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1059 results
- a memo outlining both sides of the question of whether he should resign as majority leader, and raising some questions he should answer in order to make his decision. VP Nixon and Pat Nixon, on good will tour of South America, encounter violent anti-U.S
- , 1983 INTERVIEWEE: ARTHUR KRIM INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. Krim's residence, New York City Tape 1 of 3 G: Mr. Krim, let's today discuss that period after the 1968 election but before the Nixon inauguration. K: All right
- LBJ’s frustration at the end of his presidency, especially regarding the Soviet Union and Vietnam; LBJ’s attempt to meet with Nixon and Soviets; Urban League dinner in New York; LBJ’s concern over press coverage of anti-war, anti-LBJ picketing; sale
- within 2,300 votes of beating him that year. This, I think, surprised a lot of people, perhaps including myself. So there was I a lot of feeling that I ought to stick around and make the race again in '60. The state chairman, Pat Lucey, was strong
- Career; contact with LBJ; Senator McCarthy; Pat Lucey; Carlyle Runge; Proxmire-Johnson controversy; 1960 Presidential election; his appointment as Administrator of REA; REA program emphasis on wholesale power supply; March 1964 Annual meeting
Oral history transcript, Sam Houston Johnson, interview 3 (III), 6/9/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- ] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Johnson -- III -- 3 So Taft and Lyndon--you see, they [the Republican and Democrats in the Senate] were 47 and 47, but Taft was just defeated by one vote, because Nixon
Oral history transcript, Sidney A. Saperstein, interview 2 (II), 6/28/1986, by Janet Kerr-Tener
(Item)
- of the original ones. We thought we had coordinated that more with the rest of the institutes, but when Benno Schmidt--I can't remember whose administration it was-was very active--I think it was in the Kennedy Administration, I'm not sure. No, it was in Nixon's
- -in-law's. David Acheson, Pat Acheson. And Clifford came. He said, "Old boy, we've done right well so far." He said, "We've got another one to do now." So we went off into a corner and talked for an hour about Paris. I went back to the White House about nine
- of on a circuit with the party after the appearance with Humphrey, or how did this general campaign develop? A: I don't really know. F: You mean, Pat Brown? A: Yes. I did get involved with the governorship [race]. [It was] President Nixon's worst defeat
Oral history transcript, Joseph L. Rauh, Jr., interview 2 (II), 8/1/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- to stop Kennedy, and Kampleman and Herb Waters and that oil fellow, Pat O'Connor, and a number of others--all anti-ADA. So the Humphrey camp was not one camp but two, and quite bitter and unpleasant. It wasn't a very happy time. M: Even in 1959? R
- , something like that. Pat Moynihan had a large hand in developing that report, which showed certain correlations between the LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID
- of the Johnson Administration; not to write them off simply because their hearts were with Kennedy. There was one particular example, a vivid one, is a very close friend of mine, Pat Moynihan.Pat Moynihan was never very close to Bob Kennedy, and I don't know how
- ; Pat Moynihan; LBJ’s judgment of character; Marvin Watson; Nixon’s staff; Jack Valenti; Doug Cater; Califano’s preparation of legislative program.
- Democratic senators hold a series of meetings as they return to Washington. 1/3 Congress convenes. Vice President Nixon welcomes LBJ (Lyndon Johnson) back to the Senate in his first appearance there since his heart attack. LBJ and Senator Knowland speak
- campaign, I think, at Santa Barbara. G: Was that Nixon? Me: No, with Dawes. G: With whom? Me: Charlie Dawes. F: With Mc: The first Vice President he ever saw. G: Oh, Charles Dawes. Mc: This was 1924, I think he said. ~ vice president
- in the past fairly usual for presidents to continue at the head with Schlesinger, Sr., regardless of party affiliation. But by this time Nixon was in, and I feel sure, I know that the Historical Commission people recommended that I be reappointed. Holmes told
- How Frantz joined the National Historical Publications Commission; LBJ’s practice of allowing other people to announce good news; Nixon administration’s trouble finding Frantz’s replacement; Marietta Brooks; assembling an advisory board for his
- --he's dead--and he said, "Dudley, why don't you consider running against Lyndon Johnson? The country needs leadership desperately. win. II He didn't say I could But I had a letter or so, and I got a telephone call from my cousin Pat Tenant
- his prerogative as majority leader, is the first to be recognized by Nixon. He offers a resolution to revise Rule 22 to enable two-thirds of members present and voting to shut off debate on any measure, including a rules change. The resolution also
- organization leaders who are with us was stand pat, don't rock the boat and don't succumb to any Humphrey blandishments." Then I had a series of recommendations. The fact of the matter is that I was far from sanguine about what was going to happen in New York
- Robert F. Kennedy (RFK) loss to Eugene McCarthy in the Oregon primary; support for RFK going into the New York primary; concerns going into the California primary and memories of 1960 California problems with Edmund "Pat" Brown; the RFK/McCarthy
- of the LBJ Library. THE COVER of this issue features sketches by Muse um Technician Pat Partridge (right). The sketches il lustrate activities of the Library, and are taken from photographs that appear in this issue and the enclosed report. A graduate
- in the 1960 campaign. F: Did you do that swing through the South with the Johnsons? T: No, I didn't. Like "What did Richard Nixon ever do for Culpepper?" No, I missed that one. 5 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
- . As I say, the fact of the matter is that to a great extent he did give us considerable latitude, and the staff did not interfere excessively, in my judgment. I make a point of this because it's something that has been discussed very recently since Nixon
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 16 (XVI), 9/13/1984, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- : What do you mean by that? R: Well, the Irish usually classify it as pig in the parlor, that's down at the bottom. Then you get the lace curtain, that's when Pat gets a job and Momma kicks the pig out of the house and puts it in a sty in the back
- ; LBJ announces; the Addison's Disease story; national convention in Los Angeles’ LBJ accepts the VP nomination; Rayburn and Nixon; Connally and LBJ; RFK; Acapulco trip; LBJ’s contribution to the ticket; the Jewish vote; the Adolphus Hotel incident
- grew almost out of proportion. He had one of the young black women who was a secretary in the White House with him, and he had Pat Harris, who had been one of the people involved in the election campaign. Anyway, this was a very great occasion
Oral history transcript, Clifford L. Alexander, Jr., interview 1 (I), 11/1/1971, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- Johnson, the step was made, and a black ambassador was sent up there, and really sent up there and was told that that was going to be. his name. Others on the list Frank Williams was not related to that, Pat Harris was one; I believe Hugh Smythe
Oral history transcript, Sam Houston Johnson, interview 2 (II), 4/14/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- them. you, all of you, get out. shoulder. I'm going to run." Hell, I ran, of course. straight to KVET. we put it on there. The rest of He patted me on the I got out of there and went Stuart Long was broadcasting the news for KVET
- issues involved are pretty well set. my first phase in the campaign~ The basic They can be expressed best I thinkl:N the terms "who will the people trust" and Humphrey is hammering at· this one again and again, attacking Wallace, lumping Nixon
Oral history transcript, William M. Blackburn, interview 1 (I), 5/21/1969, by David G. McComb
(Item)
- right . M: As you were with Texas . B: i~i : . . Irvine Sprague, who's now director of FDIC, had the West Coast, California, because he'd worked for Governor [Pat] Brown out there at one time . We had Chuck Roche who was a holdover from Kennedy's
- politically. H: I frankly don't believe that the President foresaw Community Action developing in the manner in which it developed. Pat Moynihan has pointed out that there were at least three objectives and really quite mutually exclusive for people who
- in a radio broadcast that he will oppose Tom Connally for his U.S. Senate seat. 1/24 Senator Pat McCarran writes LBJ soliciting his opinion regarding the relationship between Congress and the Executive regarding treaties and executive agreements. Jake
- to attend). Former press secretaries and depu ties were George Christian and Joe Laitin from the Johnson Administra tion; Gerald Warren (Nixon); Jerald terHort (Ford); Jody Powell (Carter); and Larry Speakes (Reagan). Christian also moderated one
- discusses public perceptions of the Congress. 3 Speakersat the Library. .. Jim Ketchum Jim Ketchum, presently curator of the U.S. Senate, was curator of the White House from the Kennedy through the Johnson and into the Nixon administrations. Among his
- Johnson? S: Yes. Pat McNamara was, even though somewhat junior in status in the Senate, nevertheless by the fortuitous set of circumstances that resulted in the selection of the right committees when he came in in '54 had already advanced
- . in my opinion. Julie Eisenho\\er, daughter or former Pr sident and Mr . Richard Nixon. talked about Pat Nixon; TJ,e l. n· told Story, her poignant memoir of her mother. I thmk her particular contrihut1un - one that she will prohahly be most rcmemhercd
- Among lssuc Numb-er LXXI April 30, I 999 Famed Photographer Duncan on Exhibit The blank stare of a weary Khe Sanh defender ... the raised fist of a combative Richard M. Nixon ... the Japanese surrender aboard the U. .S. Missouri ... a jubilant
Oral history transcript, Sharon Francis, interview 3 (III), 6/27/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- , and then we got Liz in an elevator and sent her down. I sort of patted Fuller on the back and said, "Now don't you worry, and don't you ever forget anything she said, because you know she's right. But don't let it get to you.” Charlie and I rolled our eyes
Oral history transcript, Lady Bird Johnson, interview 42 (XLII), 11/5/1994, by Harry Middleton
(Item)
- Governor Pat Brown, his wife, Bernice, and Australian Prime Minister Robert Menzies; India Edwards; friends such as Zendra Pipkin and Richard and Maureen Neuberger; LBJ's battle with Tom Miller over what Austin citizens had to pay for electricity; Luci's
- and vigor, ready to back our efforts . We were a fresh committee- council, a wonderful group of people on the council by the way, made up of a cross-section of disciplines . There was Fritz .Gutheim, an architectural historian of note---there was Pat
- historic sites; Willard Hotel; J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI Building; Lady Bird’s time and attention; Federal Highway Commission; National Plaza; Owings close to the Nixon Administration; Nixon’s interest in the National Plaza; LBJ Library; Skidmore-Owings
- : Not at all. One of our senior executives, a member of our board of directors, was very active in the Nixon campaigns, and I guess I'm identified as a Johnson Democrat, and yet we sit in the same meetings. F: Now, you mentioned Arthur Krim. Is there kind
- fundraising dinner at the Ambassador Hotel; housing and Proposition 14; Pat Brown; Wasserman’s appointment to the executive committee of the Kennedy Center; LBJ’s ability to be a 'real' person; visits to the Ranch; 1968 election; the 'fatigue factor
Oral history transcript, Earle C. Clements, interview 1 (I), 10/24/1974, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- that stood out above any other in the 1958 contest, it was Utah. I felt so good after being in California, and we got Clair Engle to run. Actually, Pat Brown really wanted to run for the Senate, but he had agreed on Clair Engle to run for the Senate. Then Pat
- by Emotionalism By (;F,ORGE H. HALL Of the Po~t-Di~pa1t,h St•"• VICE PRESIDENT NIXON'S proposed new policy in the Formosa Strait has re opened an emotion-charged issue that the American people never have been able tn consider dispassionately. I ts roots extend