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  • : I've been there several times, yes. Mc: What did you go to--a dinner or what? M: I went to receptions, and the meetings of the National Committee. the last thing. I can't tell you how many, but the last committee That's LBJ Presidential Library
  • National Youth Administration (U.S.)
  • History of Democratic conventions; relations with Democratic leaders; First meeting LBJ; NYA; opinion of LBJ
  • . The National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam is organizing this demonstration. Dave Dellinger, Chairman of the Committee, has claimed that numerous Negro militants, including H. Rap Brown, would support the October 21 demonstration. However
  • A (National Security)-SANITIZED
  • LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] INTERVIEWEE: SENATOR JOHN SPARKMAN (Democrat/Alabama) INTERVIEWER: PAIGE E. MULHOLLAN More on LBJ Library oral
  • activities of organizations which are adjudged deserving, in the national interest, of public support." The President indicated that this committee would include representatives from the Executive, the Congress, and the private community. The following
  • A (National Security)-SANITIZED
  • Material on CIA testimony before the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations and the establishment of a Committee under Nicholas Katzenbach to inquire into the relationship of government agencies with private organizations.
  • Hays Interviewer: Paige E. Mulhollan Date: March 11, 1969 Tape 1 of 1 M: Let's begin by simply identifying you. You're Wayne Hays, Democratic Congressman from Ohio--the eighteenth/district; and you've been in the House of Representatives since
  • Biographical information; contact with LBJ; NATO Parliamentarians Committee; LBJ’s praise of Hays; collaboration of Rayburn and LBJ in shaping legislation in the House; committed JFK delegate in 1960; LBJ as VP; friendship with President a political
  • . R: With various titles. M: With various titles, yes. boards and committees. You have served on a number of national You were also assistant director to the Office of Price Administration with Rationing from 1942 to 1945. R: That should
  • , it happened that Senator [stuart] Symington, who was a member of the committee, does not like boards. So we changed the name to council, that's how it got to be the National Aeronautics and Space Council in the NASA Act. I don't know what Symington's bitter
  • Biographical information; LBJ; Sputnik; committee work; NASA; space legislation; U.N. and space; conferences; visiting the Ranch; space law; reports; foreign travel
  • Committee. He wanted to get the tax, but he wouldn't agree to this withholding. On one occasion he had every Democratic chairman in the House in there. (Interruption) G: You were talking about the meeting with the President here. M: Oh, yes. He started
  • Tax surcharge; balancing the budget and six billion dollars in budget cuts, pressure from LBJ; budgetary process reform; George Mahon; work on the Ways and Means Committee; appropriations.
  • LlBRARr ). THE WEEKLY NEWSA\AGAZINE October 23, 1964 Vol. 84, No. 17 THE NATION THE ADMINISTRATION The lmpond•rables Nothin~ it .had seemed, could conceivably .stand· in the way of Democrat,. Lyndon. .. Jo.h·nson's inexorable march back
  • LlBRARr ). THE WEEKLY NEWSA\AGAZINE October 23, 1964 Vol. 84, No. 17 THE NATION THE ADMINISTRATION The lmpond•rables Nothin~ it .had seemed, could conceivably .stand· in the way of Democrat,. Lyndon. .. Jo.h·nson's inexorable march back
  • Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 5 Democratic National Committeewoman in 1940 for the state of California. The same year, I became State Vice-Chairman ... you know, we have a 50-50
  • . But when we had the National Defense Education Act up, I was Whip. Carl Elliott from Alabama handled it in the House. The conference committee had agreed, and we had a conference report, but it was the last day of the session. Carl was carrying it around
  • ; Barkley; Rayburn-Johnson conversation regarding the Democratic nomination for president; LBJ's working relationship with Eisenhower; Rayburn; Civil Rights Act; Federal aid to education; Gerald Ford
  • of the Congressional Campaign Committee. J: My first contact with Lyndon Johnson was in a wire that I received from him after having been nominated on the Democratic ticket for Congress from the Second District of Washington. The wire advised that I was to receive
  • LBJ as congressman; Joseph McCarthy; bipartisan foreign policy under DDE; Space Committee; statehood for Alaska and Hawaii; LBJ legislative strategy as majority leader; 1955 Minimum Wage Bill; Hell's Canyon; Senator Richard Russell; Senator Dirksen
  • had good manners. But getting to Bobby Kennedy, what did happen around one o'clock was Bobby came in and wanted to know if Johnson would be the chairman of the Democratic National Committee instead of vice president. And old man Rayburn said, "Shit
  • Tidelands legislation; admission of Alaska and Hawaii as states; East-West Center in Honolulu; space program; Senate committee assignments; Estes Kefauver, John Kennedy, and the Foreign Relations Committee; 1960 Democratic National Convention; LBJ’s
  • Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Proxmire -- I -- 2 Republican. Wisconsin Democrats hadn't elected a senator since 1932 and we hadn't elected a governor in thirty elections, since 1896 except in 1932. The year after I
  • Views on the duties of a Senate leader; circumstances of assuming office; 1959 speech relating views and reaction to speech; LBJ and committee assignments; opposition to depletion allowance; LBJ's support for Proxmire's re-election; 1957 Civil
  • not quite sure that's true. But Russell was the com- manding figure in the Committee on Armed Forces, but Johnson took an active part. When there was some problem that the Democrats opposed, I remember that he would always be very strong against
  • and the Democrats quite well and faithfully--everyone from Truman forward as President. I wonder how you first came into contact with Lyndon Johnson. M: My first contact with Lyndon Johnson was in 1950 or 1951 when I was Under Secretary of the Air Force during
  • ; CIA role exaggerated by press; National Students Association; Watts and racial problems; Kerner Report; CIA relationship with other organizations in Vietnam; raw information provided for by the CIA
  • jurisdiction issue. You're now dealing with the jurisdiction of the committees, and most of the legislation that we would deal with in health, other than national health insurance--I would regularly, when I was Republican counsel, always open the hearing
  • 1974 Budget Impoundment Act; how Cutler came to work for government; the importance of seniority on committees; Cutler's work on veterans' affairs; Wilbur Cohen and the creation of Medicare; Jacob Javits' national health care initiative; Javits
  • , and added that From the very beginning, there was never a disagreement on the committee between Democrats and Republicans, or conservatives and liberals, about one proposition: Washing­ ton should never have the power to be able to determine what
  • of platform that he drew such national attention to. At that time I was Democratic national committeeman from Arkansas. I went on the national committee and was a Roosevelt man very early. I was the youngest member of the national committee. hadn't reached
  • ; Community Relations Service; Roy Wilkins; Pope Paul; Southern Committee on Political Ethics, 1967-1968.
  • 31, 1940. At that time, of course, I also resigned as Chairman of the Democratic National Committee. But before I tell about that resignation, I'll go back and say that in 1928 when Governor Smith was nominated for the Presidency in Houston, when
  • of the U.S.; Hubert Humphrey; law and order issue; Labor Union; open immigration policy of the Democratic Party; LBJ’s place in history; science of politics and LBJ; difference in roles played by Farley and Bailey as National Chairmen of the Democratic Party.
  • that way. It would appear to Republicans as they watched what was going on that he controlled the committees and who went on. Now and then there \
  • : No, I'm not the first. As a matter of fact, another woman was nominated at the Democratic convention--what is her name? She was a committeewoman at the time and national vice-chairman of the Democratic committee. She's very active this year-- F: India
  • Biographical information; 1948 Senate campaign; 1960 campaign; federal judgeship appointment; VP nomination at the 1952 convention; swearing-in of LBJ; funeral of JFK; meetings with LBJ; appointment as member of U.S. National Commission of UNESCO
  • , May 10, be observed and flags display on all Govt buildings on that day. . calls upon people of Nation to render public and private expression of their love and reverence for their mothers. 2) Prayer For Peace Proclamation issued - Memorial Day, 1964
  • work on the same committees in Congress, and later, when both were in the Senate together, they also served on precisely the same committees again together. S: So Lyndon Johnson [was] on the Democratic side and I on the Republican side, he just ahead
  • was the precinct chairman for thirty years, and he was on the State Democratic Executive Committee. So we, of course, both went to the convention in San Antonio. The big fight was, of course, the liberals versus the Shivercrats, and whether or not we were going
  • National Youth Administration (U.S.)
  • Biographical information; first meeting LBJ in the 1930s when he was state director of the NYA; LBJ’s decision to run for the Senate; 1952 split in Texas Democratic Party (Shivers’ “legal delegation” seated at the 1952 national convention); Texas
  • Allan Shivers for control of the state Democratic Party and chairmanship of it. S: Okay. What do you want to know? G: Well, just simply how the battle took shape from your point of view. You were down here in San Antonio at the time. S
  • Allan Shivers and LBJ's 1956 fight for control of the Texas Democratic Party; Spears' work with Shivers; Shivers leaving the Democratic Party; the 1956 Texas Democratic Convention; Dwight Eisenhower as president; John Connally.
  • areas to see if we could get through. So one of the fund raisers or assistants, at least, to the Democratic campaign committee came out to Utah to see what he could do to help. In the course of that, while he was there--and he stayed for several days
  • LBJ’s assistance in Moss’ 1958 Senate campaign in Utah; LBJ’s management and leadership as Senate Majority Leader; conflict over Rule 22; 1960 Civil Rights Act filibuster; LBJ’s use of the Senate rules and vote counting; 1960 Democratic Convention
  • of the State Democratic Executive Committee, 1946-48. I've held various otherm.inortype jobs, like president of the Hillsboro School Board for a period of time and things of that sort. I was nominated in the Democratic primary in 1950 for an associate justice
  • Biographical information; 1941 and 1948 campaigns; 1948 state convention; State Executive Committee and certification of LBJ as a candidate in 1948
  • _,_ II I THE WHITE HOUSE I FILE COPY · .·• WASHINGTON February 14, 1964 SECRM I • NATIONAL SE'C URITY ACTION MEMORANDUM NO. 280 ! MEMORANDUM TO: I THE THE THE THE SEcRETARY OF STATE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE DmECTOR OF CENTRAL
  • National Security Action Memorandums
  • National Security Files
  • delegation, we're one zone in the Democratic set-up. Texas is. position on a committee. So we would recommend the person for the The senior man, usually the senior man who sought the position would be favored though he might not necessarily
  • How he met LBJ in 1935; LBJ’s ambitions and absorption with politics; LBJ as a new Congressman and loss of the Appropriations Committee appointment to Albert Thomas; Sam Rayburn and the Board of Education; rural electrification; Civil Rights Act
  • vote provided the margin of victory for Democratic governors and congressmen-and where Republicans such as the Bush brothers attracted large percentages of Hispanic and black voters, helped roll up majorities with national im­ p! ications. The Voting
  • for the women, or did you do this as India Edwards personally? E: I did it as the President's representative and the Director of the Women's Division of the Democratic National Committee. I may have appeared to be more free- wheeling than I actually was for I
  • by the committee but his impact showed up more in Mrs. Johnson's involvement in issues around the country, national park issues like the Grand Canyon and some of these other issues that were very much of interest to Udall as secretary of interior. My impression
  • Wilson's work with the First Lady's Committee for a More Beautiful Capital; difficulties keeping committee projects on track; Mary Lasker; Laurance Rockefeller; Stewart Udall; the White House Conference on Natural Beauty; highway beautification
  • - 17 ll 12 12 - 14 14 - 17 18 - 38 18 - 19 19 19 - 20 20 - 21 21 21 - 22 22 22 23 23 - 24 24 25 25 - 27 27 - 28 28 - 29 29 30 30 - 32 32 - 34 34 - 35 35 ESTES AS A MEMBER OF THE NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON COTTON 39 - 41 ESTES
  • , somehow allowed the campaign organization and the Democratic National Committee and so on to sort of atrophy while he was president, through disuse or through neglect or something, so that it was not a vital force in 1968. Do you think that's true? LBJ
  • Biographical information; knew LBJ as majority leader; Housing Committee, a sub-committee of Banking and Currency Committee of the Senate; staff director Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, 1965; Earle Clements; Kentucky Senator Symington
  • THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON July 8, 1964 OFFICIAL USE ONLY . NATIONAL SECURITY ACTION MEMORANDUM NO. 310 MEMORANDUM TO: The The The The Secretary of State Secretary of Defense Director of Central Intelligence Administrator, Agency
  • Memorandum # 310, Designation of Michael Forrestal as Chairman of Committee for Management of US Policy and Operations in South Vietnam, 7/8/1964
  • National Security Action Memorandums
  • National Security Files
  • not want to have the television exposure of, say, Larry Spivak or something? R: Oh, that would have been very bad really at that particular point. The difficulty there, that was during a period when holding the Democratic Party together in the Senate
  • and Bob Komer 6:30p -- Busby out at 4:18p April 20, 1966 Wednesday White House list not available WH police said a DNC man vouched for each guest Police asking DNC for complete list To the mansion w/ MW and PM for RECEPTION for Democratic National
  • after 1958? C: No, I was not. B: The agency that paul Butler established in connection with the National Committee. C: I was not a member. B: Were you asked to be a member of it? C: I was not. B: I was asking because Mr. Johnson and Mr