Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

1057 results

  • 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
  • . Stew [Stewart] Hensley was the senior United Press correspondent. The foreign news agencies, Reuters and Agence France Presse, had Pat [John W.] Heffernan and Jean Lagrange respectively, both senior diplomatic reporters. The specials, that is, the daily
  • . And all of us standing in awe, and here are these three men coming out just acting like they were the best of friends, patting each other on the back, you know, and that thoroughly impressed me. I'll never forget that. Kennedy and Johnson and Humphrey. So
  • . Stew [Stewart] Hensley was the senior United Press correspondent. The foreign news agencies, Reuters and Agence France Presse, had Pat [John W.] Heffernan and Jean Lagrange respectively, both senior diplomatic reporters. The specials, that is, the daily
  • into contact with Jere Cooper, who was the chairman for awhile, and of course ultimately with Wilbur D. Mills, with whom I worked out the Medicare plan. Similarly on the Senate side, I intimately knew and worked with Walter George; I worked with Pat Harrison
  • simply stepped through the French doors, in from the patio area. That may have been later; that is, it may have been just before the actual broadcast. Lynda, Luci and Pat also showed up at this point. All I remember is 10 LBJ Presidential Library
  • there ought to write as though he were inserting his name. MEETU4e 1~eTES COP¥R1~JalTC:D­ Publiculion Rwquh es p1,...i11iesc of Cop71 igl,._ It0 , .'· ,;, w fhomas JQAA&QD . sa::v;cE SET [3 of 4] M£ETlf~6 ~IQHS COPYAl6111fD Publica1loii lteqoh es Pat
  • 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
  • at the Ranch. daughters. It was fascinating. There were the There was luci there and Pat Nugent, or one of the boy friends--I don't know. It was before she was married. It was a rol- licking discussion and all of that. Then very shortly thereafter I
  • President Nixon has sent up is something we toyed with for a long time. I ·think there are a lot of LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library
  • be made for the future, favorite sons in some instances, like [Michael] DiSalle in Ohio, Pat Brown's activities in California and the rest. But the effort was to build up within the party a recognition that Kennedy could be a strong candidate for president
  • Virginia primary and what JFK learned from it; the JFK/Nixon debates; JFK's handling of the Bay of Pigs incident; O'Brien meeting with each cabinet member to review roles in the Kennedy Administration; JFK's and O'Brien's time spent learning their roles
  • to Preeldeat Ola• Ordaa la April. at whlcb time he told lwn aboat the le1la1at1oa ,oa ••b•equatlr ■abm.ltted to tile Coacr••• to pat the Commla ■loa oa a permaaelll t.1al foot1a1. A t.tter for ,oar ■lpatare 1■ attached at Tab B. lt lafonna Preeldelll Dias
  • too many reasons that Luci joined the Catholic Church [that] was not good politics. F: Did her interest in this precede her meeting Pat, or did this come after? C: Oh, I think Luci was almost born with a rosary in her future because she's a deeply
  • in the White House, appointing people whowere not very competent. And I think perhaps that's the most serious charge against him. However.there's something around Nixon, I don't quite knowwhat. In his early days, he was called "Tricky Dick." In his running
  • is announced. calling. And then "White House calling" It's a lame duck White House Then pretty soon you have very nice meetings with your successor if they have been named--in this case, Gerry Van der Heuvel and Lucy Winchester. F: Where did the Nixons
  • the Senate . nize the Senate . If he voted Democrat, the Democrats would orga­ It was that close . Nixon was sitting in the chair as vice president . I looked down at the-floor, and I saw Lyndon . He wandered around a little bit, very relaxed, sat
  • that this is going to become a Rand position. As you may know, there is one Rand person as assistant director in the Nixon Administration, Jim Schlesinger, who was also a classmate of all of us at Harvard at the same time. He was a graduate student at Harvard
  • a great deal to us. We wish you. your government and the British nation every good fortune. Sincerely. Lyndon B. jobDSon 7;2 ---- Thurs•• July 6, 1967 9 :30 a. m • . ,.SEGRE'l'-- .SENSITIVE MR. .P RESIDENT: This transcript of the De Gaulle-Nixon
  • believed 'in fair play, would have put a damper on · such a poorly _planned procedure. ~~ Another · thing that should be cleared-up, is the continual reference to Gen'I Eisenhower and Mr. Nixon as President and Vice President, living .foreign nations
  • they were stepped upon too often, so when this announcement was made, "No, no, no." One person stood up and said, "If this is the case, I'm voting for Nixon." That's how mad some of them were. M: Mr. Rayburn objected pretty strongly to his accepting
  • the second most powerful man in the nation when Eisenhower was President. He recognized that he could not be that powerful if Kennedy won the election. Now, you might say, "Well, Nixon would have won and then he'd still be Majority Leader." exactly what
  • histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh -17- Not a bit in the world and I would say that there were over 150,000 people on the streets welcoming them as they came through. It was a much larger turnout for Kennedy and Johnson than Nixon got
  • , with Vice President Nixon breaking the tie. Do you remember that vote? C: I don't remember that specific vote. was quite involved. a higher price. I remember the issue. The issue Wheat producers in the wheat areas, naturally, wanted We produce so much
  • of them, you know, would just come right out and say, "Why don't you support me?" Now, Stevenson thought that he, for the first time, could win in 1960, because he thought he had a sufficient following and that Nixon would be by far much weaker than
  • that one of the most faithful, and one of the nicest, ones we ever had was Pat Nixon. I don't think she missed a Tuesday unless she was out of the country with her husband. We took it rather seriously. I, too, later on acquired that job. We had a high point
  • to the legislature. I served down there in both the House and the Senate. F: Was that during Pat Neff's days, or was that just after Neff? P: I served ten days or a week under Pat Neff. the outgoing governor when I was elected. Mrs. Ferguson administration
  • on the staff get written? This Patrick Anderson book, for example, what role does the staff play here? Is this extracurricular or is this part of the direction of the office to get the public educated or what? L: Well, on Pat Anderson--in particular Anderson
  • House staff's public exposure; Pat Anderson; press criticism of domestic programs under LBJ; the long process of enacting domestic programs; urban housing developements; Model City task force members and work; funding Model Cities and getting
  • this sort of thing was . And I said, "What shall I expect?" And he said, 'Well, he will give you a pat on the back and march you through the Oval Room and give you a little pep talk and tell you that he expects loyalty and he knows I'll do a good job
  • . They are to go forward with their plQDS. · State Pat to whether anxious ··ot course, the idea was to make the sp~hes before the Clubs of a non-political nature. They have a Texas Club at San Diego also. You are probably right that they would put a political
  • , were Pat Blair in the Business School; Millard Ruud in the Law School; Jack Otis, the dean of Social Work; Steve McDonald in Economics; Bob Divine in History; Emmette Redford in Government; and myself. So. . . . M: Any significance in the discipline
  • dean; LBJ getting a car stuck in the mud at the LBJ Ranch; the Secret Service supplying LBJ with drinks as he drove around the Ranch; social visits with the Johnsons; Pat Nugent’s boat-driving skills; LBJ as a storyteller; McGeorge Bundy’s input on LBJ
  • . Kennedy, Mr . Nixon, and Mr . Albert all in one little huddle . They were the only � � � � LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral
  • cake" with the materials hand, and with m7. guests at home it went across very well, every­ I regained "face' as a champion of your dependability, body was happy and we had another Tom Collins on it --to you and the saucers and your so pat-able mink