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  • changes mf and diana retype d the cards. / 10:45 CST Wheels down on Air Force One at Air National Guard Base, Nashville, Tennessee President met at the airport by , Governor and "Mrs. Buford Ellington - Gov. of Tennessee Senator and Mrs. Albert Gore
  • President wen t t o the barricades t o shak e hands calls checked mf October 9 , 196 4 Friday Louisville, K y Herbert To Nashville , Tennesse e aboard AF#1 . Me t in the Stat e Roo m w/ Senator s Walter s Senator, Gore, Congressma n Dic k Fulto n r e
  • Albert Gore of Tennessee told me that 3 or 4 Ambassadors he visited were excellent. There was no Ambassador in the 4th country. He said our programs are moving welL We also may get Under Secretary Katzenbach to go to 3 or 4 countries and Ambassador Covey
  • To Ova l R m Of c w/ above j Movi e pic s bein g take n whil e th e Presiden t an d First Lad y si t o n the couch. Marvin Watson Mrs. Dwigh t Eisenhowe r (Mamie ) ( b. 1) Sen Secy Albert McNamara - Mrs (ac 404 - 7338611) Ft. Gordon, Ga. Johnson
  • where he could more or less point to his support of both sides at times. That was one of the times he and [Albert] Gore worked together peaceably. G: Do you recall the give and take on that? M: No, I don't think I do. LBJ Presidential Library http
  • ] please, have signed it. Clinton and Al Gore, both right there signed it. And I've got Lloyd Bentsen, and Dan Rostenkowski, and Jim Wright, and Price Daniel, and Tom Connally. It goes way back to Marvin Jones is on there. Marvin Jones wrote much
  • Goodling, Al Gore, Bob Graves, Bill and Bernice Greeter, Nan Gulahr [?], Steve Gunderson, Claire H., Ralph Handing, Bob Hardesty, Bill Hefner, Jack Hightower, Hogg Family, Lloyd and Kathleen Hopwood, Walter Hornaday, Amory Houghton, Steny Hoyer, Elizabeth
  • completed 7-day simulated flight to moon. That afternoon they fly to Washington from Austin. 2/18 Hearings headed by Sen. Albert Gore begin on federal-aid highway program. First witness is Dem. Gov. Foster Furcolo of Mass. On 2/21, Dem. Gov. Averell
  • agents from around the country, with about 130 of them from California. Kuchel, in the meantime, had voted--this was where he worked with the Democrats. Albert Gore introduced the first defense highway legislation, and Kuchel was a co-author. About
  • senators. But I think primarily during this period the thing that surprised me is how many times I talked to people or they talked to me about the gas bill and reported on their conversations with [Albert] Gore or [Stuart] Symington or different senators
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 6 Mc Who were the other members of the board of education? M: Oh, they ranged from Wilbur Mills to Albert Gore--Senator Albert Gore now, Wilbur Mills, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, and some of the rather
  • beneficiary. Please present this telegram at the Northwest Gate. Lyndon B. Johnson. HUMPHREY, Hubert H. BIRD, Harry LONG, Russell ANDERSON, Clinton P. RIBICOFF, Abraham GORE,Albert MAIISFIEI.D,Michael J. SMATHERS,George A• HILL, Lister McNAMARA, Pat HARTKE
  • . Gore withdrew. I remember Mike Monroney rushing down the aisle and saying to me, "Brooks, why in the world are you all not lining up with Albert here! Can't you do something with Arkansas? They should be helping our friend Albert Gore." But you'll
  • a bunch of people on the committee who'd be in a position to vote him down on that. He already had Paul Douglas on the committee and Albert Gore and some other people that he couldn't influence in that way. G: So I think that that was the reason. Had
  • . Bob Kerr, of course, was on that committee; Albert Gore was on that committee. They had views and the committee would have had those views, too. Their views would have been sustained in that committee. They had something like a discussion of maybe
  • - Press Mr. Robert Weaver D. Mr. Aubrey Wagner Senator Albert Gore Louis Seltzer - Cleveland, Ohio (fm by (other staff members - see AF manifest Territo has) returning his AF One) Arrived McGee Tyson Airport, Knoxville, Tenn. - by Greeted
  • ,,,__,,"t1C..!..._?~Y~O~RK=-------. . . .... - -- - - - -­ ---CONF-lDENTI..A.. L, in the United Nations chartero" Our poli yin this regard was made clear to the United Nations by Senator Albert Gore speaking as UoSo Representative to the First Committee
  • ? Was there a measure of truth in them? AG: Well, that's hard to say because I am prejudiced. From my point of view, having worked for him, I thought Proxmire and [Albert] Gore were extremely out of line; they were probably the worst as far as public criticism
  • switched my loyalties and my allegiance. G: They also seemed to have opposed Estes Kefauver for the vice presidential nominee and even went to [Albert] Gore and to [John] Kennedy and [Hubert] Humphrey. Do you remember that, their efforts there to organize
  • in Houston than Albert Thomas? R: I wouldn't say who was more responsible. I'm not sure we would have had it in Tulsa, but there was a lot of speculation that we would have been in the running if we'd have had the [water]. I expect Kennedy was just
  • a caucus of the labor delegates late the night before, and they had decided to support Kefauver for it. Mr. Rayburn in our first caucus recommended that we support Albert Gore from Tennessee and carried the vote. Mr. Rayburn disliked Estes Kefauver
  • were you when the draft went on?" So these four people--and I'm fuzzy on this, youlll have to recheck this, but I know that one was Albert Gore of Tennessee, and one was John Fogarty of Rhode Island. And I think one was Lyndon Johnson of Texas
  • [of correspondence deposited at Princeton], one reference he made to Senator [Albert] Gore of Tennessee, who was one of his pet dislikes, is very revealing of the fact that the conversations were not what you might call all political but often were personal. B: Did
  • years and who were so strong for a Johnson-Kennedy relationship. II I remember very \" well then the difficulty that Mr. Rayburn had in accomrnooating himself. but he did it very bravely in finally supporting Jack Kennedy. gone with Albert Gore, whom
  • ) I\/ --1 THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON Mr. Preaident: I There were four vote• in the Senate ,rFinance Committee meeting thh morning We won all of them. Firat -- Gore'• motion to •~rike exche• aiid"'"aubatitute inveatment credit -We won 9 - 4. JI
  • were you lost by one vote on a-- B: Oh, really? G: Yes. Carl Albert had introduced a substitute to the Republican version and you lost by a teller vote of one vote in 1961. You don't remember that? B: No. G: Well, why don't we talk about tax
  • recollection of the Albert Beeson nomination to be National Labor Relations Board--? C: Not really. G: It was a close, partisan vote. C: I remember it, but you asked me do I have any working recollection; not really. G: Okay. I wanted to ask you
  • with a crowd of approximately 2, 000 according to USSS estimate the President jus t prior to his arrival. the platform were The President and Mrs. Johnson _ ________ j Governor Buford Ellington ! Sen. & Mrs. albert Gore Dr. & Mrs. James Clark, acting president
  • Energy] for some years, so Scoop Jackson or Albert Gore would know more about that. G: How about the atomic peace ship? Do you remember that? The first year that that came up for a vote the Democrats opposed it. S: I don't remember. I think
  • with the leadership, reflecting on the election returns. You have to remember the leaders had their frustrations. Sam Rayburn and McCormack and [Carl] Albert and [Hale] Boggs, along with Democratic members, had a great feeling of frustration regarding the Rules
  • -Wilbur Mills alternative to Medicare; Mills' changing views of Medicare legislation; LBJ's surprise meeting with Harry Byrd, Sr., regarding Medicare and the televised results of the meeting; Russell Long misusing William Fulbright's and Albert Gore, Sr.'s
  • if LBJ was urged to sign it? M: I don't. He simply didn't, and neither did Albert Gore, [nor did] I believe [Estes] Kefauver, someone else. And their defection from it really reduced its clout very substantially. He, I'm sure, told Dick Russell
  • range of sport . At Albert Park, seen above, Europe ans and Fijians play rugby football and cricket, each game having a large fol­ lowing of spectators . Tennis , hockey and polo are also played on the same ground. Associa­ t ion football is very popular
  • .l·J. (D) Ark. Gore, Senator Albert (D) Tenn. Grueriing, Ernest (D) Alaska Harris, Senator Fred R. (D) Okla. Hart, Philip A. (D) Mich. Hartke, Senator Vance (D) Ind. Hayden, Senator Carl (D) Ariz. Hickenlooper, Senator Bourke B. (R) Iowa. Hill, Senator
  • 1 S. Mike, Senate YOUNG, Milton R., Senate ALLOTT, Gordon, Senate J., J., c., KUCHEL, Thomas H., Senate SPARKMAN, John J ., Senate GORE, Albert, Senate CHURCH, Frank, Senate CLARK, Joseph s., Senate McCARTHY, Eugene J., Senate AIKEN, George D
  • Eisenhower delivers the State of the Union address at 12:30; afterward LBJ meets with JFK and Robert Kennedy. The Democratic Conference meets at 3:30. At the conference, Gore introduces a motion to expand the Democratic Policy Committee from 9 to 15 members
  • is on the high side. We would put the figure at about 150,000. Otherwise the Senator's facts jibe closely with our own. Dean Rusk CONFIDEN'fIAL LJ? SUGGESTED TELEGRAM FROM PRESIDENT JOHNSON TO SENATOR GORE Honorable Albert Gore United States Senate L- Dear S
  • , New Menco ALBERT GORE, TennTHOMAS 0. MORRIS, New Mm.co HENRY M. JACKSON, Wuhlncton JOHN YOUNG, Tena BOURKE B. HIOKENLOOPER, Iowa ORAIO HOSMER, Califomla GEORGE D, ALKEN, Vennonl WILLIAM H. BATES, Muucbu11ettl WALLACE I'. BENNETT, Utah JOHN B. ANDERSON
  • was-- C: As you well know, Lyndon Johnson and Sam Rayburn threw Texas votes to Kennedy on the second ballot. They went for Albert Gore the first time. Not because they were for Kennedy, but because they hated Estes Kefauver so much. I don't mean hated
  • . What's the background on that? W: Well, I was for Kennedy from the beginning. ning. I say from the begin- I was for him when it came to the point of its being Kennedy or Kefauver. If I'm not mistaken, I think our first ballots went to Albert Gore
  • , the Speaker, Wright and Merle Patman, Albert and Lera Thomas, the Clarks, Frank and Jean Ikard, Lloyd and Beryl Ann Bentsen, and Bob and Frances [?]. July 7/2 John Lyle sends LBJ a memorandum on H.R. 6578, a bill to provide for research into a practical