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388 results
Oral history transcript, Lawrence F. O'Brien, interview 29 (XXIX), 11/3/1987, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- Don Fraser. The vice chairman of the McGovern commission, which was how it was referred to, was Senator Harold Hughes of Iowa. Obviously, the commission was heavily weighted to the liberal wing of the party. But there was a commitment and it was my
- ; labor's response to the changes; controversy surrounding the reforms, leadership of the Credentials Committee and the Democratic National Committee (DNC); Harold Hughes and Patricia Harris; Harris' election as Credentials Committee chair; the Credentials
- having a memo rewritten so it would be contemporaneous with a certain meeting that took place. He expresses concern about Mitchell and Harold Geneen of ITT as both Mitchell and Geneen had testified that they discussed policy only, not the individual ITT
- and Harold Geneen of ITT, and other memos that would be harmful if leaked; Mitchell's and Kleindienst's denials of knowledge or involvement in ITT; Terry Lenzner's and Sam Dash's demand that Robert Maheu's replacement, Chester Davis, provide them
- day on the operations side. Colonel Jasper Williams [Wilson]--I guess it was Jasper--Wilson was the principle advisor on Hop Tac because it was a corps operation and he was the corps senior advisor. So I was a fifth wheel there, unwanted representative
- Montague's involvement in Hop Tac; the intended cooperative nature of Hop Tac; why Hop Tac was unsuccessful; security as the first priority in village pacification; differences of opinion between Colonel Jasper Wilson, General William DePuy
- , the new chief of staff, Harold K. Johnson, was appointed. Harold Johnson was a man I had not known before. He came up from the position of DESOPS, Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations, who is the army's strategic planner, and he came up with a burr under
- Knowlton's military background; working in the office of Secretary of the General Staff, Harold K. Johnson, in the mid-1960s; Knowlton joining Joe Califano's staff when Califano was special assistant to the secretary and, later, deputy secretary
- a part of our history and becomes vitally concerned, as does his staff in the office of the president. We talked many times about what happened when Wilson became sick, and where for eighteen or nineteen months Mrs. Wilson and Admiral Grayson tried to run
- building he did that we looked at was the Woodrow Wilson School of Public Affairs at Princeton. I also saw another building too. And while they're beautiful and elegant buildings--I don't know if you've ever seen the one at Princeton? F: Yes. H
Oral history transcript, Adam Yarmolinsky, interview 3 (III), 10/22/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- you list Richard Boone. Boone I'm sure worked on it. Hackett working on it. Richard Dave Hackett, I don't remember Dave Bill Capron probably worked on other things. Harold Horowitz worked as a lawyer and I don't remember what part he worked
- a neat package. G: Let me ask you to discuss your allies here in the Congress and your opponents. O: You'd have to start on the House side and say that Chairman Cooley was at least willing to work with us to get a reasonable bill out. Harold Cooley
- Chairman of the House Agriculture Committee Harold Cooley; the creation of the Department of Transportation and pressure to keep the Maritime Administration separate; the 1966 minimum wage increase; the Demonstration Cities/Model Cities Program; parcel post
- of the poverty-stricken people beginning then were central city blacks. He wasn't quite ready to take on civil rights head on like LBJ did later. He figured his mandate was too thin. Wilson and Franklin D. Roosevelt. a presidency just for civil rights. Then he
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 9 (IX), 8/16/1983, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- of the coalition for that year. I'm not saying that this is the way people think of it, because again, even very experienced politicians have been caught up in this myth, mostly perpetrated by Woodrow Wilson, that that's the purpose of the political platform
- city, New York was Rome; everybody went up there for the But in any event, Premier Clemenceau had asked President Wil son how the United States government worked. extremely complicated affair." He sai d, II It I S an President Wilson said, liMy
- vigils, strong ol arms and hands .. ," an early 18th-century manual for childbirth said ol the ideal midwife. "She must have slender hands, long fingers, tender feelings, sympathy, be hopeful, and above all, silent." (Below) Charles Wilson Peale: Rachel
- of the Library. He helped Photo Archivist Kyla Wilson research and catalog photographs in the audio/visual archives, received orientation from Archivist Linda Seelke in the Reading Room where he conducted a small research project, and helped ..fetch" document
- was made in that period. Then the matter came up again at the end of 1964 in the context of a visit from [Harold] Wilson. And he just wasn't ready to make it a bargaining issue with Wilson, which he would have had to make it to get the kind of progress
- in charge to agree to stop in my hometown of Tarboro and pick me up there. I got on the train there and then we stopped in my congressional district in Rocky Mount. She spoke from the platform of the train there, and then we stopped in Wilson, also my
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 16 (XVI), 9/13/1984, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- Congresses had been selected by state legislatures, because the amendment hadn't been in effect before. This was probably a rather deceptive thing to Woodrow Wilson. There was a very remarkable Senate leader, I think one of the three greatest of all times
Oral history transcript, William B. Cannon, interview 1 (I), 5/21/1982, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- . They WOUldn't have liked me any better. that thing went. Udall did a good job as a secretary. That's the way And when you follow a man like Harold Ickes that had made the kind of reputation he had, he's pretty hard to follow [for] any man. And I didn't
- Biographical information; Judge Ben B. Lindsey; Harold Ickes; Alvin Wirtz; FDR; LBJ techniques; Harry Truman; tidelands; civil rights; 1960 Democratic convention; Chapman's health; national lawyer's group for Johnson-Humphrey in 1964; conservation
Oral history transcript, Lawrence F. O'Brien, interview 8 (VIII), 4/8/1986, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- attached here the agenda for that very meeting, and you'll notice in preparing ourselves for the meeting there's a reference to Wilson McCarthy, and he would be asked for a head count and trouble spots. Ken Birkhead would respond on the food stamp bill
- : A couple of weeks later Deputy Director Wilson also pulled out. part of a new team? M: Yes. F: Or just some dissatisfaction on his part? M: No, Wilson was a holdover, and Wilson felt that if he wasn't made Was this LBJ Presidential Library http
- Marks, Leonard Harold, 1916-2006
- the candidate himself, Governor Stevenson, was over-confident? H: It was not so much over-confidence, I think--although he was confident. . It was more a personality trait. He just did not get excited. He was as unflappable as Harold Hacmillan, at least
- Jenkins, Walter (Walter Wilson), 1918-1985
- and I got a call from the President, he changed his mind, and is sending an airplane to pick me up to go on one of those aborted peace missions. I saw the Pope, General De Gaulle, Harold Wilson, and would have continued had we not had a death
- /exhibits/show/loh/oh Friday -- I -- 17 people working. T: Were most of these people from the Budget Bureau? F: Yes. Harold Howe became involved with it. He worked with us; we invited him, and he cautioned about costs. He, of all people, would start
- giving a concert the night before down in South Carolina, and I'm giving a concert the next day in New York." I said, "Well, that's just great. You can stop by Washington in between times and sing for the Prime Minister of Great Britain, Harold Wilson
Oral history transcript, Phyllis Bonanno, interview 1 (I), 11/12/1982, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- the military. Prime Minister [Harold] Wilson was about to arrive. I always remember that whole scene, because the limousine pulled up at the South Portico and they were trying to get me out and into the Mansion very, very quickly so that I wouldn't disrupt
Oral history transcript, Elizabeth (Liz) Carpenter, interview 5 (V), 2/2/1971, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- working in that office for about thirty years. F: Among other things, Rene criticized the menu that was served Harold Wilson. C: Yes. F: Who decides on the menus? C: Bess and Mary Kaltman, the housekeeper, and Mrs. Johnson. F: Does the chef come
- tried to prepare the press by getting as much material as we could on the visitor, because most of President Johnson's visitors were people not very well known in Washington. Only occasionally you got a Peron or a Harold Wilson. -:'. Particularly
- the appropriations, get approvals, things of that nature? J: Yes, I can1t remember. with PWA, WPA, Interior. There was a man named--he was always meeting I don't remember exactly what [Harold] Ickes had to do with it, but Ickes had something big to do
- Jenkins, Walter (Walter Wilson), 1918-1985
- responsible for that than anybody else. it. Probably Hank [Henry Hall] Wilson worked with him on Maybe Lyndon Johnson asked Landrum, I don't know. I wasn't a party to it, so I don't know. G: Was Lister Hill asked to sponsor it in the Senate, do you know
- was overthrown and Harold Wilson, the Labor Government won the election. So here was sort of a climax within the campaign and I was with Palmer Hoyt in Denver, and the President of course had his lines out to everybody, his usual telephoning. Hoyt and I talked
- weekends there. F: What sort of state dinners? W: I don't remember who they were for anymore. F: Anything else? (Some new voices enter into conversation from this point on; Mrs. Edie Wasserman, Mrs. Lyndon Johnson) EW: One was the Harold Wilson? W
Oral history transcript, Hubert H. Humphrey, III, interview 1 (I), 8/13/1979, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- in the Buddhist movement, Thich Tri Quang or any of those people? H: Yes. They were very articulate. Tri Quang was always a kind of mystic. Trying to talk to him was like going to a Harold Pinter play. I don't know if you remember when the Dallas Cowboys
Oral history transcript, Norman S. Paul, interview 1 (I), 2/21/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- dealt frequently with the legislative liaison staff--Henry Hall Wilson, Larry O'Brien, etc. But it was mostly in the context of either what to propose in the way of legislation or how the legislative program itself was going, that I participated. I
- he did over the next two years, which brought about Watergate. G: I want to ask you some of the details about your role in the 1970 election, but first, anything on [G. Harold] Carswell and [Clement] Haynesworth? Any role that you had in generating