Discover Our Collections
Limit your search
Tag- Digital item (5)
- Black, John W. (John Woodland), 1925- (1)
- Farley, James Aloysius, 1888-1976 (1)
- Gehrig, Leo (1)
- Scammon, Richard M. (Richard Montgomery), 1915-2001 (1)
- Weaver, George L.P. (1)
- 1968-10-18 (1)
- 1968-11-02 (1)
- 1969-01-06 (1)
- 1969-03-03 (1)
- 1990-02-13 (1)
- Immigration (5)
- 1960 campaign (1)
- Assassinations (1)
- Humphrey, Hubert H. (Hubert Horatio), 1911-1978 (1)
- Kennedy, Robert F., 1925-1968 (1)
- Vietnam (1)
- Voting rights (1)
- Text (5)
- Oral history (5)
5 results
- political science academies and associations, and you are a writer and a lecturer. If you would like to add anything to that, by all means please feel free. S: No, I think that just about covers it. G: I'd like to begin this interview if I can
- never forget, I saw him in Paris. He was in NATO. I called on him one day with a friend, an associate, of mine in Paris. At that time I kidded him. I said, "This is a Tammany Hall Democrat calling on you, and I'm probably one of the few persons who
- , and this is one of the reasons that I admire President Johnson--that he in a very real way was running the government toward the latter years of the Eisenhower Administration. Much of the initiative and enterprise in our government toward the late fifties
Oral history transcript, George L.P. Weaver, interview 1 (I), 1/6/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- serving in this position since 1961. Is that correct? "\1: Since July 1961. M: You were an appointee, then, of President Kennedy and served through the entire Johnson Administration. W: Yes. ~II: For many years you were associated IVi th various
- don't have any recall of any actions that he took. G: One other thing on the compliance. The National Medical Association in 1966 was critical of Robert Nash in terms of enforcing compliance. Let me ask you to evaluate that criticism. LG: I don't