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1163 results
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 49, November 1-7, 1967 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 25
(Item)
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 49, November 1-7, 1967 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 25
(Item)
- a little space between us and his position. The President: He wants space. In his heart he is with us, but he thinks it is politically wise to keep space. Secretary Clifford: Nixon 1 s representative on the Department of Defense wants to see me on personnel
Oral history transcript, John A. Schnittker, interview 2 (II), 5/18/1989, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , but would never have allowed him in the mid- or the late sixties to make the leap that Javits and Kennedy wanted, and was made in the Nixon Administration when the Food Stamp Program became truly national with many billions of dollars, instead of one or two
Oral history transcript, Joseph A. Califano, interview 63 (LXIII), 4/17/1990, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- of the things [Richard] Nixon learned when he went with [Clement] Haynsworth and whatever the other guy was, and of the things [Ronald] Reagan learned with [Robert] Bork--[G. Harrold] Carswell--that Supreme Court seat is something that the Senate takes very
- oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 7 But, as I recall it, in the late summer of 1960, with the campaign heating up, JFK moved ahead of Nixon in the polls. Foreigners contemplated the realistic possibility of election
- interest in Richard Nixon's economic policy-making; visits to the LBJ Ranch after LBJ's presidency; the Bart Rowen article that quotes LBJ as saying Walker had "elbows"; deer hunting with LBJ, Jake Pickle, and Walker's son, Chuck; Walker's phone calls
- --and we all know the history--Nixon decided for whatever arbitrary reasons he was not going to expend funds the Congress appropriated. And I was reflecting upon the fact that I can remember it was Senator Mondale, Senator Kennedy, Senator Javits and Pete
- policies under President Nixon.
- live out a pec~lim-- a."1dd--:~dly pat-c~n1. 'Ihe first prcr2qilisitc for a nction CC!pc.blE: ·of ~er,ocic.c is th2 beliet t:1::t t~ey C:..."'0 sup';;rior· to th~ir vic-c;ns. They ;;iust b-2li\:.·VG th:-4t they a:r·0 0~ti tlcd to the control of' th0 lir
Oral history transcript, James H. Rowe, Jr., interview 6 (VI), 12/9/1983, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- was sort of ambivalent about Humphrey both ways. G: Sure. What did you observe about the relationship between Johnson and Nixon that year that you were working [for him]? LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT
- Southern Manifesto; farm legislation; Francis Case; social security; LBJ and Paul Butler; LBJ and Nixon; 1956 Democratic National Convention
- in whom the Republicans might select? In other words, who his successor would be. T: I think he could easily predict that Nixon would be the nominee. I think a year before the convention Nixon was the apparent front runner. I don't know that he had any
- 11 that. But an)~ay when he submitted the names--and I ' l l just say the Sanders' nomination and others--it was after the election. Richard Nixon had been elected President, and there was some indication at tIn t point that Mr. Mitchell was going
- for the party. I found during 1970 that Nixon had free reign. That was not unusual. A president has great advantages. I had seen that in my days on the other side. But what was disconcerting was that he seemed to be on television constantly. There didn't seem
- elections; O'Brien's desired role as spokesman for the Democratic Party during Richard Nixon's presidency; Bob Strauss' efforts to raise money for DNC programs and to pay off debt; going to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and networks to try
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 3 (III), 6/7/1975, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- ; Reedy’s relationship with LBJ after the Presidency; LBJ’s use of the telephone; LBJ’s power of persuasion; LBJ’s positive attitude; Walter Jenkins; President Nixon; LBJ’s and Sam Rayburn’s view of Nixon; LBJ’s separation from reality; LBJ’s childhood; Sam
Oral history transcript, George A. Smathers, interview 1 (I), 2/14/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- had an opportunity to observe his relationship with Richard Nixon when Nixon was vice president. They'd come down to Florida, wouldn't they, at the same time? S: Yes. G: How did they get along? S: They would get along very well. G: Did they? Do
- agreeing to be JFK's running mate; LBJ's relationship with Richard Nixon.
- did indeed work with the Labor people and some staff budget people, and they indeed liked it and they started urging it on Wirtz. And Wirtz became very high on the plan. Now, Nixon--I can't remember whether we started to run into trouble before
Oral history transcript, Lawrence E. (Larry) Levinson, interview 6 (VI), 8/18/1972, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- of the experience that my wife and I had on the Sequoia. I can't pin the date down, although I would think it would be sometime after the Republican convention of 1968, and after President Johnson had had a meeting with President Nixon at the White House, generally
- The Sequoia; LBJ's assessment of Nixon; LBJ's comments on Martin Luther King; working on a tax surcharge speech on the Sequoia; staff members wanting access to the Sequoia for personal use; Camp David; visiting the Ranch; LBJ's office at the Ranch
- ___________»_______-______, vote. This morning by 8 am we all ! „_ began to feel the defeat with dis-^ ^^ belief, and followed the TV events minute-by-minute, until the VP j ___ ' and Nixon made their statements __ to the nation. / = 10:30 - 11:00a ___ __ "11:00a t____ I
- to President-elect Nixor, addressed to Mass in care of Mr. and Mrs. David Eisenhower -- Mr. Nixon 1 3 b1 day. ) Eion. Joseph Barr, Secretary of the Treasury Larry Temple (PL) - at Jim Jones' desk Honorable Lawrence O'Brien in "Little Lounge" --Chairman
- office To th e Second Floor Tuesday January 14, 196^ the White House Tuesday Wm. S. White President-Elect Richard M. Nixon at Key Biscayne. Florida President to the Theatre room The President departed the White House - for U S Capitol arrive
- ^^A. Murray Lillian D'Urbano Al Martinez Karen Schwarz Nancy Prevatt Mr. Maurice Stans (Mr. Stans is now President of Glore Forgan, Wm R. Staats Inc:.)! Secretary of Commerce-designate Col Haywood Smith Col James' Hughes . USAF Hughes will be Mr. Nixon's
- . Activity (include visited by)* ID Tuesday (cont'd) January 31, 1961 Expenditure Code McGeorge Bundy, for secret briefing before National Security meeting tomorrow Ralph Dungan Ross Buckner, R. L. Williams; J. W. Nixon, A. O. Bowen, J. D. King (School
- . Thomoa Joiin90n Nixon asked to see Harriman. He will see him Thursday The President: Communications, Transportation, M2dics and the Secret Service have never failed me. I like the new Military Aide, Colonel Hughes. Doctor Burkley has done a wonderful
- with Rockefeller, and Nixon. and McCarthy, and Kennedy and Reagan if you wanted him, but put enough of your fellows on it to control it••• a committee made up of political leaders throughout the country to advise me and analyze and review the entire Asian situation
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 17 (XVII), 6/11/1985, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- : Was there a way during these stops, these speeches, to have monitored what the Nixon-Lodge campaign was saying and answer their charges or their accusations? R: They were being followed closely in Washington, and we'd get on the phone every time we had a chance
- between the convention and election due to a lack of political stability; the JFK/LBJ 1960 campaign kickoff parade in Boston; LBJ drinking too much in El Paso at the beginning of the campaign; the nature of LBJ's campaign speeches; the Richard Nixon-Henry
- Nixon: "At the time [he] left office in 1974, he rated, along with Warren Harding, at the bottom of la poll of historians on presidential greatness]. But this is a president who has tenaciously. since the moment he left office, cam paigned for his
- of 2.0 boys from Teddie Military School in N. J. arri Ving MaitC:h:2..'4f. •Sclleawed~oVsee Vice Pres~ Nixon .or Sen. Knowland and .want to see the Senator ay fepresenting Jhe Den:;.o~ ratic _s ide. s :Donr.C-oolt c~l~.On:t N"e.weYorl
- Rusk: A new peace plan. Thieu won't see Bunker until tomorrow. We should see how Nixon can get out of this as soon as possible. Bill Bundy or I could go down to Key Biscane. I would be opposed to Nixon going to Saigon. emmis sary like William
- . " The President then turned to the subject of what we have to be thankful for and pointed out the recent August and September polls showing the President's performance in relation to the four leading Republican Presidential candidates. He noted that he led Nixon
- two man. F: Did you have any idea that he would accept the vice presidency? Or would be offered it? M: No, no. F: Is that the main reason that you supported Nixon in 1960? M: Yes, absolutely, absolutely. did Sam I was very disappointed when
- Biographical information; envoy to Luxembourg; 1960 campaign; Eleanor Roosevelt; selling her house to LBJ when he was VP; Democratic Women for Nixon in 1960; Mrs. Rose Kennedy and Jackie Kennedy; Democratic factions
- the Apollo 8 launch. our final meeting on this was November 11. I believe that President-elect Nixon happened to be visiting President Johnson the day of our meeting in which we decided to send Apollo 8 around the moon. So by phoning that information over
Oral history transcript, Thomas H. Kuchel, interview 1 (I), 5/15/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- INTERVIEWEE: THOMAS H. KUCHEL INTERVIEWER: MICHAEL L. GILLETTE PLACE: Senator Kuchel's office, Los Angeles, California Tape 1 of 1 G: You came to the Senate in 1953, I suppose. You were appointed to replace Vice President Nixon, as I understand it. K
- election; Wayne Morse; the Lewis Strauss nomination; the McCarthy censure and the Watkins committee; LBJ’s relationship with Richard Nixon; relationship between Republicans and Democrats in Senate; civil rights legislation; statehood for Hawaii and Alaska
Oral history transcript, Donald J. Cronin, interview 8 (VIII), 5/16/1990, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- I condone all these things but I do think I recognize the human frailty in every person and I think this goes to that same question. (Interruption) G: Anything on the 1968 presidential race between [Richard] Nixon, Humphrey with George Wallace
- a pathetic picture of kCarthy in his final days: "He was not going t his Senate office any more. he was drinking hea ily, he was talking about th betrayal fall of his riend . ineteen fifty-six as an election ear, and Richard Nixon was giving a speech
- and a possible future president. F: We're moving ahead. H: Yes. F: But did he ever express himself on Richard Nixon vis-à-vis Johnson? H: You mean as being elected president? F: Yes. H: No, not that I can recall. If he did, it was, "If Dick
- of the first [Kennedy-Nixon] debate, but that predated what I'm talking about here by about eight years. So, no, as far as my own relations with Daley, nothing, and I don't recall that the company had any problem. G: Did the reporters at CBS feel
- of 1934; introducing the idea of televised presidential debates; the first Nixon-JFK debate; setting up the details of the Nixon-JFK debates.
Oral history transcript, Ellsworth Bunker, interview 3 (III), 10/12/1983, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , that we were going to support them. And that's the position I took consistently, not only during President Johnson's term but President Nixon's also. G: When you spoke at West Point in 1970 you said that the South Vietnamese realized that they would
- minority leader end as majority leader. I suppose I was influenced somewhat by the same consideration that others were. I can remember very clearly a meeting with Nixon. Nixon some in those years. I was covering And I would say in the late fifties, I
- much worried about Johnson when Humphrey was running against Nixon. pretty late. I felt that Johnson was sitting on the fence until I have no concrete proof of this. But, knowing that [Governor] Connally was talking for and reputed to be raising
- programs; Parten’s opinion Nixon; future problems with Congress under Nixon; the energy problem.
Oral history transcript, Robert D. S. Novak, interview 1 (I), 11/15/1971, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- with Rowland Evans, and author of Lyndon B. Johnson, An Exercise in Power, as well as other books, including one now on the Nixons. To begin with, you were still a fairly junior congressional reporter at the time your book begins. How close on that level were