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  • ~r of the Hoover was the Rcpublicnn prc~idcnt. From Marxist winr~ or the E'rcnch socialist party his early days Lyndon B. Johnson was a libwhile atte11clin1~the pnrLy conrerence in Paris. cral with a sinnll "l". • • • Lyndon n. Johnson
  • Chiefs of'Staff in the budget area. Inter-service rivalry also co~pounded existing o.dministrative . proble!US.• The Hoover Commission Ta~.k Force on Ua.tional Security studied the situation extensively. and rccomm~ndcd a.number of.chanzes,· many
  • porcelain from previous administrations in the 1890s. Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt did a fair amount. The second Mrs. Woodrow Wilson was extremely active in this regard. The Coolidges went so far as to form a committee, which the Hoovers also used. It kind
  • he'd say just about what he was thinking. On reflection he could have, because--let's see, this was in the twenties, that was during Hoover's administration, and before that Harding I guess. Things were pretty conservative around. G: Did LBJ talk much
  • , I give you pernlission to fill his nanle in. And I called up the FBI and got hold of J. Edgar Hoover, I think it was, or the man next to him. So I talked them out of protection. Of course, they told nle they had to protect me under the law. Well, I
  • quite honestly that they didn't think they could vote for Kennedy. As young men at the age of thirty in 1928, they had voted for Hoover instead of Al Smith, and as older men at the age of sixty or thereabouts, they weren't able to bring themselves
  • to happen like what happened under the Hoover Administration. Mr. Johnson has been, he's just been very interested in banking, and he's insistent on good examinations. That's what he wants. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • to January 20. That was to avoid the lame duck session we always had in between there. A lot of politics was carried on during that time. F: Well, we nearly wrecked the country there, you know, in 1932, before Hoover could get out and Roosevelt could get
  • everything. role. I had a. feeling that J. Edgar Hoover played a large I had a feeling that J. Edgar, who hated Bobby, was doing what he could to be sure that the President was convinced that there was a Kennedy conspiracy. I think every little action
  • -thirdo eventual]3 through the m111tont ant unshckable Southern and Weotern support that r,ould ronult. !hero is n eentJ.mont here that 90 New York votes 1·,111 oont .more than -90 votes olsewhero. The oame eoonomio pressure thEit 1e rapidly puttins Hoover
  • , Senate Counties McGUIRE, Robert G., Wash., D.C. HOOOES,Luther, Rotary Intl McKEE, William F., FAA HOLLANDER,Rich-'ll'd, Washington Daily NewsMcQUADE,Lawrence c., Camnerce HOOVER,Thereosa, YW~A, NYC MEANY, George, Wash., D.C. MEEOO,IJ.oyd, Congress HORNIG
  • , and by providing policy guidance and support for each means· of. tran~ portatiC?n that will strengthen the economy·a• a whole. It follows many distinguished 0 recommendations. . , • The 1949 Hoover Commission. • The 1961" Eisenhower • The 1961 ~pecial
  • be apprehended and observed that he ought to go to jail. He then appointed a committee, consisting of representatives from Defense and State, and Bundy, Dulles and Hoover of the FBI, to review security policies. The President expressed the view that the best way
  • CONVENTION : A meeting of par­ REPUBLICAN PARTY : The party of Lincoln andtrust-bustingTheodore Roosevelt,oftencalled "G. O.P." (Grand OldParty).Now considered the "conservative" J:)8l1Y {last J)reeident, Hoover), it likes free enterprise. Once "bolationiat