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  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • . I met Lyndon during that period, and knew him In any event, I kne\>1 him much better than I knew Jack Kennedy by 1960. F: Did you ever consider backing him for the nomination in '60? . S: I \~s one of the earlier people to talk about Lyndon
  • on the other hand probably the candidate that I most closely identified with because of my own personal background was Hubert Humphrey. And you know if you had just given me the choice ideally, I think I probably would have picked Humphrey. Kennedy in the early
  • 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
  • 1960 election; the Kennedys; relationship with LBJ; Massachusetts politics; Vietnam War; comparison of JFK and LBJ; Education bill; LBJ's persuasive ability
  • /exhibits/show/loh/oh Valenti -- I -- 6 V: Yes, I suppose they did. You just couldn't conceive of the possibility that, for instance Senator Kennedy would get the nomination because of his youth and being Catholic and all the other arguments that were
  • MM explains how she came to work for Lyndon Johnson, LBJ’s interaction with state office management, role of Walter Jenkins in office, LBJ’s attitude toward 1960 presidential nomination and campaign, relationship between LBJ and the Kennedys
  • of the John F. Kennedy Oral History Project, and I assume you have made a tape for it. 0: Yes, I have already. I did not particularly touch on President Johnson. B: Yes. We'll probably cover some of the same time from a different point of view
  • INTERVIEWEE: FRANK MANKIE'"wICZ INTERVIEWER: STEPHEN GOODELL PLACE: Washington, D. C. Tape 1 of 1 G: I think last time we were talking about 1967 and the last topic we discussed was your urging Senator Kennedy in 1967 to run in 1968. M: Well, I think
  • , as you said, you became an assistant to the Solicitor General in the Justice Department. P: The first time I met Mr. Johnson is partially a further answer to your question. After I came into the Department of Justice, President Kennedy had a tradition
  • Kennedy, Robert F., 1925-1968
  • , and I met him on the morning after the nomination in Los Angeles. What had happened was that I had been campaigning for President [John F.] Kennedy for about three or four years on a part-time basis. I hadn't left my office, but I would go out on trips
  • Lawson's work for John F. Kennedy in 1958-1959; gaining support for JFK among African American delegates; Kennedy's announcement that LBJ would be the vice-presidential nominee; Mary McLeod Bethune's opinion of LBJ; Lawson's recommendation
  • be represented by someone else. I don't know whether he did this because he was afraid of protest on the floor by some outside Kennedy groups or not. But at any rate he decided that John McCormack should stand in for him. He sent Jim Rowe down to talk to John
  • John McCormack's refusal to stand in for LBJ as a favorite son at the 1968 Massachusetts Democratic National Convention; LBJ's campaign weakness; LBJ's efforts to win the Kennedy family's favor; the lack of loyalty of JFK's staff members to LBJ
  • , which [John F.] Kennedy did not have, of the Chiefs of Staff as much and of the military establishment as such. B: He generally respected it? K: Yes, I think he did. B: To move on. I think he did, and does. Again, you say in your Memoirs
  • Kennedy, Robert F., 1925-1968
  • . Robert Kennedy Motorcade to the Waldorf Astoria - accompanied by. . . Motorcade too k the President through East Harlem where good crowds --~6 deep ; lined the streets. ..-•'. '" Arrive Waldorf Astoria - because of the density of the crowds in the area
  • distribution program for the general public when the Kennedy-Johnson period began. There was also the school lunch program, but that was another classification. One of the earliest presidential or secretarial orders reestablished the Food Stamp Program
  • stockpile, and President Kennedy had asked the Senate to have an investigation, specifically he had asked Symington who was chairman of the Stockpile Subcommittee of the Senate Armed Services Committee. Symington asked Kennedy to send someone up
  • for LBJ; comparison of the White House social life of the Kennedys and the Johnsons; Kappel Commission and reorganization of the Post Office; defection of top level appointees regarding Vietnam policy; Larry O’Brien’s opposition to Vietnam policy
  • - Mr. & Mrs. Bill Moyers, Jack Valenti, Mr. & Mrs. Abe Arr Waldorf - Astoria & greeted by Tom Kane - escorted to Feinberg grand Ballroom for Weizmann Institute Dinner Address by the President Departs Hotel and drives to Kennedy International Airport
  • / the President. Mrs. Johnson and other ladies -- except Mrs. Kennedy -- already at the table to suite in hotel - take Mrs. Birge Alexander and Dr. Carp to meet President Kennedy in his suite. Carswell AFB via presidential motorcade w/ Mrs. Connally and Mrs
  • been reading about this coznmission from Kennedy. about it. We've started reading DALEY: Oh, yes. WATSON: I want to tell you what we know about it. Mel Elfrin, of Newsweek magazine, tells us he got his original tip from a freind of Ted
  • Kennedy, Robert F. (Robert Francis), 1925-1968
  • of Tucson and had to resign that pOSition. After the nomination of Mr. Stevenson and when the Convention was thrown open for selection, Jack Kennedy was nominated for Vice President, and I led the opposition to President Kennedy on the Arizona delegation
  • THE WHITE ,­ HOUSE ---- WASHINGTON 4 December MEMORANDUM FOR: Bromley Subj: 1963 Smith Changes in Defense Readiness the Assassination of President Conditions Kennedy as a Result of 1. By the authority granted under the Joint Chiefs
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • NOVEMBER 1963, GILBERTO ALVARADO, NICARAGUAN, ADMITTED TO MECICAN SECURITYOFFICIALSIN WRITING THATHIS WHOLE STORYOF HAVINGSEENLEE OSWALD RECEIVEMONEY IN THE CUBAN EMBASSY IN MEXICOCITY TO ASSASSINATE PRESIDENT KENNEDY WASFALSE. HE ADMITTED HE HADNOTSEENLEE
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • NTERV I EWEE: MYLTON L. KENNEDY INTERVIEWER: MICHAEL L. GILLETTE PLACE: Mr. Kennedy's residence, Denver, Colorado Tape of 1 G: Let's start with your first acquaintance with Lyndon Johnson. You indicated earlier that you arrived on the campus
  • See all online interviews with Mylton Kennedy
  • Kennedy, Mylton
  • Oral history transcript, Mylton Kennedy, interview 1 (I), 5/9/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
  • Mylton Kennedy
  • quite a They had first the Kennedy-Ives Bill; Jack Kennedy and Irving Ives of New York had this bill which was a rather moderate effort to correct some of the abuses in labor. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • President [John F.] Kennedy. But he was not necessarily--well, he was the not the sort of member of that team who would just be prepared to happily and whole-heartedly espouse every piece of legislation. That's my feeling. And I know it's not the general
  • to Hyannis Port to visit the Kennedys; Mrs. Johnson's impressions of the Kennedy family, including Robert Kennedy; campaigning in Texas with John F. Kennedy's sisters and mother; JFK's meeting with Protestant ministers in Houston; incident with anti-Kennedy
  • INTERVIEWEE: DAN FENN INTERVIEWER: Paige Mulhollan PLACE: Cambridge, Massachusetts Tape 1 of 2 M: You are Dan Fenn, currently director of the Kennedy Library and lecturer at Harvard Business School. Your government association during the Johnson years
  • ] to summarize Kennedy and then we'll go to LBJ's style. The Kennedy I first knew was a fellow who had decided to run for statewide office in Massachusetts. As he traveled the state to become acquainted beyond his congressional district, he had a set speech
  • John F. Kennedy's (JFK) effort as a young politician to become a better communicator; how Lyndon Johnson's (LBJ) legislative power shifted when he became vice president and then president; JFK's and LBJ's different styles in dealing with members
  • breakfast Walter (Wash, DC) Lunch visited Pres and Mrs. Kennedy at Glen Ora Dinner at Huntland: Mrs. J; Bob and MMW 6. Spent night at Huntland * Selecte d name s should be underscored. Sunday SEE VERSO FOR TRAVEL ACTIVITY AND CODE April 23, 1961
  • . JOSEPH P. KENNEDY, JR. FOUNDATION AWARDS DINNER begins. Dais List: Prime Minister and Mrs. Pearson of Canada, Sen. and Mrs. Edward Kennedy, Mr. and Mrs. Sargent Shriver, Jack Benny, Mrs. Rose Kennedy, Kennedy Foundation Award Recipients; Dr. Lionel S
  • University Stadium and Space Installations in Rich Building accompanying President Kennedy 2 1:00p Returned to Rice Hotel * Selected names should be underscored. SEE VERSO FOR TRAVEL ACTIVITY AND CODE 12, 1963 Expenditure Code
  • Arr Miami, Florida and went to Fontainebleau Hotel on Miami Beach. 3 Addressed Steelworkers' Convention. Dep. Miami for Washington, D. C. Arr Washington, D. C. 6 Helicopter to Anacostia Naval Base 7 Met President Kennedy and boarded Yacht Sequoia
  • both McCarthy and Bobby Kennedy on the ballot. I have asked Bailey and Criswe ll at DNC to talk to the State Chairman and National Committeeman and our friends and get their recommendations on these Primaries. I do not want to say I am or I am
  • Kennedy, Robert F. (Robert Francis), 1925-1968