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  • /exhibits/show/loh/oh Krim -- I -- 21 who support the idea of a government taking care of those in need, the opposite of what elected President Reagan in l980. I mean, this was the appeal to people--and many of them wealthy--who felt the system would
  • or a secretary of state role and to speak with such precision that each word is going to carry a very unusual weight. And they're not accustomed to it. We're seeing it right now with President Reagan. It's quite difficult to adapt a general political style
  • Johnson, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Carter, now Reagan. Since 1968 when Nixon came in and he wanted to do away with the Great Society, he wanted to close the Job Corps centers and finally relented. This year, 1981, there is a greater number of slots
  • the Republican party, and a Reagan nomination would split the Republican party. Parties rarely nominate a candidate that is going to split the party. B: Then did you participate more actively after the convention in the Humphrey campaign? R: I didn't
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Cline -- II -- 26 I can see Reagan doing that; he's beginning to do it a little bit right now. But Johnson didn't do it. And yet he knew it was his responsibility and I think if he's to be criticized it is for taking
  • . Reagan had a huge program, but he enacted it the first year and he hasn't done much since. He had a huge tax cut the first year and an expenditure jump and he's just held onto that. I don't think Jerry Ford or Carter--they didn't have much. Nixon didn't
  • , Enclosed is a copy- of a etter REAGAN,since my :groblem involves some how tied which I sent tc;, GOVERNOR SOOIALSECURITY,and 1s up w1 th STATE PROGRAMS, 1 t became necessary to· wrJ. te to you'. Please refer I w111 appr1o1ate; SYSTEM, to renew
  • the war in which, as it drags on, and a.:. -che election approaches, more and more into the arena of partisan politics. 2. The vote against consideration of the resolution was not a vote of lack of support for the war. (Babcock and Reagan, for example
  • . Bator as­ serted. today held firmly by some in Washington. is that glasnost and per­ estroika would not have happened had it not been for Reagan's def nse buildup in the 1980s. What would Rostow make of the notion Lhat Reagan·s policy forced the Soviets
  • to come right back to Washington to finish this session.” c. 6/11 LBJ and Carl Vinson are conferees on the Extension of the Rubber Act. 6/12 Reagan Brown, a thirty-year-old from Terrell, is challenging Rayburn for his congressional seat. He launched
  • Communist problems and anti-Communist improvement to the activities of our Vietnam Station. - 9 - Thursday, July 27. 1967 -- 3:15 p. m. Mr. p,re sident: This is merely to report a telephone call from Jack Irwin: He briefed Gov. Reagan. Reagan eald
  • honored those force levels. We weren't up to them then, but every president all the way to Reagan--those same force levels obtain. And people, when I make speeches about the past, when I tell them that, and say, "You know, we quit racing in 1962
  • , so that they would withdraw the veto. At one point Governor Reagan of California was bragging about the number of vetoes that he had issued on our program, and we never considered that quite a proper contest for a governor to engage in. G
  • , by car--and he would always drive; I soon got used to the idea that he was his own driver--by jeep we visited four of the ranches, the Lewis Ranch and the Haywood and the Reagan and the Scharnhorst. We visited one of his neighbors, Bill Heath, who 19
  • Billy Graham was sort of a president gatherer. In subsequent years I noticed with what ease he moved to Nixon and then Ford and then Carter. Now he seems to be breaking a little bit with Reagan on the nuclear issue. I met Billy Graham after
  • what my relations would have been with Reagan if I had been--when he was governor, I know that he took exception to something that CBS did, and a friend of mine from California said, "You better come out and see him, because someday he's going
  • Rono~d Reagan, o farwner lib.oral Oe.moc1'o~ ond one of th• fifnt ·indudry't masr ardent unior1 leader,,. ., state ca-chairman of rhe Citi~n, for '$ena'or lorry Gold.wot.,, Among fhoM ht li,u lri hi1 Repvblican coffi9 ore: John Wayne, lay llo"9rs