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- : And your Congressional district, too? C: Yes. Nixon carried Wisconsin. I actually ran ahead of the national ticket in my district, but I got beat by 10,000 votes that time around. had a good deal to do with it. The religious issue It cut both ways
Oral history transcript, Chester L. Cooper, interview 2 (II), 7/17/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- it, it was a very good set of propositions; in fact, much of what Nixon said in his speech was basically that sort of stuff. It had a lot of that. But the one new thing it had in it was something that surprised me, frankly, because somebody had 'dredged up
- of arrangement that Nixon now has, in which the staff has almost excluded the cabinet? A: I think they pretty much did, except for certain people. For example Bill Wirtz couldn't get in to see the President--even if he insisted on it, at least very rarely
- . But he was helpless, because I knew that once a man's president, that if he wanted to, he couldn't do anything for you. You see precisely what's happened with President Ford pardoning ex-President Nixon; had Johnson done this, it would have completely
- to be comfortable knowing that you are working for me, that you are not working for Eisenhower or Nixon or Bobby Kennedy down the line." And I assured him that he had my total and absolute loyalty and dedication . For what that was worth I gave him that assurance
- of things that you would have been testifying before . Did you take any role at all in the 1960 election campaign beyond just an ordinary citizen? B: The 1960 election campaign? F: That's the one between Nixon and Kennedy, with Johnson of course tagging
- it was the same approach. We see already Nixon has a different approach. He's using sub-Cabinet committees. I held the view myself, particularly in the last part of the Johnson years, that it would have been a wise thing to have had a kind of sub-Cabinet committee
- , even though the guy might have spent a lot of time in Texas. However, my hunch is that if you could look at John Kennedy or anybody else, that they'd be about the same about Massachusetts, or Nixon about California. I don't think that was extraordinary
- to choose a candidate in the American election. Nixon? out. Who are they going to choose, Humphrey or It would take them all of two minutes to figure that one Humphrey's running around the country half a dove, half of this, half of that, God knows what
Oral history transcript, F. Edward Hebert, interview 1 (I), 7/15/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Hurst -- I -- 13 Nixon I recall visited, also. Many, many people did. Mr. Johnson was always quite kind to me in wanting me to be there and meet the people who visited him
- to belittle or to denigrate his position or his own effectiveness as an individual. I'm guessing at that. G: Do you think he was concerned that an ugly incident such as Vice President Nixon had [experienced] on that South American trip might have been
Oral history transcript, James R. Jones, interview 2 (II), 6/28/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- that this was an innovation with Lyndon Johnson. Is it being carried on under Nixon? I thought it was. M: I really don't know. I haven't read anything that says it is. J: I think it's good because--this is not relevant to the oral history, it's just a personal viewpoint
Oral history transcript, Elizabeth (Liz) Carpenter, interview 3 (III), 5/15/1969, by Joe B. Frantz
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Oral history transcript, Jake Jacobsen, interview 1 (I), 5/27/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- , the position of the persons in charge of the Texas Democratic party was that therefore Eisenhower and Nixon ought to go on the ballot as the Democratic nominees in Texas because our Democratic state convention went on record as favorable toward them
Oral history transcript, James C. Thomson, Jr., interview 1 (I), 7/22/1971, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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Oral history transcript, Robert E. Waldron, interview 1 (I), 1/28/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
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- in their overalls, and local people. He just worked himself up into the greatest speech you can imagine, but he made the mistake of saying, "I ask you what Dick Nixon ever did for Culpeper?'! And the crowd applauded. LBJ Presidential Library http
- for them. You weren't Remember President Nixon ordered a raid into Laos and got very severely criticized about it. G: Of course that was a very large-scale operation. H: Yes, it was. G: It was rumored--not rumored, it was reported pretty rel'iably
- on the Republican Party. landslided Nixon over JFK. In 1960 the state of Wyoming I remember in 1964 when the Republicans were talking about bringing Nelson Rockefeller out to their state convention some of the Wyoming press editorialized on that and they said
Oral history transcript, Charles M. Maguire, interview 1 (I), 7/8/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- Point who went on to become assistant to Postmaster Genera 1 Larry 0' Brien, stayed under F.ostmaster General Watson for awhile, then left to take a very high position at the University of Michigan, and has now been asked back by President Nixon