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  • Gardiner. Mr. and Mrs. father, according to his ,Richard Adler, Mr. and Mrs. daughter, "would have been •. Guedaliahou Shiva, Mr. and richer than my mother if he Mrs. Howard • Johnson, Mia hadn't traded his interest in Farrow and Norman Mailer. Bayer
  • Gardiner. Mr. and Mrs. father, according to his ,Richard Adler, Mr. and Mrs. daughter, "would have been •. Guedaliahou Shiva, Mr. and richer than my mother if he Mrs. Howard • Johnson, Mia hadn't traded his interest in Farrow and Norman Mailer. Bayer
  • been there since Truman's adminis- He had come there as a navy chief; worked under Truman, Eisen- hower, Kennedy and Johnson, and continued to work under Nixon up until, I think, just after Ford took over or just before Ford took over. Jack
  • . Nixon has improved his performance has without doubt helped him. FDR, by popular lore or nythology, was a gifted radio performer. But I don't think many pros in the business would put it that simply. He happened to have a good voice. But much.more
  • it proved the difference in 1968 in Ohio for Nixon. He had that campaign train through there, and I don't believe Humphrey did. It brings back a bit of nostalgia of the old days. At the same time you can cover a lot of ground and there's a lot of color
  • Richard Daley; LBJ meeting with Eisenhower; Hubert Humphrey’s campaign; LBJ, Wilbur Mills and a surtax; Poor People's Campaign and consumer measures LBJ supported.
  • ; the Johnsons, Wests, Krims, Lyn Nugent & Yuki walk on White House grounds; Lady Bird walks on West Ellipse; the Abe Fortases to dinner; Richard Nixon & Hubert Humphrey campaigns; LBJ made speech in Kentucky on September 28
  • SS T Jo e Califan o (pl ) BessAbell Senato Bess Abell r Stuar t Symingto n - °d t Rosto w ' Q \ replacement 11:02 f_ e Morse e . Richard Daley . Mayo r o f Chicag o ^ Secretary SecretaryFreeman 10:05a t 10:14a t Ii -> | 10:25a t toas
  • the Westmoreland --he also asked mf to call Fred Panzer to see if he could relation between Paul Hall -work up a memo detailing LBJ and Romney pairings and LBJ and Nixon pairings ^ and the AFL-CIQ. during the last six months. This request was preciptated
  • Treasury \ Gen. Maxwell D Taylo r \ Robt Hardesty, Wh . Hous e\ James Moyers, Wh . Hou s 3 Will Sparks , Wh . House Richard Adler, Saddl e River , N J Joe L . Allbritton , Houston , Te x Wm M. Allen , Pres . Th e Boein g Co , Seattle , Was h George P . Bake
  • of the procedural technical problems of the presidency when they moved into the White House. I suspect Richard Nixon right now is going through the same kind of cram course despite his lengthy experience. And Johnson I don't think learned a great deal as Vice
  • north, the intellectual guys. There was plenty in Lyndon to appeal to an easterner. Christ, he was doing what the Kennedys hadn't done. Christ, he was doing what these guys wanted done. But in the same way, you know, he took on this guy [Richard] Goodwin
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Terry -- I -- 17 Humphrey Democrat. And now the country was in the hands of Richard Nixon. All I could think about was getting a book together about the black soldier and then getting back overseas, out of the United States
  • . Haasett (left),presidentialsecretary. Ab
  • . Haasett (left),presidentialsecretary. Ab
  • Richard Nixon was in Congress and one Richard Nixon was about to suddenly steal this away LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral
  • of the A&O and what it was all about. But while (inaudible) it would be useful for posterity for us to get some of this information on tape particularly about the individual members. Bill, you were there, you and Lyndon Johnson and Horace Richards and Vernon
  • Richards, Vernon Whiteside; LBJ's college career; biographical information on Walter Grady, Deason, Albert Harzke, Wilton Woods, Archie Wiles, Hollis Frazer; jobs handed down from one White Star to another; biographical information on Sidney "Sub" Pyland
  • Strom Thurmond and others wanted to hold this vacancy for the new president, hopefully Richard Nixon, and it's nothing more than that. They'll never convince me that anything more was behind the effort. Later, of course, as it developed
  • in trouble. And he--I was sitting next to [Sargent] Shriver and Moyers and [Richard] Goodwin and [Willard] Wirtz. I forget who else was there. And he began giving anecdotes from India--[Laughter]--and he came to this one! And I had already told Bill about
  • And tried to keep my contact at absolutely a ground Didn't talk to leaders. There was one difficulty: whether we should tell [r",layor Richard] Daley I was in there, because politically.. We finally decided, Watson and I -- he may consulted
  • of say, "Well, we expect you to say that," you know. But you know--while the "New Left" calls the New York Times and the Post the Establishment press, Spiro T. Agnew doesn't. Nor does Richard Nixon. Maybe we've come a long ways when the supporters
  • First meeting with LBJ in March, 1946; Ganson Purcell; James Rowe; Sam Rayburn; W. Averell Harriman; Truman’s anti-inflation program; General Counsel for AEC; Herbert Marks; Kenneth D. McKellar; Dr. Edward U. Condon; General McArthur; Richard
  • in Texas and with the FBI alone. But eventually, over a matter of days and after a lunch with Richard Russell, the senator from Georgia who had been Johnson's mentor in the Senate, Johnson changed his mind. "l became interested in the Johnson tape
  • HIVE, ~xr, WITH PRESIDENTIAL NOMINEE RICHARD II'. NIXON. • ; i! ;H 0~1 ~JO~~BER TWO, INSTANT, AT SEVEN TEN A.ti!., MRS. '. ; CHEN~AutT• S CAR VAS OBSERVED IN THE PARKING GARAGE AT, :1 'ftc'!O FIVE ONE ZERO VIRGINIA AVENUE, N.W. ·: .1 I ·I
  • was it that [Richard] Helms became head? Because I was there that day and he was very complimentary about Helms. We all met upstairs in the living quarters and then went downstairs for the Helms swearing in. I would say that was in 1966 sometime, wasn't it? G: I'll
  • by Nixon, who discussed this with me as a result of a detailed conversation with the President-Elect. The Nixon Administration ran with it. I was asked by the President to co-chair a citizens' committee to carry on this advocacy. I considered it totally non
  • continued advocacy work for postal reform as co-chair of a citizen's committee; legislation enacted under Richard Nixon to give the Post Office Department more independence and the ability to self-finance; lack of political interest in the Post Office
  • say that he was less an initiator of legislation than he had been prior to that time. G: I guess one could explain his ability in the House of Representatives as a result of having worked for Richard Kleberg and being an assistant, but how did he
  • the press. You must remember a little piece of political background. There was a senator in Georgia at that time named Richard Russell. Richard Russell had been the foremost opponent of Jack Kennedy in the Senate, and in the lame duck period between being
  • ; affirmative action; Jerry Holleman; John Hope Franklin; Gwendolyn Tice; Percy Williams; Jerry Bruno; staffing and funding the commission; Bobby Troutman and the conflict between LBJ and RFK; Richard Russell; the Lockheed plant in Marietta, Georgia; Plan
  • 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
  • · OF'. THE NiXON ADMINISTRATIONo c: \ FAILURE TO CONSULT WiLL' CREATE· DOUBTS ABOUT AMERICAN POLICy· AND ~ F'l,JTURE AMER:cAN• SUPPORT· OF", EUROPE iN THE· FACE OF tNCREASED sovIET v, PRESSURE A! A.TI ME -~HEN ~E~MAN ~CL I CY TOWARD THE USSR Is l) ' { iTSELF''.tN
  • , you will remember, Vietnam was coining into the fore and President Johnson was not getting too good a receptivity in the United States. Neither is President [Richard] Nixon at this moment--a very similar situation at this very moment. The feeling
  • , changes in the way they ran their institutions, could look to something steady and say "Here's what we have to live by." Well it grieves me to say so, but when President Nixon came in, he shattered that--that growing coherence of doctrine--and we began
  • tendency in a campaign. Your own people are apt to react strongly to hard-hitting spots. We had that with [Spiro] Agnew and then Nixon at a later date, by the same Tony Schwartz. G: Oh, really? O: Yes. G: Which spots in particular? O: We had one
  • organizations found in Philadelphia under the leadership of Bill Green, Chicago under the leadership of Richard J. Daley, Minnesota under the leadership of the Democratic-Farm-Labor group, and in Albany, New York; O'Brien's concern about the two-party system
  • in which Eisenhower was elected. Then along in about December was when it really began to jell. Lyndon himself hadn't decided at the time and hadn't taken any--he was there to see who was going to be the Democratic leader. He had urged [Richard] Russell
  • INTERVIHJEES: GOVERNOR AND NRS. RICHARD HUGHES (Betty Hughes) INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: The Hughes' home in Princeton, New Jersey Tape 1 of 2 F: First of all, Governor Hughes, tell us briefly where you came from, how you gradually moved up
  • See all online interviews with Richard J. Hughes & Betty (Elizabeth) Hughes
  • Hughes, Richard J. (Richard Joseph), 1909-
  • Oral history transcript, Richard J. Hughes and Betty (Elizabeth) Hughes, interview 1 (I), 8/6/1969, by Joe B. Frantz
  • Richard J. Hughes