this letter from you dated just a few weeks back and saying you're going to be up here to, let's have a little gab fest about our mutual friend, the former congressman, the former senator, the former majority leader, the former vice
  • favored the idea of the Democratic Advisory Council . In fact, I remember once seeing a letter from him which he may never have seen, as many people in his position sometimes don't . I'm not saying this is anything wrong, but it was apparently a letter
  • , and they composed the letters; then he'd recompose them. Must have been that way because the two Henderson boys didn't take shorthand. F· How long did you work for him? N: Till election day of 1964. F: It was intermittent, wasn't it? N: Yes, I quit as soon
  • Vietnam mail and things. I work with Will Sparks writing messages, mostly kind of the secondary chores of the speechwriter. Many speech writers write letters and a few of them work on messages. B: Whose payroll were you on then? c: I went back
  • : Did you have any contact with Lyndon Johnson after that? C: No, I never did. M: Did he ever write. you a letter? C: No. M: So after that point when he flew back to Washington~ you never saw him again? C: Let's see, I saw him again. He's
  • was standing right there and she is a very good friend of I was standing a foot behind her, two feet behind her. face just changed and he drove off. And his And I know it was the custom to send letters of condolence when somebody, a member of the press
  • re- quired to be filed with the Secretary of State in Texas. Of course, the Senator was very anxious and very meticulous in his desire to follow both the letter and the spirit of the new election law, and so he asked me to-- I had at that time left
  • use colorful expressions? He has a fine vocabulary of four-letter words, and I've heard him use just about every four-letter word I've ever heard. use them very, very effectively