Discover Our Collections
Limit your search
Tag- Digital item (16)
- Allen, Robert S. (Robert Sharon), 1900-1981 (1)
- Barrow, Allen E. (1)
- Bowles, Chester Bliss, 1901-1986 (1)
- Brown, Edmund G. (Edmund Gerald), 1905-1996 (1)
- Harris, Patricia, 1924-1985 (1)
- Hughes, Elizabeth (1)
- Hughes, Richard J. (Richard Joseph), 1909- (1)
- Kramer, Herbert J. (1)
- Nabrit, James M. (1)
- O'Donnell, Kenneth P. (Kenneth Phillip), 1924-1977 (1)
- Purcell, Graham (1)
- Schnittker, John A. (1)
- Spock, Benjamin, 1903-1998 (1)
- Weaver, George L.P. (1)
- 1969-01-06 (2)
- 1968-10-30 (1)
- 1968-11-21 (1)
- 1969-03-10 (1)
- 1969-03-28 (1)
- 1969-05-19 (1)
- 1969-05-30 (1)
- 1969-07-23 (1)
- 1969-07-29 (1)
- 1969-08-06 (1)
- 1969-11-11 (1)
- 1970-07-13 (1)
- 1970-08-19 (1)
- 1972-06-11 (1)
- 1982-10-23 (1)
- Kennedy, Robert F., 1925-1968 (16)
- Assassinations (5)
- Vietnam (5)
- 1964 Campaign (2)
- JFK Assassination (2)
- Jenkins, Walter (Walter Wilson), 1918-1985 (2)
- King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1929-1968 (2)
- National Youth Administration (U.S.) (2)
- Outer Space (2)
- 1960 Campaign (1)
- 1960 campaign (1)
- Great Society (1)
- Humphrey, Hubert H. (Hubert Horatio), 1911-1978 (1)
- Immigration (1)
- Natural resources and national parks (1)
- Text (16)
- Oral history (16)
16 results
- not read that. I mean to. Y: Well, you'll find it very clearly laid out in there. At any rate, the task force that President Kennedy had set up, which was in effect Walter Heller and Kermit Gordon and their staff, the Council of Economic Advisers' staff
Oral history transcript, Kenneth P. O'Donnell, interview 1 (I), 7/23/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- sense, and so therefore ~1e were not happy with the kind of leaders hip they were giv i ng in the United States Senate. He thought they were overly cooperative 1·1ith President Eisenhower and that they ~1ere not--this really goes to the Democra
- letter. At that time I was still invited by the Johnson Administration to be in the White House Conference on World Cooperation and a conference on education. I was invited to be in two conferences after I parted company with him. G: Another
- Campaigning for LBJ in 1964; serving on National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy; disagreement about Vietnam War; letters to LBJ about the war; RFK; HHH candidacy; White House Conference on International Cooperation; Spock trial; civil
- and that race and so forth. Once Lyndon knew I was aware of what was going on, his interest was to keep me from writing anything. I was very willing to cooperate because I was eager to help in any way I could. And his efforts paid off. forty seats or more
- an army, on the assumption that the U .S . would never let Pakistan attack them . Since 1954 we had told them we never would allow them to . Every U .S . Ambassador--Allen, Cooper, Bunker, Galbraith and I--had assured them of this . I don't know why I
- that I was here. With the cooperation of the Management 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
Oral history transcript, George L.P. Weaver, interview 1 (I), 1/6/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
Oral history transcript, Edmund Gerald (Pat) Brown, interview 2 (II), 8/19/1970, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- cooperative with me during the whole period I was Governor . This may be a little bit ahead of your story, but in '66 the President � � � LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories
Oral history transcript, Patricia Roberts Harris, interview 1 (I), 5/19/1969, by Stephen Goodell
(Item)
- think in This was the summer of the Co-Fo(?) and there was a good deal of cooperation between both black and white elements in the South at that time. I'm not sure of my chronology, I'm not sure whether the three murders had occurred prior
- ; it's not like holding it in the winter there. RH; Well, the hotels cooperated splendidly, and the President sent Marvin Watson up here with a very nice fellow from East Texas named Blake Gillen. And Blake Gillen and Marvin and I had a lot of fun. We
- judgment, went from a very slow moving, almost sullen body toward Mr. Kennedy, to quite a cooperative, aggressive, or at least progressive entity under Mr. Johnson's leadership. I think there are rationalizations that do belong there, but not all [can
- well. I knew And English seemed to have most to do with it; I think he'd been Kennedy's closest leader in the state and then after the assassination, he was very cooperative with Johnson. And he asked me to be campaign director, which I did. F
- ] he was going to make it more than just a title, an office, he was going to work at it if he could, and [he] apparently did . I guess that was with the cooperation of President Kennedy . F: Did you get any sort of insights into the awarding