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  • me that his other officer had become quite ill and was going to have to retire. principal officers. At this time the bank had really only two So he asked me if I could break away from the bank in Los Angeles and go back to the bank in Provo. cerned
  • =:.c:i:-.s ,eve:: to ::om:: ~o::~e-.: fo:: •~.:S aerio:u. :.mt ::-eflective di:.lo:~ ir. t::e :ie·.:io:• a l:.=~, :i:c~ of t:1.! pr::~s c.nt! t~:.eviaior. fo:.-.:3 ,:en.:ied to !.t.cn:!£y :l!~c:: -:'o~:.!: r.s :.n .:sc~el!'!.c covesq,:r. uaoc!ated oQly t1
  • at that time was that I would line up my Congressional district, get friends of mine that I knew were supporters of his to start working to get on the delegation, to go to the Convention in Los Angeles. I made no public announcement, I just went home and I
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh August 19, 1970 F: This is an interview with Mr. John A. McCone in his office in Los Angeles, California, on August 19, 1970. The interviewer is Joe B. Frantz. Mr. McCone, you have served both the Republicans
  • a particularly interesting quote in view of what happened many years after that between Mr. Johnson and Mr. Fulbright. L: That's right. B: Then, sir, you said you went to the Los Angeles convention. Did you go as a John Kennedy partisan? L: Yes
  • LBJ-Rayburn relationship; LBJ as legislator; the 1960 Democratic convention in Los Angeles; LBJ and his domestic programs evaluated; LBJ and the watchdog committee for the AEC; LBJ's visit to Iran and his influence on the Shah; LBJ asks Lilienthal
  • Marvin Watso n 0 ^ WHITE HOUSE Date IDENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON r DIARY President began his day at (Place) the :1 Time Telephone 1 In Out Lo Activit 10:24a t Secretary Hon. 10:44a t Hon. 10:47a t Cong. 11:04a f 11:17a t Tom Califano 11:19a t
  • to get across is that a crisis like that at Los Angeles could be both a danger point and an opportunity. King felt this is the time to seek the causes and face the fact that we have not done enough to right the wrongs. King and Levison also discussed
  • Chalmers Roberts , Washingto n Pos t Joh n Cauley , Kansa s Cit y Sta r t Donovan , Lo s Angele s Timef e ; Davi d Wise , N . Y . Heral d Tribun e Rober and JV , .GER, an d Dou g Cate r meetin g ende d at 10:0 0 p.m. Viewed T V program o n Mrs . Johnso n i
  • which Governor Reed had sent him. The President drove i over the countryside, sometimes on the road, and other times over the lands --damaging the automobile. Birthplace -- where the President said, "This car is no good," because of its front right tire
  • , Knickerbocker News, Albany, N. Y. Don Goodenow, managing editor, Los Angeles Herald Examiner Louis Guzzo, managing editor, Seattle Post-Intelligencer William Randolph Hearst, Jr. More on Page 12 Dam October White House Da\ 5, 1966 Wednesday Activity
  • . I have There were others the same day. That evening was the evening that Senator [Robert] Kennedy was wounded in Los Angeles, and the following day the activities were interrupted for that reason. F: Yes, I remember. T: And although we finished
  • air/ and he's sending me couple of articles he 1 s along this line before he made such intensive research. me January 19, 1957 I Hr. Clarence Green ~reene-Rouse Productions Goldwyn Studios Los Angeles, California Dear Mr. Greene: Thank you
  • Officer, The Cleveland Foundation; Thomas Bradley, Mayor, Los Angeles; Maynard Jackson, Mayor, Atlan­ ta; Esther Peterson, former Assistant Secretary, Deparlmen o[ Labor; Wendell Anderson, Governor, Minnesota; Earl Johnson, Jr., Professor of Law. Universi­
  • in--for announcement of Warren Minor Christopher, a lawyer from Los Angeles, Deputy Attorney General . President to the Cabinet Room to Join Secy Dean Rusk ; ' Earle Wheeler, Chmn of JCS . y Robert McNamar a _____„___ Hon. Richard Helms. Director CIA' .; ~* Hon
  • may wish to discuss this matter in my absence. The following cities may conceivably be selected as the pllot city: St. Louis, . Providence, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Detroit, °Los Angeles, Chicago, and Cleveland. . : ,. ' .,. '' ! • I '. l ". I
  • night so I don't think--I doubt if we ever stayed overnight. I mean even going to California, we went, I remember going to California and we went to Los Angeles. I don't know which year we did that or what trip that was in. G: I think it was 1966. C
  • to Los Angeles to the 1960 convention to work for Lyndon Johnson. P: Yes, at the Biltmore Hotel, as I had twice. G: What happened when you got there? P: We began to have little meetings around like you usually have at a convention where you
  • 1960 convention in Los Angeles; the Biltmore Hotel; decision to take the Vice-Presidential post with JFK; connection with Johnson family in Oglethorpe County, Georgia; Lady Bird Johnson’s grandfather as founder of Baylor University; the LBJ Library
  • , 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
  • biography of Lyndon Johnson, spoke at the Library on the subject of LBJ and the rise of liberal nationalism. Dallek, a professor of history at the University of Califor­ nia at Los Angeles, gave the third Littlefield Lecture Series in Ameri­ can History
  • the Democratic Nominee in Los Angeles that to them appears to be the best qualified, most experienced, ablest Once selected and most dedicated the person available. we're all going to work for his election. We're going to elect the Democratic 'i'icket From
  • in Los Angeles and the East Los Angeles Community Union were others in time. very effective organizations. They were I confirmed in my own mind that my approach was better than the Alinsky approach. Nevertheless, when my son wanted to learn
  • on the ticket. F: Did you do anything to help him get ready for the 1960 convention in Los Angeles? W: Well, we all did something. There was a heck of a lot to do. The 1960 convention was totally unlike the 1964 convention. F: You knew pretty well in Los
  • ' and Vietnam; LBJ’s public relations and popular public personalities over time; attending White House functions; arranging a mobile home for LBJ to use for freshening up before a Los Angeles appearance; LBJ’s interest in movies and television; 1968 campaign
  • in there. M: Did you campaign then for Lyndon Johnson again? S: Oh, yes. I handled all of his senatorial campaigns beginning in 1948, then in 1954, and then in 1960 I was out in Los Angeles with the Johnson For President people. So I've been very
  • Spears’ youth; Spears’ entry into politics; getting to know LBJ; Spears role in the 1948 and 1954 elections; LBJ becoming favorite son in 1956; Spears’ relationship with Allan Shivers; Shivers becoming a Republican; 1960 Los Angeles convention
  • Negotiations, and is now a Washington attorney, will be the LBJ School's Commencement speaker on May 22. 5 At Southwest Texas State University Tom JohnsonReflects on LBJ Tom Johns n, Publisher of the Los Angeles Times and President of the LBJ Foundation
  • the New York state delegation--who voted for him in Los Angeles on the first ballot. I remember giving a newspaper an interview at the time which said that we shouldn't discount the effectiveness of Lyndon Johnson on the ticket because he brought enormous
  • with the minjnn1m of repression; that the second is to ex,­ press and act proportionate values in the use of time and emphasis;: that such approach, of course, will encourage intellectual honesty, intellectual curios­ ity, kindness, clarity, and above all
  • Iavostif:atiou. I ·-·- -- -- --· __ _ PRESERVATION COPY _! •. - "' . ~ . ' · --~d_. ..CL. . ~~a.."~~· . · /UU- : ~ - ~-- ~ 14;,~-·< .. . .. ... -. - .. _:· : ~/U-lo-&.. I • A-d ~ . ..." . 'O"ZA
  • . C., last evening from New York City. Last~ evening Carmichael attended a student function at Howard University entitled ''Project Awareness" which sponso~~d a speech by Ron Karenga, leader of US, a militant black nationalist group in Los Angeles
  • Affairs Mro Toshiro Shimanouchi, Consul General of Japan at Los Angeles (Interpreter) The President Secretary Rusk Ambassador Reischauer Assistant Secretary William Bundy Mr. McGeorge Bundy Mro Marshall Green, Deputy Assistant Secretary, Far Eastern
  • on through, even until the Democratic convention when he was put on the ticket in the second spot in Los Angeles, because it was Rayburn's hand always that was moving the cards. S: What was Johnson himself like in those early days? You say you don't
  • time I had ever been on a long-distance train. Wetook the train and went out to Los Angeles. Mymemories of this are not very clear, except I do rememberLos Angeles, I do rememberour going downto San Diego. I remembermy father buying a Scripps-Booth
  • meeting which was held in Los Angeles, Calif. in November 1967. l Bonds R11,tJ11,Jy on the P11yroJJ S111Jint,s Pl11n &., U.S. S111Jin1,s THEBLACK YOUTR CONFERENCE SOUTHERN OFFICE NORTREBN OFFICE c/o BLACK CONGRESS 7228 S. Broadway Los Angeles, Calif
  • time around; but they wouldn't altogether close the door on him. F: Were you in Los Angeles? H: Yes. I got out there early to help things along and to do just general staff work -- meeting delegates as they arrived and again talking to the people
  • Biographical information; 1937-1960 campaigns; Congressional secretary to LBJ; lived with the Johnsons; Hardy Hollers; waiting for election returns; appointment as U.S. District Attorney; Herbert Brownwell; Frankie Randolph; Los Angeles Democratic
  • a frequent caller or visitor. F: And he was not one of the sort of inner clique, so-called? V: No, he was not. F: Did you go to Los Angeles? V: Yes, I did. 13 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B
  • heard of smog and air pollution. At the most it was kind of a local joke in Los Angeles, and that was about the extent of it. It wasn't really until people began to see it in their own communities, hear more about it, until the 1958 and 1962 episodes
  • to you that you're not going to win this election unless you take Johnson on for vice president." F: This is long before Los Angeles? C: This is in Los Angeles, after the vote on Lyndon. I had gone earlier to Sam Rayburn--I was out in Los Angeles
  • ; Corcoran's work for LBJ at the 1960 Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles; Corcoran's efforts to convince Sam Rayburn that LBJ should accept the vice presidential nomination in 1960; Mike Mansfield as Senator Majority Leader; Jim Landis; Ambassador
  • . At that time I must confess that I was rather naive about national politics and I assumed that he had a good chance to win. I learned later when I hit the convention in 1960 in Los Angeles that there really was no chance to win, that it was pretty much all
  • Meeting LBJ; Albert Thomas; seeing his wife for the first time; events before and during the 1960 convention; LBJ accepting the vice-presidential nomination; LBJ as Senate Majority Leader; Valenti’s role in the 1960 convention; advertising
  • Consolidated Gas, and the Budd Company. Pl111s have been developed for similar projects to be held in the following cities begiMing in June: Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Hartford, Houston, Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, San Francisco
  • Carolina!" D: Did you go to Los Angeles in 1960 to cover the convention? D: Yes, I went there. F: What did you do out there? D: I wrote back to my paper. F: And saw the Republican convention? D: And Lyndon came by San Francisco
  • AUSTIN: Richard Lewis Robert Toth James Gansen Mn?phy Martin Ron Nessen Chicago Sun Times Los Angeles Times American Broadcasting Company American Broadcasting Compaiy National Broadcasting Company PAN AMERICAN: Captain Fir ot Officer Flight Engineer