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956 results
Folder, "South Vietnam and U.S. Policies [X-File] [2 of 2]," Files of Walt Rostow, NSF, Box 19
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- , Johnson was in direct and bitter tdcphonic contact with Rich ard Nixon in Los Angeles.'' White says, "What could have been made of an open charge that the Nixon leaders were sab oteurs of the peace one cannot guess; how quickly it might, if aired, have
Oral history transcript, W. DeVier Pierson, interview 1 (I), 3/19/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- a frightful day and ended up that night-about 10 o'clock at night the President had this message to go on television with. He didn't know whether to go on, because the Secret Service agents in Los Angeles were calling back here saying that Senator Kennedy
- , I worked with Senator Humphrey from 1955 through the time he went into the vice presidency and then went over with him as his chief of staff in the vice presidency and held a somewhat ambiguous subtitle of assistant for national security. I had
- there . variance . There's just one little For awhile I was Counsel and not the Staff Director, for a period of about two years, but the rest of the time I was the principal staff person for the Post Office and Civil Service Committee of the House . P: When did
- --in Los Angeles at that time--and Fritz Hollings was for Kennedy. We both made speeches to the South Carolina delegation for our candidates. I cited Lyndon's Senate record and showed it was much more conservative than John Kennedy's Senate record
- , 1971 INTERVIEWEE: JAMES C. HAGERTY INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: Dr. Frantz' office in Austin, Texas F: Mr. Hagerty, I think we might just start this off by asking whether you knew or had at any time in your newspaper career run into Lyndon
- had been state executive director for Governor Stevenson's Presidential campaign in 1956. In 1960 I had served on Governor Stevenson's national staff for a period through his defeat in the Los Angeles National Democratic Convention. Mc
- of the Civil Rights legislation? Yes, it did. McS: Did you play any part in the 1960 Convention in Los Angeles? F: I was a delegate--now wait just a minute--I was there! whether I was a delegate or not. I don't recall. I'm not sure Yes, I was. When LBJ
- had accepted? M: Well, when I got the news I had just-- we were staying at a little offbeat motel that had just been refurbished out there in Los Angeles quite a ways from the hall, and I was sitting around the patio with a group of members
- / U. ALEXIS JOHNSON Tape 21 (21a) It is Thursday, March30, 1972. Muchhas happened since my last tape in Novemberof last year after I had returned from a trip I took at that time out to East Asia. First, on the personal side, on February 4 I
- Carolina or, it so happened, Los Angeles in my own state, that I would help him. And his answer was, "I'll get no publicity out of Los Angeles." This was a few weeks before the Watts bonfire. And incidentally, I went out on that, on the President's
- , ultimately was a strong supporter of Mr. Johnson in 1960. F: Did you go to Los Angeles? W: No. Or had you left the paper by then? Because I came to work for the Times in May of 1960. The conven- tions were in July, as I recall. F: Yes. W: And I
- against civil rights and he was a true representative in voting against every bill. he became a United States Senator, the situation changed. And then when Texas was about half and half at that time on civil rights, so his votes were divided a lot
- not be anticipated. lb traced development of the democratic process in Vietnam, said when Geno Ky took second-place on the Thieu 1
Oral history transcript, Richard H. Nelson, interview 1 (I), 7/20/1978, by Michael L. Gillette
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- thesis. That \'1as turned in in April, and that was about it for my senior year, really, except waiting around to take final orals. I had become friendly with Bill. At that time Bill had left the Vice President's staff, Mr. Johnson's staff, and gone
Oral history transcript, Claude J. Desautels, interview 1 (I), 4/18/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
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- : Was that sensitive with regard to the subject matter or the congressman or senator involved? D: Mostly the subject matter, mostly the subject matter, because I had had some experiences in the Kennedy years and I'd been burned a couple of times. So we straightened
- Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh advisor to many of us and was well versed in the history of China at that time. [He] predicted pretty accurately what was about to happen
- relations in South Africa; meeting LBJ for the first time; Sam Rayburn; Democratic National Conventions of 1956, 1960, and 1964; political social gatherings; visits to the Ranch; working with Mrs. Kennedy on the Fine Arts Committee; White House furnishings
Oral history transcript, Everett D. Collier, interview 1 (I), 3/13/1975, by Michael L. Gillette
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- there. C: Fine. I came to Houston with my family in 1929 from Long Beach, Mississippi, and felt very much a stranger in Texas at that time. the fall of 1930 I entered Sam Houston High School. old. In I was fifteen years President Johnson, then twenty
- was living in Japan, Dien and I began to hear and read about this place called and so I went down there for the Chicago Daily News what turned out to be the end of to the Viet Minh Dien Bien Phu fell Accords . it . and at the time of the Geneva
- of people in- Some individual started it. It was furthered by Dr. [Eliot] Corday of Los Angeles through the College of Cardiology; he obtained a special bill from Congress for intensive coronary care centers with LBJ Presidential Library http
- . 1970 INTERVIEWEE: CHARLES ROBERTS INTERVIEt1ER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: Mr. Roberts office, Washington. D. C. I Tape 1 of 3 F: Mr. Roberts, you were in Dallas at the time of the assassination, November. 1963. R: Ri ght. F: Did you have any
Oral history transcript, Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr., interview 1 (I), 1/28/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
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- vantage point there . O: The 1960 convention, of course, was held in Los Angeles . I was a delegate to the convention from Massachusetts as a delegate for Jack Kennedy . campaign . I had been an advance man on the Kennedy came out with a real
Oral history transcript, Patricia Roberts Harris, interview 1 (I), 5/19/1969, by Stephen Goodell
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- you say before 1960? S: Before he became Vice President. H: The reason I was asking was because I made a basic personal commitment in 1960 that predated the Los Angeles convention. Had I thought anybody would listen to me, I would have supported
- , 1970 INTERVIEWEE: HARRY ASHMORE INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: Santa Barbara, California Tape 1 of 3 F: Mr. Ashmore, let's talk first chronologically. let's give a very brief resume of your life up to the time that you began to emerge
- throughout the world, they were not paid. So the American press didn't come back and say the Vietnamese ambassador refused to pay Madame Nhu's bills, they carne back and said, Madame Nhu jumped a hotel bill in Los Angeles. myself. I read that in the press
Oral history transcript, James C. Gaither, interview 2 (II), 1/15/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- interesting and I think moving show of this kind on television the other night looking at Los Angeles and really asking the question, 'Where is this Society going to go?" and making it absolutely clear to everybody watching that if we don't do something about
- known him before. I don't remember. In the late 1950's, I would think. G: Had you had much contact--? T: No. Then I saw how the cards were stacked in Michigan, and I didn't even try to get on the delegation for Los Angeles because Michigan has
- - In the 1960 Convention, the late President designated me to handle his campaign in the Convention in Los Angeles and that meant, of course, on the floor of the House with Senator Ribicoff , because of my knowledge of parliamentary law, I assumed, and the many
Oral history transcript, Kenneth P. O'Donnell, interview 1 (I), 7/23/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- , and being Bobby Baker we were very concerned . M: Some justice, no doubt. O: Yes. M: The events at Los Angel es that year had been reported and over reported, and I certainly have no intentfon of havi ng you repeat th i ngs that are public record
- and saw something of the then-Senator Johnson at that time. The first time I recall talking with Senator Johnson was during the fall of 1956 when Senator Kefauver and I were campaigning throughout Texas with Senator Johnson. Senator Johnson led us
- House press apparatus; Dean Acheson; Dean Rusk; Senator Aiken; Congressman Moss; Mr. Rooney; Mr. Katzenbach; Eugene Rostow; the press; Joe Alsop; Vietnam coverage; mail; lag time in making records available; Douglas Cater; transition; Lady Bird; trip
- as a legal secretary, and she was on the law review. G: I think that's accurate. I suspect that the time I finished high school had more to do with my going into teaching than anything else, because it was the acceptable, the respectable thing for a woman
- to re s o lv e o u ts ta n d in g problem s between o u r two c o u n t r ie s . A f t e r y e a rs o f n e g o t ia t io n s , F u lb r i g h t agreement i s ready to be sig n e d . A f t e r an e q u a lly lo n g p e rio d o f f r u s t r a t i o n
Folder, "South Vietnam and U.S. Policies [X-File] [1 of 2], Files of Walt Rostow, NSF, Box 19
(Item)
- >i9r ~3b To White House (Mccafferty) ~t JCT l~-l\IP 8 79 cable
- . He gave it to the TV Guide people, and they gave it back to him after they'd used it, and then he gave it to--gosh, 1 think to the Los Angeles Times. I don't know, the latter is a guess. And again, in let's say September 1968--1 don't know what
- Philadelphia, Los Angeles You do have to be political at least to the extent of spreading it around and the real question is is there a cut-\-~ff place? t{e followed the policy, ,'7ith the help of the Advisory Committ:ee on the Arts--you need these outside
- and S V N b o r d e r s (se e a tta c he d ). Id ea h a s m aJiy h o o k e rs , b u t m e r i t s to o - e s p e c ia lly f o r a f t e r N o v e m b e r. S u g g e s t we take a good lo o k a t i t i f In d ia jis e v e r flo a t i t . N o te B o w le s
- , a formal of the over President state speech of ~rom taking the high program the made concern as being South. a specific and in Los Angeles north move both to warn North.Viet he included the following language: "In South Viet Nam
- ARCHIVES PROCESSING NOTE You will find two versions of the document withdrawal sheets in this file. The original document withdrawal sheets were completed in the 1970s and early 1980s. Since that time, many of the documents have been declassified
- to a n y o n e else in th is c o u n try in m y o p p o s itio n to co m m u n ism a n d a ll t h a t co m m u n ism s ta n d s fo r. I n o u r tim e a g re a t stru g g le, w h ic h m a y vei-y w ell be a d e a th lo c k stru g g le , is going o n
Telephone conversation # 13511, transcript, WALT ROSTOW and DEAN RUSK, 10/2/1968, time unknown
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- November 6, 2008 Reference No. 13511 Processing Note Transcript only of this conversation; there is no recording. DATE: 10/2/68 TIME: UnknoWn . CALLER: Dean Rusk Pages ofTranscript: 1 page Barbara Cline Archivist /1'f r. Pt '€ J" SI ~ c r
- Telephone conversation # 13511, transcript, WALT ROSTOW and DEAN RUSK, 10/2/1968, time unknown