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1163 results
- be about right. M: Do you have close knowledge of the role that Mr. Johnson may have played in the Eisenhower years in the realm of foreign policy? Mundt: Yes, as I said earlier, he fairly consistently supported the Eisenhower-Nixon-Dulles foreign
- First meeting LBJ; LBJ’s relationship with Eisenhower; 1948 Mundt-Nixon proposal; Joe McCarthy; USIA; Smith-Mundt Act of 1948; Arthur Larson; LBJ’s support of Eisenhower-Nixon-Dulles foreign policy; Quemay-Matsu-Pescadores problem; Russia détente
- : Yes, the lack of power and the lack of action. We always hear about the "new era" when Eisenhower gave Nixon more responsibility and more authority, and the same was supposedly true that Kennedy was to have added onto Johnson's responsibility from
Oral history transcript, Antonio Carrillo-Flores, interview 1 (I), 7/24/1970, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- feasible thing: to untie the loans of the United States to Latin America, something that President Nixon did about a year ago. President Johnson wanted to do that, but apparently he couldn't get the authority from, or the approval of, the key members
- another way the answer would be different. And that is, did the same group support Nixon. Many of them did after he became president. There was a kind of standing job between President Johnson and myself because there were occasions where I would have
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 22 (XXII), 1/8/1988, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- because he was representing the United States. It was because somebody hated Lyndon Johnson. He was always citing what happened to [Richard] Nixon down in Caracas, you know, when the eggs were thrown and all that kind of thing. Of course, Nixon wasn't
- on the one hand made his own decision about child health grants and [Congressman Harley O.] Staggers, on the other hand, made his decisions about public health grants. So they weren't combined until Nixon's administration. See, up until--Nixon was the one who
Oral history transcript, Warren I. Cikins, interview 1 (I), 5/12/1986, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- Democrats and Republicans have made those distinctions very sharply, because I know that in the Nixon Administration the Civil Rights Division put out papers discussing exactly what the difference was between goals and quotas, and they made it very clear
- be an advantage no matter how long it lasted. Well, the initial arrangement was that I would be here for six months. And then that was extended for two years see, I'm still here. And as you can The transition people for Mr. Nixon called me up the other day
- said, "Yes, sir, but I've been about my Vice President's business," and he grinned and didn't say a word ! So we went on out to dinner and oddly enough Nixon was in Chasen's! So he was just about getting ready to leave, so we circled the block--the Vice
- suspect the Nixon Administration discontinued it because the emphasis was heavily on education and work training rather than, as with the CCC's, on the actual doing of large scale conservation projects. F: Within your purview how did these ghetto boys
- it happen with Hum?hrey, although the relationship, as I viewed it, was different betwe2n Johnson and Humphrey than it was between Kennedy and Johnson --and I take it between Nixon and Agnew as I read the newspapers. You never know until you're inside
Oral history transcript, William S. White, interview 2 (II), 3/10/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- that I, for example, had supported it under Kennedy. I supported Eisenhower's part of it. I support it now, by the way, under Nixon. Therefore there was an undoubted effort generally to discredit in journalism those of us who stood up for this war. I know
- States since Mr. Nixon has been in. I doubt that very few people on the Hill have ever gotten a call from the Presid ent [Nixon]. He just doesn' t do it. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 10, August 1-11 1966 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 9
(Item)
- Minister Thanom. and Nixon. The Thais (and Ainb. Martin) use the oe;caaion to lean ·o n us tor the full $10 million ln MAP. State and De!e.n se· are still negotiating on the latter. It will be coming over to you fairly soon. \l!W.B.. SEClUsT. attachment
- ; she became the assistant secretary until Nixon came in. K: Was it within your purview to make prescriptive recommendations as to what was desirable [or] what wasn't, if you saw--? G: Oh yes, of course. K: Did you convey these to Gardner, or back
Oral history transcript, Lady Bird Johnson, interview 31 (XXXI), 3/29/1982, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- ] Nixon presiding over the Senate. Well, as far as my life goes, I didn't see an awful lot of Lyndon that fall and after the flood was over, the drought took up again. Oh, we had several years of a wretched drought. The ground cracked open. And sometime
Oral history transcript, Nadine Brammer Eckhardt, interview 1 (I), 2/22/1984, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- it was, in the Capitol at first. Then a few months later I went over to the Senate Office Building to a conference room, maybe the Democratic Policy conference room. I don't know what they called it, but it was right below Vice President Nixon's office. One of the things
- didn't have to get that to win in a three-way race. M: You also had a pretty hard reelection campaign, and Nixon carried Indiana. Can you make an assessment of Mr. Johnson's--his Administration's--effect on the Democratic party in Indiana? Has it been
- /exhibits/show/loh/oh McGeorge Bundy -- Dallek Special Interview I -- 23 waters," he said to me. B: That's right, surely we were both out of the government by then. We were both believers that-- Tape 1 of 1, Side 2 --and Hubert over Nixon by a country
- the Vietnam War was still fresh in the memories of many people. DC: It was still going on at that time, because that was during the Nixon Administration. I think we've covered the beginnings well enough. Stages of growth; and I think we should try to confine
- that was said, I can't prove that. But some people that told me that I respect yery highly, and I wouldn't doubt their statements a bit. But Jim Murray was sent home, and it was a crucial vote. We lost it by a tie. Nixon broke the tie and voted against us
- formalized it, but he did some things with computers and things whiCh we hadn't done. project out of it. And then, Nixon has made a big So I went down specifically to do that, set up that operation. M: And you were domiciled in the White House
- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 21 Mc: Now did you try to explain all of this to the incoming Nixon Administration? T: Yes. Mc: Did they understand what you were talking about? T: The man they selected--Floyd Hyde, former Hayor of Fresno, had been
- participation; communication between citizens and city people; helping cities of all sizes in all regions; funding Washington D.C.; the Eccho Neighborhood Cooperation Model in Columbus. OH; Model Cities Supplementary money; transition to Nixon Administration
- that in the review of foreign policy which I am sure Mr. Nixon's Administration intends to make that we would look SEATO over and decide whether we need that particular coalition. present form. I doubt it in its Or whether it would be possible and desirable to put
- the Eisenhower Administration, there were any number of involvements of the White House in critical wage negotiations. Vice President Nixon, for example, was heavily involved in the steel wage settlement of early 1960. But I think there was a degree
- over many problems. They arose when the naval base was located in Corpus Christi and when he told Grady Kinsolving, who was at that time the publisher of the Corpus Christi Caller and Times, and r1aston Nixon, who was a great civic 1eader in the area
- know that he leaned over backwards to be fair to Nixon and Wallace and not to give Humphrey advantages because of being vice president, simply because he himself had pledged he would not devote an hour. But when there was national security information
Oral history transcript, Otis Arnold Singletary, Jr., interview 1 (I), 11/12/1970, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- with high hopes, good press, made some very noticeable impact; and yet, in public esteem, in congressional esteem, kind of dropped off. And still, at the time when the Nixon Administration came in, in a sense with a mandate to discontinue it, LBJ
- of weeks later to President Nixon, and the timing is good. It wouldn't have been if I'd listened to my own counsel instead of his on the timing. B: Had you before that time formed a personal opinion about the Vietnam War? L: About the war itself. we
- of the provisions that we were much opposed to. Vice President Nixon at that time cast the deciding vote, and he cast it against us. But Johnson, who was Majority Leader at the time, was very much with us on that particular episode. MU: He was voting your way
- to win an election against tough odds--Richard Nixon, who was a smart clever man. I came to appreciate both his leadership style and even the content of what he was doing. I thought, in later years, that once elected, he made a series of mistakes
Oral history transcript, Lawrence F. O'Brien, interview 20 (XX), 4/23/1987, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- had and that's when I tried to be a spokesman and go on the attack against the administration of Nixon. Now, that's an understandable role. You can dig your teeth into it and have some degree of effectiveness. But now you have a Democratic president
- and Nicolae Ceausescu; San Antonio formula; Anna Chennault; Nixon people’s conviction that LBJ Administration hurt U.S. relations with the South Vietnamese; junior members not in total sympathy with its Department.
- effect in Saigon, and I knew that she was representing herself to Bui Diem as speaking for Nixon. In fact I was told that Agnew in some eccentric way or another got into the act, but I was told this in very great confidence and on the basis
- they needed their own bank, so I helped write and defend that legislation. F: Do you think this need for a bank for Latin America came out of sort of a nationalistic pride, or do you think--? B: Yes. If you'll remember, Mr. Nixon had certain problems
- departments involved; gold pool; strengthening of the dollar; promotion of Common Market in Europe; surcharge extension; tax reform proposal; consultation by Nixon staff; 1967 inconsistent economic forecasting; Group of Ten; estimation of LBJ
- lost Alaska. The weekend· before the election, the Sunday before election on Tuesday, the Nixons came to Anchorage. It took three days to be sure of the vote in Al aska, a·nd many of us fel t that that trip was what turned that trick. Many people
- passed; Alaska's vote for Nixon in 1960; Vietnam War
- bore down on the Commission. I don't know that Nixon did. I don't think Ike ever did, to the best of my knowledge. I was very close to Washington in the period of the latter years of Roosevelt certainly all the way up through the Nixon Administration
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 103: Nov. 1‑4, 1968 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 41
(Item)
- 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
- Eisenhower and Vice President Nixon have called for inclusion of family planning in United States foreign a.id programs. In June 1965 President Eisenhower wrote Senator Gruening: nlf we now ignore the plight of those unborn genera tions which, because