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  • this. I said, "Well, I can be on your side but I don't think I want to work for you or anything." But then that summer, Senator Johnson asked me to come up and work in Senator [Richard] Russell's effort to get the Democratic nomination [for President
  • 7 You mentioned Richard Russell--Dick Russell was along. Sam never did play poker, but he liked to kibitz. Sam Rayburn, Homer [Thornberry] and Myron Blalock, Stu Symington, Lloyd Bentsen, and I've forgotten who else. But anyway we were playing
  • require the use of troops to enforce, and he didn't like that so much. Thereafter he held a conference with Senator [Richard] Russell, who had made the charge on the floor that they could enforce at the point of a bayonet. Well, it was from that point
  • of the report to President-elect Nixon. (A lfst of the major Committee proposals can be found at Tab "A" of the report~) As it stands now your tentative schedule calls for you report officially at noon on Monday. After discussing and John Rockefeller's
  • from Governor Richard J. Hughes of ·New Jersey who, in a letter to me, says: - - , r •ff "I returned from this trip with a high respect for the courage of the Vietnamese people and with a confirmed belief in the • honesty of the September 3 elections
  • PEACE TALKS ??? • • • ANOTHER KOREA? ... OR WORSE? * JUNE 27, 1950-JAN. 11, 196B-DEPT. OF DEFENSE Albert Sp.4 Richard Decorated World-War II, Army-Air Corps, Europe Elected a Democrat and re-elected a Republican BARRETT Twice-wounded Vietnam
  • to the President MEETING - August 11, 1965 DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE J. Richard Grant William Seabron CENSUS BUREAU Conrad Taeuber CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION Is t dore L. Risen Charles J~ Sparks COMMISSION ON CIVIL RIGHTS Walter Lewis Marian Yankauer COMMUNITY
  • . · settlement · · ·--1 In Johnson's ~larch 31 speech, · when he also announced he would THE SPECTRUi.\[ extends from not seek re-election, the President former Vice President Richard limited the bombing of North Viet- Nixon. calling for a 'moratorium Mm
  • ? Is there time for the Vice President to catch Mr. Nixon? How would the President view Mr .. Nixon's pre·sidency if he is elected? . I . 2. What is the President• s present thinking about Vietnam, and • . the Paris talks! Does the President feel the military
  • the President what he wants. ~· -Richard Helms Attachment l .. . ~-.: - -' . : ·.-;. . FOR ... NO. I AUG 54 10I . AE'LACES FOAM I0• 101 .. ' ·: 1, ,, ... ••• t ,· ·., . ' ( .. .. . . . -. :..-.. ( Byi:M/._, N.t\RA.Date
  • be watching a Kennedy fighting a Nixon for the have been Democrats who dislike President Johnson as a man · presidency. And this· in turn will have its effect on Mr more than they dislike the Vietnam war. Others may have Nixon's position. The swing against
  • and Mrs. Nixon, Senator Dirksen, Speaker McCormack, Vice President and Mrs. Humphrey, Vice President-elect and Mrs. Agnew, Senator Mansfield, Congressman G. Ford, Senator Jordan, Congressman Carl Albert, Lynda, Luci, Ambassador Leonard Marks, Mr. and Mrs
  • to Washington with the initial term of Richard M. Kleberg, who had been elected to Congress from Corpus Christi . That had at one time been part of the same congressional district with San Antonio . They had split off this Nueces County with sev­ eral other
  • ON WIDE SPREAD DISCONTENT OVER THE WAR . MCCARTHY•s CYN ICIS :~ I S C}{AR ACTER ISTIC OF THE ~AN . LAWRENCE : NIXON IS AHEAD IN THE RACE FOR THE GOP NOMINATION 3 ASED ON GALLU? ?OLL OF REPUBLICAN COUNTY CHAiR MEN . ROCK ­ EFELLER WOULD HAVE BEEN
  • , that was at the Speaker ' s personal request. Pnd then the President had respect for Lyndon ' s judgment, and he knew some people the President didn ' t knm·1. Staffing an administration, as Mr. Nixon has found, is very difficult. They talked al most every day
  • and, on the pacificat ion s i de, into the new combined organization which Ambassador Komer directs as General Westmoreland's executive agent. ,, . ~~ Richard Helms Director Attachment I, l·• j l cc: The Secretary of State The Secretary of Defense Special
  • . Calltornla 90012 ( \1) ( THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON March 20, 1965 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT Press Contacts, Week of Marc),1.15 On March 15, Crosby Noyes brought in one of his foreign reporters, Mr. Richard Critchfield. Most of the talk was about
  • reliable information in the past advised that several klansmen from the Birmingham, Alabama, and Atlanta, Georgia, areas plan to take firearms with them to Montgomery for the Klan rally. EMPLOYMENT PROTEST, SUMTERCOUNTY,ALABAMA The ~everend Felix Nixon
  • and coor,era.tion. Lyndon ✓ a. Jolutso.11 Tuesday, February ZS, 1967 -- 7:05 p. m. Mr. President: Prime Minister Wilson's office wanted you to know th.a t, as a matter of courtesy -- but no more -- the Prime Minister has agreed to see Mr. Richard
  • E.J. '. .fI.i '· ~· \ [ J - 2 - · C l,3(u.) , (4) ~ Richard Helms Director (s) INl'OJilMA TION _...._ ...,, JIIM 12. 19'8 -- 8:40 p.m. Mr. PreaWeat: L A State De,-rtmeat •raft. peraOllllllJ clearetl 111, Sec. Rull. for the C...-.lar Caw