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- ' matters, largely because nobody else is, and somebody has got to watch the store. In my period very happily we had in the House a remarkable man as head of the Veterans Affairs Committee--Tiger Teague from Texas. He was a war hero. It must have been
- Great Society; OEO; HUD; Medicare; educational and veterans legislation; Brookings Institution
- was not important what was "right or wrong;" it was something politically that had to be done. I would almost say that the creation of the Department of Veterans' Affairs is not a bad analogy to the whole issue of establishing the Senate and House Veterans' Affairs
- 1974 Budget Impoundment Act; how Cutler came to work for government; the importance of seniority on committees; Cutler's work on veterans' affairs; Wilbur Cohen and the creation of Medicare; Jacob Javits' national health care initiative; Javits
- was on consumer affairs--really, I was in on it at various times, but basically in connection with the 1968 legislative program. The veterans task force was chaired by a Department of Defense assistant secretary. It included representatives of the Labor Department
- The development of task forces such as the veterans task force composed of representatives from several government agencies; Wozencraft's proposal of a "one-stop shopping center" to inform veterans of programs, opportunities, and benefits available
Oral history transcript, E. Ross Adair, interview 1 (I), 3/12/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- then. Your committee assignments are on the House Foreign Affairs Committee and the Veterans Affairs Committee. Before running for Congress, from 1933 to 1950, you were a practicing attorney and probate commissioner of Allen County, Indiana. your LLB from
- referring? (In the framework of foreign affairs, how did you see the relationship between State and Defense? While it is generally thought that your relationship with Rusk was good, there are those in the State Department who thought you had usurped
- McNamara’s first contact with LBJ in 1960; assessment of Johnson’s personality and abilities; McNamara’s assessment of successes and failures of Defense Department while he was Secretary; relationship of Defense and State Departments; Congress
- INTERVIHIEE: JOHN SPARKNAN INTERVI EL~ER: MICHAEL L. GILLETTE PLACE: Senator Sparkman's office in Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 G: Let's begin with your years in the House together. You were on the Military Affairs Committee and President Johnson
- Act I think it was called. And I handled everything else. And there [were] subcommittees on health, on education, on veterans’ affairs, which was then part of the committee. We had one on the National Science Foundation, and that was my responsibility
- this department, this guy or me, not an issue of this guy in the White House saying, "Well, when you look at the training programs and Labor and OEO and the VA [Veteran's Administration] and the Defense Department and the Commerce Department, you really should
- , 1985 INTERVIEWEE: JACOB JAVITS INTERVIEWER: MICHAEL L. GILLETTE PLACE: Senator Javits' residence, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1, Side 1 J: It was a time when our House of Representatives went to the Republicans, because some eighty-odd veterans
Oral history transcript, Lawrence F. O'Brien, interview 16 (XVI), 11/21/1986, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- heard any adverse comment regarding him in the White House. Ed [J. Edward] Day as postmaster general really did not have a political involvement. There wasn't a tendency in the White House to focus on the Post Office Department, unfortunately. So
- John Gronouski's appointment as ambassador to Poland after being U.S. postmaster general; the beautification stamp; a Post Office Department recruiting plan for college graduates; Civil Service regulations and hiring practices; a training program
- . The Russians didn't parti- cularly want too many assistant naval-air attaches at that time. As a substitute, I went into the newly formed research and intelligence organization in the State Department, working on the formation of the Central Intelligence group
- Biographical information; Federal Aviation Act; FAA; contact with LBJ; SST program; formation of Department of Transportation; Halaby’s departure from FAA; Henry Gonzales; impressions of LBJ.
- it was a shotgun marriage which they hated . The professional staff was put on the committee and hired by the committee, and the Naval Affairs Committee members didn't want anything to do with them. They wanted to continue to work with the -Navy Department
- , and also sent a very valuable man to the Department of Transportation, Robert J. Blackwell, in the Office of Facilitation in the Office of International Affairs. He was our number two man and a very brilliant able man. He went to the Department
- in the attorney general's department. But more and more I began to hear people out on the campus saying, "Say, I understand you're going to go to work for the federal government." And I said, "No, I don't know anything about it." They said, "We've been getting
Oral history transcript, Lawrence F. O'Brien, interview 15 (XV), 11/20/1986, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- Department. 7 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 O'Brien -- Interview XV
- when O'Brien became postmaster general; initiatives to change the postal service; whether or not patronage from postal employees would have an effect on congressional support for Post Office Department reform; O'Brien's meeting with Charles Schultze
- executive lawmaking. One example of this is interagency action, where the various departments of the government work together to institute a new program. Very frequently this is inspired by the White House. I'm thinking in particular here of the Veterans
- Department of Justice history and its role as legal advisor to the president through the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC); laws created in the executive branch, such as through executive order, presidential proclamations and executive agreements
- and 26, 1969 INTERVIEWEE: FRANK M. WOZENCRAFT INTERVIEWER: T. H. Baker PLACE: Mr. Wozencraft's office, Department of Justice, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 W: One of the most important and least solved areas of government lies
- program before the White House released it; a Bureau of the Budget meeting in which several departments expressed their displeasure with HEW's proposed legislation; OLC's suggestion of regional councils to address the air pollution program; veto power
- and take the combination B.A./LL.B. This is really what I had had in mind. Upon transferring here I became engrossed with the government department, particularly [because] Dr. Redford and Dr. O. D. Weeks [?] were there at that time, and a young bright star
- appointments for the first time. He would point to William Driver as Administrator of Veterans Affairs and make quite a point of the fact that Driver was the first career man to head that agency. Me I can see how it might be difficult to get a bureau ~o
Oral history transcript, Joseph A. Califano, interview 45 (XLV), 5/23/1989, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- was the [creation of the] Department of Transportation, and have a really good transportation bill. There was a terrific dispute in the government about whether or not we should put criminal provisions in the bill and when we do the auto safety we'll have to get
- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh February 25, 1969 M: This is an interview with Stanley H. Ruttenberg. He is the former Assistant Secretary for ManpoweT and Manpower Administration of the Department of Labor. He is now in Ruttenberg Associates, which
- Activities as Manpower Administrator; the Department of Labor; OEO; NAB; proposed reorganization of the Department of Labor in 1968
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 23 (XXIII), 8/28/1988, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- too much on brilliance. G: So first there was the question of the sequence of making manpower available, drafting, calling up older veterans rather than--was this primarily because of their experience that they--? R: Yes. We had to have something
- the military during the Korean War; the opinion that the U.S. was ill-equipped to fight the Korean War; morale problems with Korean War soldiers who were also World War II veterans; comparing U.S. and Soviet manpower and firepower; criticism of the U.S
- Administration as an assistant to the Secretary of Agriculture . One thing that comes up immediately after the first year there in March 1962, the breaking of the Billie Sol Estes affair . Bi : Were you involved in that? I was, as most of the people were
- Crusade; Larry O'Brien; Clement J. Zablocki; 3/31 announcement; Citizens for Humphrey; Humphrey's campaign; Kennedy people's rivalry and friction after assassination; Bill Moyers; LBJ's knowledge of the Department of Agriculture; Department
- father, before he died, he received--the Jewish War Veterans group in Cologne--received a letter from people who lived in Austin but came from Cologne a long time ago. And they had a curtain factory, and they sewed curtains, and they were pretty well
- , creating the senior executive corps and a lot of stuff to--he wanted to improve the lot of civil servants. He truly believed in career civil service. Reorganization. I had a deal to move the Bureau of Indian Affairs from Interior to HEW [Department
Oral history transcript, Sharon Francis, interview 2 (II), 6/4/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- gave a real tribute to Charlie Horsky and Steve Pollak, who have been his advisers on national capital affairs. I saw Tom Airis, the Highway Department director, and he was all in a twit about the east leg of the Interloop. Halprin was working
- , 1969 INTERVIEWEE: FRANK M. WOZENCRAFT INTERVIEWER: T. H. Baker PLACE: Mr. Wozencraft's office, Department of Justice, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 B: This is the fifth interview with Frank M. Wozencraft, and the subject matter is the UN
- the White House or the State Department in conferences such as these; Wozencraft's influence in presenting issues to the State Department officials; the power of treaties in international law; how international law is carried out by custom if not by treaty
- O'Brien left for the Post Office Department, because he was the overall legislative man. My title was not Administrative Assistant to O'Brien but Administrative Assistant to the President. did have to channel a lot of this stuff. Nevertheless you After
- Character of House liaison in the JFK years; a memo on Medicare on the night of the JFK assassination; LBJ-JFK relationship; the Bobby Baker affair; agendas for the weekly leadership meetings; LBJ-JFK staff relationships; LBJ seldom called
- http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Busby -- III -- 10 Department and have a briefing from the undersecretary of state. I want to say
- , but I think I worked with seven different directors of information or ministers of information, depending on the title of the department in that particular government. A couple of those had been educated in the United States. Nguyen Ngoc Linh had been
- Services and Mental Health Administration which is within the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. Dr. English was the assistant director of the Office of Economic Opportunity in charge of their neighborhood health center and health services 4
- as in the veterans' task force situation. Each is approaching the problem of human rights from his own viewpoint more or less, and the viewpoint of his department, although he has an overall interest. The State Department will be saying, "Well, now we really must
- not be able to continue his studies without employment. job in the news department at KTBC. He was given a He was a most satisfactory employee-- so much so that the then manager, who is the present manager in this year of 1969. J. C. Kellam, aided him
- , anyway, that's how that came about. I might add in line with that, this is not very consequential in the history of man's affairs, but the four-year term began, I think, December 31, 1966, and in the course of events my four years ran out. Now it had been
- in political affairs came into focus in November 1928, when I was living in this small town in LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] Fayette County. Al Smith
- minutes, when in came President Johnson and his entourage. He would be the main guest, as he always is at these affairs. And I stood there waiting to say hello to him, and Kay Graham--and of course he embraced Kay Graham; it was Kay Graham’s husband
- in the Justice Department. Do you know why he wanted Don Cook to be there in the Justice Department? J: No, other than he had a great admiration for Don Cook, his ability. I don't know for sure where he met Don Cook; I met Don Cook in 1945 when I came back
- Giaimo, whom I know quite well, and I had an appointment with Bailey. A phone call came during that appointment and Wayne Phillips, who was a public affairs man for the department and was shepherding me, came into the Giaimo meeting and said
- Department of Housing, Education, and Welfare
Oral history transcript, Lady Bird Johnson, interview 19 (XIX), 2/6-7/1981, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- abortive attempt--was it in 1948? G: Yes, to run for president. J: To run. I don't remember. G: President Johnson did a good deal of work on the Naval Affairs Committee during this year. J: Oh, yes. Naval Affairs all during his House service
- on the Naval Affairs Committee; LBJ's interest in defense and the military; constituents staying in the Johnsons' home in Washington, D.C.; Lynda Bird Johnson's first birthday; African-American employees; LBJ's career aspirations; Bill Deason's marriage; FDR's
- ]. It was a big banquet deal. He hap- pened to be the teacher of this debate team instead of the prime mover of the whole affair. G: He invited Pat Neff to that, I understand. Do you remember that? LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL