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  • of Housing & Urbaf Development . (Robert C. Weaver) ,,,. Sen. J. W. Fulbright Ca,,,,.__.t.J ... ~ (Arkansas) Sen. Thomas H. Kuche 1 (California) f(,,l sen. Albert Gore ~ ~ ~ {Tennessee) ()._ Sen. Alan Bible (Nevada) Frank Church fel sen. (Idaho) Howard W
  • St. Louis University Hedley W. Donovan Editor, Time Magazine New York City Raymond R. Tucker Mayor St. Loui~, Missouri Harold B. Gores President, Educational Laboratory N~w York City Facilities Clark Kerr President University of California
  • Judge J. Montague Bill Allen in Senator Gore 1 s office ( ) I
  • , 1954 PEOPLE SENATOR JOHNSON TALKED TO CN THE TELEPHONE : . Leonard Mirks Ed Gossett in Ihllas Congressman Wright Patman i . l t. ~:--;::. ~' Gabe Garrett in Corpus Christi (' I t •.J.. , ··- .• ., Senator Gore . J ! .. l Stan Lambert
  • on domestic issues, to be honest about it. He came up with a few bum ones, like the [Albert] Beeson appointment, that was a very important one. We almost welcomed anything where you could get the Democrats together on an anti-Eisenhower vote. There weren
  • bother him, do you think? J: To some extent, yes. I remember that his relations with [Senator Joseph] Clark were not close. I do not think it disturbed his relations with [Senator Albert] Gore. Of course, he did run the Senate with a pretty dictatorial
  • chimed in: Albert Gore, Gaylord Nelson, Church and I, of course, and Mark Hatfield from the Republican side, this young senator from New York--I can't think of his name right now. His son is the football commissioner. No, the baseball commissioner
  • the highway bill was not [Albert] LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Curtis
  • really happened was that you had head-to-head combat between a great many powerful economic forces. AT&T, for instance, wanted to run the whole thing. Senator [Albert] Gore and others felt that the whole thing ought to be public because we had
  • of an understanding, and very especially with Senators Kerr, and [Clinton] Anderson, and Clements, and [George] Smathers, and Symington, to some extent of Senator [Thomas] Hennings and [Albert] Gore and [Styles] Bridges on the other side. In fact the Bridges, I think
  • region, and elimination of the post of deputy collector. 2/4 Mrs. Sam Johnson writes LBJ that she is glad Sam Houston is under hospital care, and that CTJ is helping Josefa. 2/4-2/5 Albert Jackson is visiting in Washington. 2/5 LBJ attends
  • Gore was in the House at that time and he didn't go into the Service as an officer. He went in the regular way as a buck private and failed to--and deliberately so-make it known to those that he served with that he was a member of Congress. He just
  • Excellency Don Manuel Trucco Ambassador to the OAS COLOMBIA His Excellency Albert Lleras Camargo Former President of Colombia Dr. German Zea Ambassador to the United Nations His Excellency Dr. Alfredo Ambassador to the OAS Vasquez-Carrizosa His Excellency
  • -- Interview I, Tape 1 -- 19 lives, yielding to each other with expressions of dismay, outrage, wonderment, bewilderment, and the best at this were Kerr and Pastore and [Hubert H.] Humphrey [D.-Minn.], Monroney, [Albert] Gore [D.-Tenn.], [Wayne] Morse [R
  • on it? O: No, I don't think it probably is, because basically there was continuity. Our activities with Sam Rayburn were really part of day-to-day involvement with the leadership, and you had McCormack, [Carl] Albert, [Hale] Boggs. Then at the death
  • . Now the thing of it is, Lyndon's first vote in the delegation was for [Albert] Gore, I believe, and of course he was eliminated. and Jack Kennedy. So it became a run-off between [Estes] Kefauver Lyndon took the floor. Understand, Lyndon's box
  • and North and South Carolina, Georgia, Mississippi, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Texas, and maybe Kentucky--I'm not sure about that. And on the second ballot, I voted for Senator Kennedy. think on the first ballot I might have voted for Senator [Albert] Gore
  • to have supported a variety of vice presidential candidates, [Albert] Gore and Humphrey and Kennedy. S: Johnson did? G: Yes. S: Well, I guess it could be argued that maybe his effort there was to Everybody but Kefauver. try to head off Kefauver
  • WIGGINS -- I -- 4 that legislation ran aground principally on Albert Gore's insistence that you place a limit on campaign contributions which is not the idea that the Washington Post had nor the idea that Mr. Johnson had. The Post and Senator Johnson
  • with orders to go to certain people, but after it was all over, Sam couldn't quite take Kennedy and he recognized--who was it from Tennessee? F: Albert Gore. C: It took a long time to bring Sam around about the Kennedys. So it went to Kefauver. But I
  • was going on. I was always invited to it, so I knew pretty I've forgotten whether they followed the Clements approach of taking the [Albert] Gore document on political contributions or not, just to give them something to reply to. But it 6 LBJ
  • ] Kefauver and [Albert] Gore, both of whom I knew well because they 5 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http
  • friends with the Communists. Another example: During the 2000 cam­ paign, Governor Bush sharply criticized Vice President Gore for Clinton's efforts at "nation build- Dean James Steinberg: Will the November winners implement their campaign rhetoric
  • work out. But anyhow, after Governor Stevenson was nominated and after he made known that he was going to throw it open to the convention, the Texas delegation supported Gore, I believe, on about two ballots, or some number of ballots~ I have
  • is soft on Communism. Albert Beeson is confirmed as a member of the National Labor Relations Board, 45-42. The former labor relations director of Food Machinery and Chemical Corporation was accused of conflict of interest in trying to keep his old job
  • . Y., PM5/22/64. ALEXANDER, Alfred, 897E. 5oth St., Brooklyn 34, N. Y., 5/23/64. RICRARDSEN, Edvdo, 618 w. 142d St., NewYork 31, N. Y., PM5/23/64. DAINTO,Fred, 147-33 73 Ave., Whitestone 57, N. Y., 5/23/64. GOEPPER, Albert, 46 Chester Rd., Lynbrook, N
  • continued during lunch, at which the above were joined by Callaghan, Ambassador Bruce, Gore-Booth and Figgures (Treasury). A·r0!_~..~.~i!lg:"'Of::.m1nas:-w-a S: ~l»ev~ d T ~ th~::?.9.~ ck:lY:0~-:-~9l~:gg:~.: r;tparli, te~ta-.i ~-~;:e:a.rly:_:_aa ~possible
  • . It's a whole lot easier to be regional and national out of New England or the Midwest than it was out of the South, because of race. In Tennessee we had [Albert] Gore and [Estes] Kefauver, and there was Lyndon in a way in the same boat