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  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • really pertinent here, but I'm curious about : you were in Caracas after the famous spitting incident on Senator Nixon or Vice President Nixon? B: I accompanied him . F: Oh, you were along . B: Dick Rubottom, a Texan, and I accompanied him
  • the Soviets indicated that the North Vietnamese wished to see how much progress could be made between early November and January 20 in the hopes that it could be so far down the road that when President Nixon came in, the shape of it would be molded
  • back in with the Nixon Administration as under secretary. And he stayed on and now he is an outstanding lobbyist here in the city. I think he is moving into the faculty of the University of Texas. Did you know that? He is lecturing one or two days
  • you remember the hotel that you lived at? J: I think it was called the Nixon. It was the old Driscoll Hotel, it seems to me, that we stayed in when we made our brief trip down there to meet his boss. But I believe we lived in--frankly, I don't know
  • : that only -Nixon llallon men to become lnformed before January 20. fully Checklna with Nixon where be la per1oaally involved: for example, when Ruak waa to talk at NA TO about the outlook of the new admlnlatratlon on NA TO. Replylq to tele1rama
  • by the conference Secretary Dulles had with the leadership of the Senate in... I believe it was '54 when Nixon announced during that period that we would be p:itting troops in that area of the world, and Dulles consulted us about supporting the French following
  • the big as t ronaut dinner , following the trip to the moon, in Los Angeles, and Senato r Cranston as a Califo rnia senato r, was not invited . I didn't think Johnson would ever have done that. Certain ly Cranston was no Nixon lnver, but he
  • was a very potent factor on the Hill. .t ration is playing basically the same game. I think the Nixon Adminis­ They're saying, "We are free traders, but we're going to try and get a voluntary expansion of the textile agreement in order to satisfy
  • and attended football games. G: Did you come to the dedication? H: Yes, I was here at the dedication. G: Can you recall any impressions you had at that time? H: He seemed as active as ever. President Nixon was here. And I do recall one comment President
  • it proved the difference in 1968 in Ohio for Nixon. He had that campaign train through there, and I don't believe Humphrey did. It brings back a bit of nostalgia of the old days. At the same time you can cover a lot of ground and there's a lot of color
  • : There was that famous letter that Mr. Nixon allegedly circulated last fall. C: That was circulated, I don't know how widely. But it was circulated. M: Was it true, as it would seem in the case from the facts of that, that the investing community disliked what Mr
  • members’ involvement in the 1968 campaign; Walker Report and the 1968 convention; Humphrey-Muskie campaign; DNC; HHH-LBJ relationship during the campaign; Vietnam; Wallace supporters; Nixon campaign; developing an agricultural policy; discussions with JFK
  • of an overture about the importance of the arts. Certainly there wasn't an Abe Fortas nor a Leonard Garment, who served the same kind of purpose under Richard Nixon. T: I guess Mrs. [Joan] Mondale did, then, under-- 14 LBJ Presidential Library http
  • will do; I think it's significant that President Nixon has asked the Congress for $400 million in loan money and $82 million in technical assistance to continue the Alliance. I wouldn't be surprised if Governor [Nelson A.] Rockefeller will strongly
  • Administration was delighted to find it in. I can remember during the Kennedy-Nixon campaign I was approached by a former staffer in the Bureau of the Budget who had gone to work for Senator Kennedy, and he came to me and suggested that we have lunch. He told me
  • ; the Johnsons, Wests, Krims, Lyn Nugent & Yuki walk on White House grounds; Lady Bird walks on West Ellipse; the Abe Fortases to dinner; Richard Nixon & Hubert Humphrey campaigns; LBJ made speech in Kentucky on September 28
  • have chosen to deal with this administration rather than the next. THE PRESIDENT: I will be charged with doing this to influence the election. Nixon will be disappointed. The doves will criticize us for not doing it before now. I
  • the Westmoreland --he also asked mf to call Fred Panzer to see if he could relation between Paul Hall -work up a memo detailing LBJ and Romney pairings and LBJ and Nixon pairings ^ and the AFL-CIQ. during the last six months. This request was preciptated
  • ;: Procedures - identica l t o procedures adopte d by Pres. Eisenhowe r an d VP Nixon as wel l as Pres . Kenned y and V P Lyndo n Johnson, hav e been agreed upo n bv the Presiden t an d VP Humphrey - release d thi s dat e (i n case o f inabilitv o f
  • was quite different from theirs, so I never had any hesitations about staying on. professional. I've always regarded myself as a I would have stayed on for the Nixon Administration if they had chosen to regard me as a professional instead of a Johnson
  • ; problems regarding Komer’s ambassadorship; losing his job when Nixon became President; LBJ’s visit with Indira Ghandi; how Komer met LBJ and discussed the Pakistan-India issue; White House visits from foreign dignitaries; sending wheat to India; comparing
  • don't believe that President Johnson thought, at one time, that Kennedy had a chance to win, but later on as the campaign proceeded, when President Kennedy made such a fine showing on TV against now President Nixon, well it was then that the Democrats
  • to California two weekends in a row at the time of the Cambodian incursion, which was 1970 or 1971, during the Nixon Administration. But first I went out to California once during the Johnson Administration because the State Department had a request
  • . Even with Nixon today it seems to be bothering him. There appears to be a solution for everything, but there doesn't seem to be a solution to the Vietnam War. President Johnson always seemed to think, "Maybe it will all be straightened out