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  • Series > Transcripts of LBJ Library Oral Histories (remove)
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  • Subject > 1964 Campaign (remove)

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  • cut from Goldwater cloth. way around. I think from their point of view, it was the other Goldwater was cut from their cloth. The Wyoming Republicans in 1956, 1952, really believed that Dwight Eisenhower was a trick the Democrats played
  • : The public including the Senators? W: I think many of the Senators. I think that as the hearings progressed, we found that people within the defense establishment had strongly warned the President--Prepident Eisenhower--and the Secretary of Defense
  • [For interviews 1 and 2] Family relationship with LBJ; visits of LBJ to Weisl home; Preparedness Subcommittee after Sputnik launch; role as special counsel; Department of Defense bureaucracy; Eisenhower Administration; cabinet secretary; George
  • . I saw Mr. Johnson probably one or two or three times a year. B: Weren't you fairly close to President Eisenhower when Mr. Johnson was Senate Majority Leader? S: I was never really close to Mr. Eisenhower. well. I knew him fairly I saw him twice
  • - fifties when the Harris Gas Act was laboriously passed through both houses of Congress under the Eisenhower Administration, it was due in the main to the work of Johnson and Rayburn. Eisenhower vetoed it, yet Eisenhower got the support of the Republican
  • . One thing Prime Minister MacMillan of England had said to Jack about President Eisenhower and Vice President Nixon, that Eisenhower never let Nixon on the place, impressed Jack a lot . Every time there was a state � � � � LBJ Presidential Library
  • down in the course of it. He attempted to serve as an intermediary between the Eisenhower Administration and [Orval] Faubus. I suspect that he was in touch with Lyndon, a kind of a tactical matter during some of that time. F: I haven't interviewed
  • in space was fairly accurate; that what had happened was, I think, largely budgetary considerations--the Eisenhower Administration had--well, not exactly suppressed--certainly had not given a great deal of emphasis-- F: Had preferred to disbelieve-- W
  • [For interviews 1 and 2] Family relationship with LBJ; visits of LBJ to Weisl home; Preparedness Subcommittee after Sputnik launch; role as special counsel; Department of Defense bureaucracy; Eisenhower Administration; cabinet secretary; George
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Adams--I--16 A: I didn't know what to say with that. As I started to say before the press photographers, I had sung for Eisenhower and for Kennedy, and I never was asked by Johnson. they said, "Well, he didn't attend
  • another. I believe I agreed sometime late in January, after I had gone back to Dallas to come up. My partner had worked in the Eisenhower campaign, and he wanted to come up and join the Eisenhower Administration. and I came up here very early in February
  • the two houses, there would have been no end to it. I've seen a number of instances which I felt that Mansfield and McCormack really didn't push, the way that Rayburn and Johnson would have, well, as they did for Eisenhower. P: There was a great man
  • it out of a department, we never would have had any means to get anything done with. So that's the reason why we put it there. It was well known that the Congress was not going to let anybody go beyond what Eisenhower had done in expenditures. You'll
  • arose because of Johnson's leadership in the Senate. And insofar as it was a problem the problem was that Stevenson felt Johnson was not making the issues on which he would have to run in 1956, because as you recall, Johnson was supporting the Eisenhower
  • ran into Dr. [George] Burkley, who was President Kennedy's private physician, and he was getting into his car. He'd gotten cut off from the President, too. you give me a ride?" I said, "Will I had known him for years, since Eisenhower days; he'd
  • of anybody--and as I say, I had dealings with a number of people in Washington in high offices, both Republican and Democrat--this was in the Eisenhower years, and I don't think there's a single person that I ever met there that impressed me as a man
  • on the staff. There was no justification for having an agricultural economist as a member of the council, even though that had been the tradition under Eisenhower and Truman, I guess. F: Did the President ever voice the opinion that in one sense agriculture
  • , Politics and Mr. Sundquist is the Policy~ the Eisenhower, Kennedy and Johnson Years, and as I understand, is to be the author of a forthcoming volume on the administration of some of the programs enacted during the Kennedy and Johnson years. lid like