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  • . about four. My guess is that Kennedy got The others were for Johnson and votes for Hubert Humphrey and one or two for Adlai Stevenson. So Utah was split all over the place. The other thing that I remember quite well is that of being invited up
  • 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Whiteside W: II 24 He told me that held just spent a month and a half convincing Adlai Stevenson that he would not be a candidate and said lid ruined
  • are the very people who should be supportive. I'm not suggesting their criticism wasn't valid. For example, Adlai Stevenson strongly objected to McGovern's position on amnesty and 4 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT
  • Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Read -- Interview II -- 10 R: To this day, and I've seen everything that [Adali] Stevenson left, I've seen everything that Secretary
  • to overstate my national I began \vorking in national campaigns, as I recall, in 1956, involvement. being head of the Speakers' Bureau in Southern California for Adlai Stevenson. I had a role in John Kennedy's campaign in 1960, and a minor role
  • - -there were some votes for Adlai Stevenson, and the rest were for John F. Kennedy. So as the convention went on, as you know, Kennedy for President on the first ballot. we nominated John F. The next morning we were having a breakfast of all our
  • the article about 1952, how it got started on that. I discussed with you about his taking the lead then and going on radio. G: Actively campaigning for [Adlai] Stevenson. J: Actively campaigning for Stevenson. Now, I don't know whether you've got his
  • that Senator Johnson was campaigning actively for Governor [Adlai] Stevenson, or that he was just sort of giving party lip service? K: This is a little difficult to know, what motivates a man. I had felt at least that Senator Johnson was keeping his party
  • Stevenson or Johnson at the Hotel Adolphus? OM: No, I was here in Washington on both of those occasions. VM: Dale, let me interrupt you. On the time that Mr. Johnson and Mrs. Johnson were there, we were getting ready for their visit to Corpus Christi
  • ; campaigning in Texas; Ladies for Lyndon; the whistle-stop campaign; how they responded to opposition while campaigning; LBJ as VP; incidents at the Adolphus Hotel with LBJ and Adlai Stevenson; Bruce Alger; the time following the assassination; how
  • to show you how he operated. I was on a trip around the world, on leave, when he appointed me to this post as ambassador to the United Nations, and I was in Rome when Stevenson died, and I was Ambassador. in Beirut when Goldberg was made the Then when I
  • selected in 1960, large state primaries. We bluffed it out reasonably well with the threat of going in. There was strong Adlai Stevenson support in California at that time. We did the best we could, making the deal. I won't pursue that further because I've
  • and get the right kind of an ascot tie, et cetera, et cetera. Was Adlai Stevenson on that trip? I think so. G: Yes. R: I'm pretty sure he was, because there was a woman diplomat on it, too. Adlai, the gentleman, gave up his bed to her. There were two
  • Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Reedy -- XXVI -- 23 cruel, mimicry. God, what a mimic he was. You ought to see him mimicking Bobby Kennedy. G: Really? R: Oh, it was mean. G: Was it? R: Or Adlai Stevenson, when he
  • became a candidate for president and Humphrey became a candidate for president and Johnson became a candidate for president, and I can't remember all of them-- F: [Adlai] Stevenson was in it that year. 2 LBJ Presidential Library http
  • was a long, tough, and hard fight, where Ambassador [Adlai] Stevenson was, who was an alleged 1iberal and did not see what, to me, was the profound i m p o r t a n c e o f having a black in a ranking ambassadorial level there. Mainly working with President
  • 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 12 Farmers for Kennedy-Johnson, Farmers for Stevenson-Sparkman, Farmers for Stevenson-Kefauver . I guess it was my suggestion as much as others, but I felt
  • remember any others? L: There were others and I don't remember, but Okie is very available. Now, there was one other incident I remember. Bill Moyers ripped a flash off the teletype that Adlai Stevenson had dropped dead in London. At that time
  • . It did not enter into my own decision. TG: When was this proposal made? I associate it with Adlai Stevenson. AG: No, it was made before, and then typical of Lyndon--now I can call him Lyndon, he's dead; I always called him Mr. President although I
  • served in that position during the years of 1951 and 1952. They were the Majority Leader and the Majority Whip. In 1952 in an election with Eisenhower and Stevenson, we became the minority by two votes, 49 to 47, and Ernest McFarland served those two
  • Stevenson's possible renomination. Were you involved in that? C: No, I mentioned I took practically no part at all in the '52 campaign, and I think even less in '56. I believe I went to both those conventions just in order to keep in touch, to see old
  • , particularly during your time, I suppose, the one which involved U Thant and Adlai Stevenson. B: I never thought there was anything in it, but I never, to be honest with you, went back and checked all the cables and whatnot, because I really assumed that what
  • . Johnson when we had invited him to come to Arizona as a speaker in the Adlai Stevenson campaign, and had had some association with him at the national Democratic conventions when I was a delegate from Arizona. But after that time, I had no real close
  • --and Adlai Stevenson's when he was governor, Director of Finance and Chief Economist and then he came back. 1954. I worked there until I went back to California in I opened a one-man mortgage brokerage firm and spent a year-- M: This was the Bankers
  • that if Senator Russell could not get the nomination maybe another Southerner like Senator Johnson [would be chosen] as the vice presidential nominee? T: No, I don't recall. Of course, as it wound up, you know, Adlai Stevenson got the nomination
  • of 1956, in the preconvention campaign when Adlai Stevenson was chosen a second time? H: No, I tried to help Adlai out in Arizona. F: There was a little bit of a boom for Mr. Johnson at that time that never really got started; particularly
  • because we were on the platform together. He was nominating Mr. [Adlai] Stevenson and I was seconding it, and I urged him then to run for the vice-presidential nomination. He demurred, but in the next twenty-four hours he did agree and we were able
  • incident that seems absolutely unreasonable and absurd, but it had some beneficial effect after. F: You were an honorary chairman for Adlai Stevenson's campaign, the second term. H: Yes. F: Did you work much with Johnson in that campaign, or not? H
  • Stabilization Board and other means, and his reputation was superb. I said, "Arthur, I understand thoroughly." I'm sure that there was an association with Adlai Stevenson, and that political world was something I didn't know too much about but respected, so I
  • Post critical--I think it was a piece about Stevenson--"It's very hard to make new friends when you're President." God knows that's true. So I think each president brings with him a recollection of some reporters who he liked or he thought LBJ
  • remember thiS, he went to Laredo in 1956, I believe, when Adlai Stevenson who was the Democratic nominee for President of the United States. And I remember this very distinctly, that he took a young man to Laredo and introduced him to those assembled. He
  • . We finally arrived at a plan which we turned over to the President in 1962--Kennedy was following this closely . One of -my close friends was Adlai Stevenson, who was, I remember, in the � � � � LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org
  • , which was nice. G: But it was kind of funny. Did Eleanor Roosevelt ever try to persuade LBJ to promote more liberal legislation? P: I don t know. G: I know that she was very close to Adlai Stevenson, and he was not. I I don t know. I Did she
  • /loh/oh WILSON -- I -- 16 W: Oh, only to deny that he had any intention of doing it, and [to say] that if he did it, then held have a chance. At that stage, Adlai Stevenson--at least he said he [Johnson] thought--had the edge. But this changed
  • , from essentially either window-dressing for the campaign--"See how many intellectuals I got to sign my advertisement?"--which Kennedy had developed, I think, initially with the response to the effort of the popularity of Stevenson on the campus. It had
  • did want to be vice president. Sam wanted to be the veep worse than hell because I've told you that four years before when we had the Adlai Stevenson business and Sam went in to ask Adlai to make Lyndon the vice president and he came back