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1163 results
- !.rdcncy. (The actual recordings amounted to seven times thi.: material ultimate!) used in the book.) Beginning with the :.iss ssination of President cnnedy and nding with th' return to the LBJ Ranch Lh day Richard Nixon was inaugurated. thl.! diary
- Nixon, and Johnson are three who did, he said. "Tu:o of those presidents, because of outside factors. didn't come to as happy a conclusion as the nation may have wished. Rut they were true presidents, who understood how a democracy fun tions
- as well, he a1mounced, such as those showing Liz with various president : Clinton, Bush. Reagan, Ford, Johnson, Nixon, Carter-and Lincoln. Her birthday mail brought Liz some new and welcome material for her speaking engagements. She read to the audience
- , Ramsey Clark, David and Julie Nixon Eisenhower, John Kenneth Galbraith, Barry Goldwater, Ann Landers, David McCullough, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Charles Robb. Dean Rusk, Liz Smith, William I WANT TO BECOME A MEMBER OF THE FRIENDS OF THE LBJ D General
- , contains more than 4,000 items of political memorabilia from the campaigns of George Washington through Richard Nixon. In this bicen tennial year. the Library sponsored four special exhibits: The Presidents on the Presidency, American Politics Through
- recommendations. To my knowledge we never had situations like the problem that Nixon's now having with [John] Knowles between [Robert] Finch and [Everett M.] Dirksen. And if we had any, I'm sure that the President was fully capable of ironing out the situation
- and Senate leaders in LBJ’s office and at 4:30 he meets with Fred Weber and Harold Thoms (?) concerning the Ultra High Frequency Committee. 4/29 LBJ meets with Leonard Marks and Walter Jenkins. 4/30 LBJ, Rayburn and Nixon address the Washington Pilgrimage
- Leader Scott Lucas and Democratic Whip Francis Myers are defeated; Richard Nixon defeats Helen Gahagan Douglas in California Senate race. 11/8 Warren G. Moore, U.S. attorney in Tyler, sponsors a get-together breakfast for LBJ with his supporters. LBJ
- of conversations; William Gulley’s Breaking Cover; recording in the Cabinet Room; Robert Kennedy interfering with recording; LBJ’s love of gadgetry; getting small tape recorders from Japan for LBJ; removing recording devices from the White House before Nixon came
Oral history transcript, Richard H. Nelson, interview 1 (I), 7/20/1978, by Michael L. Gillette
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Oral history transcript, John A. Gronouski, interview 3 (III), 2/14/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- , 1995 INTERVIEWEE: J. WILLIS HURST INTERVIEWER: Ted Gittinger PLACE: LBJ Library, Austin, Texas Tape 1 of 1, Side 1 H: Let's see: May 22 [1971], when the Library was dedicated I was here and Nixon was the chief speaker. G: How did LBJ look
- inner circle; Humphrey's compassion; George Wallace's candidacy in 1968 and its effect on Humphrey; the Jewish vote; 1968 concern over violence and crime in the U.S.; Humphrey's knowledge of Nixon's communication with Anna Chennault; the October 1968
- years, and the Nixon years. So he was a very wise fellow, but he was not about to get down into this street-corner brawling that was involved here. Unfortunately I enjoyed it a little bit at the time. I shouldn't have done it either, I suppose
- in the Middle East with more sensitivity than anybody in that last two years. He's still there; he's doing the same job for the Nixon Administration. M: There's a whole potpourri of what you might call minor issues that I might just mention to see if you think
- sc~duled £·o r ia:oo noon on Satulfday. May Z!ld. 5. With regard to North Vietnam, Pl."e&lde,n t Johnson. asked U President Eisenhower supported Nixon'• ~ecommendatlon to go tnto North Vietnam. I sa.ld that Eisen.bower did not !-avor this. He favo~ed
Oral history transcript, William J. Jorden, interview 1 (I), 3/22/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- hard to We in this agency, like the term that President Nixon recently used in saying sufficiency. That's rather vague but deliberately so, because to try to decide what level of forces would be enough for each side to have an assured destruction
- Division of ACDA; General Wheeler; President Nixon; ICBM; arms control proposal; LBJ's interest in arms control
- 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Davis -- I -- 12 meant I spent about eight weeks with Richard Nixon and about eight weeks with John Kennedy, and got to know both of them in a reporter/source
- their language, but they had much to The way to do it is to come to that office with a broad acquaintanceship in the first instance. If you don't have it, the more I think about it, then you shouldn't be President. I don't think Nixon has got a sufficiently
Oral history transcript, John E. Lyle, Jr., interview 1 (I), 4/13/1984, by Michael L. Gillette
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- went in we got aerial photographs of Nixon's visit there. last big name who had been there had been Nixon. The We had aerial photo- graphs so we could determine what kind of a crowd was there by looking down at this aerial photograph. was. You could
Oral history transcript, Esther Peterson, interview 2 (II), 10/29/1974, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- the Anyway, you see what I mean; you balanced it with these And nobody has matched the quality and effectiveness of that commission yet in the women's area. Nobody. Nixon's is just a silly marshmallow compared with it. G: What about Eleanor Roosevelt
Oral history transcript, W. DeVier Pierson, interview 1 (I), 3/19/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- right now incidentially, there's a big dog fight on for who gets the trade stick in the Nixon Administration. But Ambassador Roth and the State Depart- ment and the Commerce Department, Labor, Treasury would all have views on a trade issue
- , with the beginning of the Nixon Administration in January of '69. I've been here a year and a hal f. F: Hhen did you first get acquainted with Lyndon Johnson? W: The first time I met him was when I was district attorney in Dallas. F: You weren't active
- in Amarillo did when it chose to certify a ballot that would list Eisenhower and Nixon as the nominees of the, I think they called it, the Texas Democrats. That, I thought, was a subterfuge and the mis- leading thing to do. I opposed it, unsuccessfully
- of the things that is interesting about Lyndon, I very seldom have seen a fellow--but Nixon's a case and Lyndon's a case--who didn't collapse inside when having screwed his courage to the sticking point to LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org
Oral history transcript, Lawrence F. O'Brien, interview 7 (VII), 2/12/1986, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- of the President's health and an arrangement whereby if he were disabled, either because of a heart attack or something, then McCormack would step in and take over the duties temporarily, I guess relating to an agreement that Nixon and Eisenhower had worked out. Carl
- --that the Democratic nominee had to be Hubert Humphrey, and the Republican nominee had to be Dick Nixon, simply because they were the only two men that didn't split the party irre trievably. Humphrey could hold together both the southern moderates and the northern
- administration we were not able to get very much excitement on the part of Europe in what was going on in other parts of the world. And the same thing has been true under the Nixon Administration. Europe eventually will recover from its isolationism
- on three and a half months in the Nixon Administration and am now out of office . M: You had been Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for ISA for some time prior to the assassination? B: Yes, I was appointed by President Kennedy at the very outset
- the feeling about race and so forth is strongest. in the Democratic ~~rty, And we managed to keep it with a lot of fighting up until the election right here recently. F: Yes, Nixon. D: Yes. F: Did it cost you advertising? D: No. F: It wasn't
- the same type of trip, covering the same ground that President Nixon is embarking on at the end of the month. We went to Bonn and then to England, stopped off to see--I can't remember the Prime Minister's name--it was after Churchill-M: Of England, you