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  • leader Mrs. Marjorie Merriweather Post, philanthropist Mrs. Phillip Graham, President of The Washington Post Observers were: Laurance Rockefeller, Chairman of the White House Conference on National Beauty, 1965 Knox Banner, executive director
  • Gotham will see the ·.film in Radi~ City- Music Hall instead. ·· t ----.-. ___ _. .-.~ PRESERVATION COPY ........, FRIEDA GRAHAM OSCAR YOUNGDAHL Int SECltffAIIY 019T. MINNESOTA COMMllTEE: INTE119TATE AND FOREIGN COMMERCE Congrt~~ of tbt Wnittb
  • . Poff Hon and Mr s Santiag o Polanco Abreu Sen an d Mrs. Winston L. Prout y Cong an d Mrs. 'Roma n C. Pucinsk i Cong an d Mrs. Graham Purcel l Sen. Jenning s Randolph Cong 'and Mrs . Rolland Redli n Congwoman Charlott e Rei d Cong an d Mrs . 'Ogde n R
  • come out to Texas just before World War I, married my mother, who was the daughter of a Confederate soldier who had moved from Tennessee to Texas and had a small ranch down at Graham, Texas. They met while she was an art student at SMU [Southern
  • secretary of defense for manpower? Who was the assis- I think it was Bill Graham. G: Anything on education as discussed in the task force sessions? H: Prod my memory some more. G: Well, Head Start was not initially included. LBJ Presidential
  • residence. M: They should have bought that house. President. That house belonged to the Vice I was always sorry that I didn't make it so it would go to the Vice President. F: Did you sell it to the Vice President--Johnson--directly or did Phil Graham
  • (John A. Burns) Rep. & Mrs. John W. Byrnes Rep. & Mrs. William B. Widnall Rep. & Mrs. Harold T. Johnson Rep. & Mrs. Samuel S. Stratton Rep. & Mrs. Graham Purcell Vice Admiral & Mrs. William F. Raborn, Jr. Dir. , Central Intelligence Agency Hon. & Mrs
  • Court; Mrs. Katharine Graham, chairman of The Washington Post Company; Mrs. Albert D. Lasker, president of Albert & Mary Lasker Foundation, Inc.; Dr. Rob rt . Good, president of Sloan-Kettering lnstitul for Caneer Research; Arthur Krim, chairman
  • , f'ormer ~ pcaker or thl' United .Stall's House ol Repre~entative~; GRAHAM T. ALLISON, JR., [)1:an, John 1". Kennedy School of Government, llan,srd lJniversity· BILL MOYERS, CBS N.,ws; Prof HICHARD E .. EUSTADT, fhrvard CnivPr~ity; ELSPETH RO.STOW, Sen. JOH
  • recovery” from the coronary thrombosis he suffered on 9/24/55. LBJ and CTJ attend KTBC board meeting in Austin. On 2/15 they hold a long meeting with KTBC sales staff--Bud Graham, Bob Meacham, Bob Slack, Bobbitt, Kellam, Harvey Herbst, Victor [?], Earl
  • up a thing and listen as long as they want and put it down. F: In 1967 you gave President Johnson the Alexander Graham Bell
  • Library; Alexander Graham Bell Association Medal for the Deaf; coronation of the King of Tonga; Redwoods National Park; Presidential Conference on Natural Beauty; biographical information
  • was represented--by this time the so-called Adams position was the CIA position, and there was a whole line-up of CIA analysts on the CIA side. Representing MACV was the then-Colonel Daniel Graham, a captain called Kelly Robinson, a marine colonel called Paul
  • ; the Kennedy staff that stayed to work for LBJ; LBJ’s relationship with the press compared to that of previous presidents; (dis)advantages of getting close to the president; LBJ’s relationship with Phil and Kay Graham; Great Society speech; type of access press
  • in the Agricultural Department, you see, and had seen the terrible plight of agriculture in the South, too, There were a lot of those North Carolina people, like Arthur Raper. All those people around the University of North Carolina, Frank Graham'S group, you know
  • . Leon Breeden 19-39 Members of band on list attached (21) (Note: all names of band have received FBI checks within past 60 days before band made State Department trip to Mexico.) Escorts 40. Hon. Graham Purcell 41. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Busby -42 43. Mr
  • means of communi- cation which would impart knowledge. The Alexander Graham Bell people-- they're still strong--felt that you shouldn't use the hands because if you use the hands, students won't use the lips. to a point. They've got a point--up I
  • , and I'll understand why you wouldn't, but Lansdale was a rather legendary figure I think in the press and popularly, although I think Graham Greene didn't think as much of him as a good many other people and saw him as rather a sinister figure than
  • husband kept that commitment with Humphrey, didn't he? R: Yes. And then of course Humphrey was defeated in the primaries oyt [John] Kennedy. And then you know the story of Jim [Rowe) and Johnson and Phil Graham and all the people at Los Angeles. I
  • on radio--we didn't have television in those days--selling his flour and how to lead them all in prayer. He got a tremendous following and, my God, ran for governor. I was up in Graham one day, talking about Pappy O'Daniel. I drove into town. It had one
  • in the United States on population. It was a very forward-looking state from a health standpoint. I think it was when Frank Graham was there. He was a very famous educator. The other states were not very interested but did talk about it a great deal
  • when I was a freshman, and I didn't know Boody very well . He was never very friendly to me . G: Elmer Graham, did you know him? B: Yes, but I can't place him . No, I can't come up with any comment about him . G: He was LBJ's debating partner, I
  • . And in my calculus, a very big country, the number one country looking at this thing as a limited investment for a limited time, but facing an opponent for whom it was total war, at whatever cost, for how long it took: unequal contest. Graham Martin said
  • Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Wozencraft -- I -- 3 Henry Gonzalez, and I think the other was Graham Purcell, I'm not certain of that. There were
  • CLARENCE T . ENGLISH WILLIAM W. FISHER CHARLES L. FOX EDWARD .I, GALL P. II. GARRETT JACK M, GOLDBTEIN JAKE GOLMAN FRANK E . GRAHAM SY Y , GUTHRIE JOSEPH M , HAGGAR MRS, KIRK HALL JAKE L. HAMON HUGH B . HAMILTON THOMAS A. HARRIS DR. GEORGE M . HILLIARD
  • , for a good job fighting CRIME and VICE in our State as Chairman of the HALEY COMMITTEE· Former State Senator J. GRAHAM BLACK, Jasper, for his outstanding work in behalf of Agriculture, the Turpentine Industry and Tobacco Interest; Judge SARAH BRYAN
  • the Johnson year are as diverse a Washington Post owner Katherine Graham's notes taken when visiting the John on Ranch and the transcripts of a taped diary Ambassador-at-Large U. Alexis Johnson kept from 1965 until 1977. The diary cov­ ered his career
  • of key issues." The objectives set forth, Conway insisted, will be South Florida), Civil Rights; Mark Gelfand (Boston College), "fully supported in a political context by the citizenry only The War on Poverty; Hugh Davis Graham (University of when
  • are drying up. If we cannot find ways to prevent that happening, future his­ tories will be written from press "Accessissues."Robert Schulzinger;John Prados; W. Roger Louis; John Brademas;Martha Kumar; panel chair Hugh Graham. (The panel is applauding
  • . Hungate, Sullivan, Mo. Mo. De laney, Keough, Murphy, N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. Kirwan, Ohio Hays, Ohio Duncan, Ullman, Oregon Oregon Vigorito, Pa. Fogarty, R. I. John Young, Tex. Jack Brooks, Tex. Albert Thomas, Tex. Graham Purcell, Tex. Clark Thompson
  • be. There were some articles about Phil Graham of the [Washington] Post pushing the President. too. That may be so, If Phil Graham [Washington Post publisher] had any concern aboJt my father, as I have read, being an effective executive, I. think that he
  • of a Swiss university . sales manager for the Ace Zipper Fastener Company . He's been He's been sales manager for some other gadget concern ." And I wired back and said, "My first assistant, Mr . Harry Graham [?] is a graduate of Harvard University . He's
  • : Yes. Straighten me out. W: That's right. Frank Graham had left by now. Frank Graham had left the United States Senate. He was defeated in 1950; served on until January, 1951. F: I knew him fairly well. What was your impression? alize after
  • , substantially the same thing that--who was this fellow from the Washington pUblisherJ--his version was correct. ~ [Philip Graham, John Kennedy came to see Lyndon and asked him to run and all this talk, well, anyway-B: That fellow at the Washington Post, Mr