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1057 results
Oral history transcript, Clifton C. Carter, interview 1 (I), 10/1/1968, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- later put itlr:aifferent words on this program. He said, 11 I 've gotten to the stage with the Congress where they won't do anything for me. I don't care who the next president is, whether his name is Gene McCarthy or Richard Nixon or Bobby Kennedy
- it. If the [Richard M.] Nixon Administration were determined that the Department of Agriculture should serve commercial farmers and serve commercial farmers only, then I doubt that the changes that have been made under Secretary Freeman could survive. Fortunately
- , and is now Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice in the Nixon Administration . And a very competent man and a very good lawyer . He wrote an excellent opinion in that case . . And his finding was exactly
- back now over the last seven years let's say, we sort of slowly wore down the opposition. We find now the Nixon Administration in the last few months has begun to take steps. I think this was probably inevitable because with DDT in particular--after all
- schedule. And you know, all the goddamned minutiae that is required there to keep things kind of flowing. I'm told by the newspapers that President Nixon has really got a staff that handles that stuff superbly. They also squeeze out some
- instead of the Nixon-Lodge ticket. B: What kind of audience was it? W: It was a mixed audience, primarily obviously of those who were interested in the election of this ticket. It was held in the Rice Hotel--a quite large group of rooms
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 106: Nov. 15‑18, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 42
(Item)
- the peoplr, and that the o. 1 et then have been broadened and str ngihened through the Nixon and Ford Administrations ... It . eems to me there are two kinds of people whos • lives are touched by th Endowment. The talented people, many of them young, who arc
- on which he was speaking. Win ter had arrived. Richard Nixon had been re-elected just one month earlier. Watergate was just surfacing. The war in Viet nam dragged on. There were many opportunities for LBJ, if he wanted, to reflect on hi successor
- and he came to know full well the meaning of nfulfilled expecta tions. But he did leave a legacy. He Lasker raised the war on disease to presi dential status. Thereafter only at some risk could presidents ignor . it; and Pr sident Nixon eclared
- . Then the publisher sub stantially raised the amount of the offer. Ms. Smith's memory suddenly improved; she had done some inter esting things, after all. "l had flown around the world with Malcolm Forbes. I sat next to Richart.I Nixon at Malcolm's funeral. l had
- Busby, Joseph Califano, Ramsey Clark, David and Julie Nixon Eisenhower, John K nnelb Galbraith, Barry Goldwater, Ann Land rs. David McCullough, Daniel Patrick Moynihan. Charle Robb, D an I WANT □ You will have free admission to all the other
- , they encountered an outlook thar was uniquely American, albeit mythically so. The ranch became Johnson's 15 retreat, just as John F. Kennedy had Hyannisport and later. Richard M. Nixon had San Clemente and George H. W. Bush had Kennebunkport. During his presidency
- Nixon. There , as a meeting in Secre But Congress and I are not hon l'lr Ru k' office one day, which eymooners. We are lik an old fan and I both attended. ei Cali man and woman who've lived th r f us was a foreign policy together too long. We'veasked
- announcement that we commit the nation to a landing on the moon; and second, the landing itself by Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, which took place in the Nixon Administration. Sandwiched between Kennedy's remark and the flight of Annstrong and Aldrin
- to speech; Lady Bird receives standing ovation; Lyn becomes rambunctious; Diplomatic Corps, Supreme Court & Cabinet arrive; LBJ receives standing ovation; in speech, LBJ asks Congress to help Richard Nixon; to Speaker's office; watch reviews & buffet
- the Finance Committee. LBJ addresses a group of students from Southwest Texas in Washington for the inaugural. The Texas State Society reception is held in the Senate Caucus Room. 1/20 Eisenhower is sworn-in as president on the Capitol steps; Richard Nixon
- as the Deputy Transition Representative between the Nixon and Johnson Administrations. He joined Morgan Stanley in 1972, and organized the Government Relations Department, becoming a Managing Director. He has served as its 1 of2 04/19/2001 2:57 PM NARA N1
- as the Deputy Transition Representative between the Nixon and Johnson Administrations. He joined Morgan Stanley in 1972, and organized the Government Relations Department, becoming a Managing Director. He has served as its 1 of2 04/19/2001 2:57 PM NARA N1
- was the man who let E. Howard Hunt into the Saigon files when he was trying to doctor them for the Nixon White House, but that's another story.) At any rate, I was told that the coup was coming, Vietnam whammo! So I went scooting up to the Capitol, got in, had
Folder, "McGeorge Bundy, Vol. 4, May 1-27, 1964 [1 of 3]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 1
(Item)
- Lodge has virtually no effective communication with General Harkins, he is developing confidence in General Westmoreland, despite the unfortunate episode of Nixon and the helicopters. General Westmoreland has gone out of his way to emphasize
- brother is"--it was during the visit of the then-outof-office and Pepsi Cola executive, Richard Milhous Nixon. G: 1964? D: Yes. And, you know, Lodge had asked me to keep an eye on [him], as you could understand his wanting to do that, since they had
- , it was fine with us. But we should not be pushing them in one direction or the other, and I think this was pretty consistently the U.S. policy under President Johnson, and I'm fairly confident that it will be exactly the same under President Nixon
- of the first things Nixon did was to accept the implications of my memorandum and appoi~t an ~ecutive security force for the protection of embassies. There have been far fewer incidents of purse-snatching, and mugging, and bumping, and pushing since
- . President Kennedy said, '~ou've got to do it because Nixon had it before, even though he didn't do anything; you're from the South, and if you don't take it, you'll be deemed to have evaded your responsibility. And so you've got to do it." So he [Vice
- ; LBJ as President; Vietnam War; LBJ and credibility; Nixon Administration; civil rights leaders and the Vietnam War; LBJ and education; various Presidents’ support of civil rights; LBJ’s early position on civil rights; LBJ’s 1965 State of the Union
- foreign knOll fror.l later accounts, \-las apparently offered the position of Secretary of D~fensc by President Nixon nine months later-- the Pn.:sjdcnt th(:i1 il;:::-;cdi.:ltcly dc.ci.dcd that he Hanted to get on the phone with, as I recall
- ; leaving judgeships open for Nixon to fill and Nixon’s response; the Texas judgeship in the 5th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals; Ralph Yarborough; deciding who to nominate for the Texas judgeship; taking age into account when appointing judges; Ed Clark
- departments, and I guess Mr. Nixon is also still working on that. Presumably his successor will still be working on getting the Department of Agriculture and Department of Interior into some kind of Department of Natural Resources and so forth. I wasn't
- with good grace just as Richard Nixon did in 1960 when he probably had some grounds to make a loud cry--I suspect that Nixon wouldn't be president today if he had made a fuss about the Kennedy election in 1960. Politically, you've got to learn to be a good
- that their advice was, "Don't go too far too fast or China will enter the war, just like Korea." think this held us back to a great extent. And I I feel sure that until the time that President Nixon went to Peking and made some assurances to Mao Tse-tung
Oral history transcript, Charles B. Lipsen, interview 1 (I), 6/13/1975, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
Oral history transcript, John Bartlow Martin, interview 1 (I), 1/30/1971, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- to take himself out, because I didn't think he could be nominated, and I was afraid if he was nominated, he might lose to Nixon, which, I think, would have been a personal disaster for Stevenson. As long as Stevenson didn't take himself out, I felt loyal
Oral history transcript, Betty Furness Midgley, interview 1 (I), 12/10/1968, by David G. McComb
(Item)
Oral history transcript, Norman S. Paul, interview 1 (I), 2/21/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- on that one. know. And whether the Nixon Administration will or not, I don't I do feel that there are missions that manned aircraft can perform that missiles can't. of missiles. needs. Also I'm just not that certain of the total reliability So I think we