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96 results
- out on report~, it concludes. previous Rockefeller stalwarts as the war whether or not the Paris The Sir ~cel~t ol the Gr!'-Jld Maryland Gov. Spiro Agnew, wtio peace talks succeed. Old Party will be ~usting aga_mst are beginning to think they wouid
- /exhibits/show/loh/oh poor people in America, and I think he has got to maintain that. G: What prompted that question was Mr. Agnew's statement about "like the surgeon who doesn't consult with the patient in making a decision." I gather Mr. Nixon and Mr
- , an d th e Princ e George' s Count y flag. r Agnew was t o hav e bee n present an d introduce the President , bu t he was not- absence wa s unexplaine d althoug h the President aske d Sen . Tyding s and Sen. Breweste r about i t later. n the President
- to designate th e new Post Office and Federal Court Building in Cheyenne, Wyomin g as the "Joseph C. O'Mahoney Federal Center.* 12:30p 1:15 Donald Graham son of Mrs. OFF RECORD Kay Graham (at the residenc e of Mrs. Eugene (Agnew) Meyer this weekend
- , the Democrats were also highly disorganized, and if they had had a better state organization, which we also wished we had had here, the story might have been different . In any event, Humphrey carried Maryland ; Agnew didn't carry Maryland . M: Well, what's
- a great deal of uncertainty right up until the convention- E: In fact I was there when--we left the night before President Nixon and Vice President Agnew got to Johnson City to confer with the President. F: Did you ever hear the President express
- Frank Rose, President, Univ of Alabama Donald C. Agnew, Director, Southern Association Harris Dean, Academic Dean, Univ of South Florida (Tampa) Benjamin Mayes. President, Moorhouse College (Atlanta) Foster Sanders. Principal, Louisville High School
- , Washington, D. C. t Mr. Robert Adamson,HH^ Nucleonics-McGraw-Hill, Washington, DC ! Mrs. Cecilia Adkins, Nashville, Tenn, i Dr. Harold Agnew, Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM [ Dr. Earl A. Alluisi, Silver Spring, Md !! Mr. Travis W. Vauls , J
- or justwhenever--? K: Whenever anybody becomes available. They have Cabinet officers and senators and bureaucrats. F: Are they sought or dodged by the principal involved? K: Both, both. refused. We've asked both Nixon and Agnew to come. I believe all
- : Nixon, Johnson, and Agnew. Does the vice president cut any ice, really, in the Senate? G: No. Not until he has a tie vote, and nine times out of ten he's off playing golf someplace when you need him. Agnew, I must say, has been the most consistent vice
- it pol it i call y . G: Did he think that Nixon was behind it? J: (Pause) G: That's a good answer, actually. J: I think he was ambivalent about that. G: Yes. J: He was certain that Agnew was involved, for a very good reason. G: Did he tell
- and talked in much greater detail about this. I also had a call from a mutual friend ",ho asked me would I come to see the Vice President-elect, Mr. Agnew, which I did. It would be completely inaccurate for me to say that he told me
- _™________________ The motorcad e drov e int o th e drive-i n entranc e o f the Civi c Center . A t his .. car , th e Presiden t was me t b y ____ _ __ Governo r Spir o Agnew ..-.' " " 'r .._.-.. . _______ Cong . Clarenc e Lon g , . , Mr. an d Mrs . Bil l Suttl e (h e i s Jayce e
- October The White House Saturday Dav 15, 1966 ' Acttvity(irtudrvtshrdby) ATTENDANCE at Transportation Bill Signing: ** Accardo, Joseph J. , Jr. Transport — Adams,Brock House — Adams, John Civil Agnew, Bruce Business ,-Allen, Bobbie Civil ^Allen
Oral history transcript, Robert P. Griffin, interview 1 (I), 3/2/1979, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Griffin -- I -- 5 the Senate he was quite a contrast from Agnew and Rockefeller, neither of whom seemed to have had much experience with parliamentary procedures and rules
- n l a r g in g to i n c lu d e S e n a to r D ir k s e n , S p e a k e r McCormack, t h e V ic e P r e s i d e n t E l e c t and M rs. Agnew and t h e i r so n who h ad b e e n i n V ietn am , w ith h i s w i f e , and t h e i r two d a u g h t e r
- a relationship that is not close. Recently I read some columnist in which he painted out that the Nixon-Agnew relationship was much closer and Nixon was trying to break Agnew into the Presidency, quite contrary to the Roosevelt-Truman relationship. Tru:nan Has
- that to Agnew pretty soon. Next year there'll be 18 governors wanting to replace Agnew. Bobby was against my being on the ticket in 1960. He came to my room three times to try to get me to say we wouldn't run on the ticket. r LBJ Presidential Library http
Oral history transcript, Sam Houston Johnson, interview 3 (III), 6/9/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
Folder, "South Vietnam and U.S. Policies [X-File] [1 of 2], Files of Walt Rostow, NSF, Box 19
(Item)
- and emotional agreement on all this. C: I would say generally so. F: So there was no collision of any sort there between Defense and Justice? C: There was no conflict there. For instance, neither one of us felt--that I remember former-Governor Agnew
- . Harold E. Hughes Governor of Iowa The Governor of Kansas & Mrs. Docking The Governor of Louisiana & Mrs. McKeithen The Governor of Maine & Mrs. Curtis The Governor of Maryland & Mrs . Agnew The Governor of Massachusetts & Mrs . Volpe The Governor
- 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
- , Commiaaloaer Dwl1ht Ink. Aa•l•~ General Maaaaer CecU Klq, Aaalatant to die Cbalrmaa -3- Com. on Government Operation• Los A!am oa Sc ien~if ic Laborat@lf[: Dro Harold Agnew, Alternate Department Divi1ion Leader ••• of Defenae: Colp Robert Partridge, US
- to backbite Kennedy, or leaking a lot of information, or making unauthorized speeches, or going off in the Agnew route. He just never did that. The fact is, I think the only notable speech that Johnson made as vice president-well, of course
- ., pm 7/24/64. QUINN.,Mrs. Willette, l3 Agnew Rd., Greenville., s.c., pm 7/26/64. SU'l'TLES,J.B., 16 Mauldin Circle, Mauldin, s.c!., pm 7726/64. REID, Charles 1.,.1 pm Greenville, s.c., pm 7/26/f:A.. SUITLES, Mrs. J. B., P.O. Box 594, Mauldin, s.c., pm 7
- ?" The invitations do go up. They go up much less in the case of the Johnsons, moving from majority leader to vice president, than they would for Agnew moving from governor of Maryland to vice president of the United States, so that she had had a taste of the world
Oral history transcript, Eilene M. Galloway, interview 1 (I), 5/18/1982, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- it at all just because of that." So then we had Vice Presidents Lyndon Johnson, Humphrey, and Agnew. [They] were all in charge of the council until 1973, when Nixon had abolished it by a reorganization plan. So I think all of those reasons [were
- of years. In the 1968 campaign, I came up with the One about Agnew says, "If you've seen one slum. you've seen them all." I say, "If you seen one slum, you seen one too many." F: That's good. M: So whenever I see Humphrey, he says, "Write faster; write
Oral history transcript, Charles K. Boatner, interview 3 (III), 6/1/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- a candidate from the West as a vice president . I think Mr . Johnson was right . I honestly believe, and the facts haven't shown otherwise, that John went back to the Nixon group to become vice president, and then Agnew's financial immorality blew up
- 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
- £sary to get attention. The same argument was used to direct a program based upon fear, trying to frighten people, what it would mean to have a Nixon or Wallace succeeded by an Agnew and the General. This with the questions of the atomic bomb
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 103: Nov. 1‑4, 1968 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 41
(Item)
- ... .., \ ! ; SENT WHCA . ; . ;.: NOY 3 EEA6'9 00 WTEtt:, IE Wtt 41~ iROM 'IALT ROSTOW 10 THE PRESID!NT CITE CApg~ 65 0 -s ! eR ! ·: ! fa I i : THE Mr:11 ~EXICO REF~RE~~CE ~A Y INDICATE REPORTS FOLLOW. nro AGNEW IS ACT ING• 1 ! •• ~?ORT ONE: .. l
- exceedingly receptive when I made some suggestions as to substantive things he might say to some of these guys, instead of confining himself to sort of the banalities that Agnew has just confined himself to on his first exercise in Vice Presidential diplomacy