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  • GRAHAM. N. C. • • •. • • • • • • • • • • •• • • PASS BURLINGTON, N. C ••• • •••• • • • •• •. PASS ELON COLLEGE, N. C. •• ••• • •• ••. PASS GIBSONVILLE, N. C •••• •• • ••••• • •• AR. GREENSBORO, N. C
  • : . . .... TO: The Secretary THROUGH: S/S FR0:·1: Graham Hnrtin .. . . . . . .. .... . .: . . .. ·... . . ·-. -- .. ..... "• .- . ,... : SUBJECT : Authorization For Assistance to ACTION l·R.NOD.'.'.NDU?·i 1968 - .­ Cz~chos lovak Refugees
  • I talked to Mrs. Kennedy. Then I had to talk at the Cardinal Spellman dinner. Republicans just knew that this was the election. Everyone who got in the way wound up corpses. I couldn't go to the Newsweek party. Phil Graham was a good friend of mine
  • . A few days later Kay Graham telephoned. It's one of the very, very few conversations I ever had with her. She was open and direct and talked a thousand times easier on the telephone than she is able to do in person. I made note of the conversation mainly
  • give you advice on where you ought to go and what you ought to do? C: Oh, yes. Oh, yes. He wanted to be sure that I had a good time. I never knew exactly how much of a good time he wanted me to have. But I remember talking to Kay Graham maybe a year
  • the Interioro Executiv D1recto -oooMembers Present:· Mrso Phillip Graham of Washington, D.c. Mro Leonard Doggetto Waah1ngtono DoC Mr~ Victor Gruen. Los Angeles Kro Charles A. H0 rsky. Advisor for Hat1o 1 Capital Affairs, White ·: .Hause Mro Rudolph
  • : -: V­ Jim Jones Barefoot Sanders ,· .. . ·' You asked me for the names of 10 Democratic Congressmen who will likely have difficult races for reelection• I suggest the following and can furnish addi~ional names: Dante Fas cell ·~ Graham
  • was quite active in debate. The spring of 1928 was when he went to Huntsville for a tournament. was Elmer Graham. I guess his partner Do you remember anything about that debate tournament that he went to and his win there? H: No. I remember he
  • Johnson -- VIII -- 21 J: Well, he had a little pressure put on him. of the top people to succeed him. He didn't name him as one I th i nk he was down at the bottom. Pressure was put on him by Phil Graham, that was it. I remember that one
  • as the chairman of the subcommittee involved, which was a Labor subcommittee, he was dealing with his counterpart in the House which was Graham Barden this tough old arch-conservative from North Carolina. Well, Barden treated him like an absolute baby, even
  • comedy in the White House. The President told this later, last year when he came for a dinner at Kay Graham's he told part of it, and we put it together. It was just a Mack Sennett thing, because John was so upset about the thing that he insisted
  • of this was ever by chance. Yo u weren't flying from, say, Weatherford to Graham and just suddenly realize that's Peaster down there or something like that. M: No, no. It was all planned and programmed. And then the press followed in another car or cars so we
  • Phil Graham [publisher, Washington Post], who had come in and was waiting and said, "Phil, I've got to get out of this. Can't you help me?" And he said, "No, I can't, but there's only one man in town that can, and that's Clark Clifford." So when we came
  • and re1entment over the U.S. policy of advocating ••lf•determinatilm for Portugal's African terri• tori•• and U.S. reatriction ■ a1ain1t the uae of ad.liter, equipment of U.S. ori1in in Portuaue•• Africa. Ambaaaador Garin ia married to the former Pby111• Graham