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  • and Mrs. Nixon, Senator Dirksen, Speaker McCormack, Vice President and Mrs. Humphrey, Vice President-elect and Mrs. Agnew, Senator Mansfield, Congressman G. Ford, Senator Jordan, Congressman Carl Albert, Lynda, Luci, Ambassador Leonard Marks, Mr. and Mrs
  • ON WIDE SPREAD DISCONTENT OVER THE WAR . MCCARTHY•s CYN ICIS :~ I S C}{AR ACTER ISTIC OF THE ~AN . LAWRENCE : NIXON IS AHEAD IN THE RACE FOR THE GOP NOMINATION 3 ASED ON GALLU? ?OLL OF REPUBLICAN COUNTY CHAiR MEN . ROCK ­ EFELLER WOULD HAVE BEEN
  • , that was at the Speaker ' s personal request. Pnd then the President had respect for Lyndon ' s judgment, and he knew some people the President didn ' t knm·1. Staffing an administration, as Mr. Nixon has found, is very difficult. They talked al most every day
  • going. Question: We haven't seen Mr. Nixon say anything like predicting bringing the troops home late this year - -some of the troops home late I?o you think that this year or early next year--as Mr. Humprey said. might have some effect
  • contributed dozens of stories to the Nation, most of them anti-HCUA, -FBI, -civil defense, -loyalty oaths, -Nixon, etc. He has worked for Pacifica Foundation radio stations in Berkeley and Los Angeles and managed the campaign of a leftwing San Francisco
  • THE CHINESE M1BASSADOR IN THE STRONGEST TERMS Y£STfR DA Y THAT WE CANNOT STAND PAT. BESIDES THE CHINESE, 11-fE JAPANESE ARE THE MOST RELUCTANT TO MOVE, BEING CONCERNED THAT SATO·s POSITION MIGHT BE THREATENED IF THE WORST OCCURRED IN NEW YMJC. \tie ARE ENLIST
  • live out a pec~lim-- a."1dd--:~dly pat-c~n1. 'Ihe first prcr2qilisitc for a nction CC!pc.blE: ·of ~er,ocic.c is th2 beliet t:1::t t~ey C:..."'0 sup';;rior· to th~ir vic-c;ns. They ;;iust b-2li\:.·VG th:-4t they a:r·0 0~ti tlcd to the control of' th0 lir
  • . Into the President's bedroom. 1. 8:35 CTJ to Mr. Per's for shampoo and set. 9:12 Called Jim Ketchum. Luci had tour of Nixon Administration. Children! 10:30 CTJ came back to the White House. 10:36 Called Helen Williams to come in to bedroom. 11:06 Called Mary Rather. 11
  • and President [Richard] Nixon during LBJ's retirement. F: Well, obviously this ignores the striking earlier history between the two going back to the Eisenhower years, but Johnson made it a point with the [1968] election barely over--we were in New York
  • Meeting LBJ and the "Johnson treatment;" deciding how to proceed in the Richard Nixon Administration with Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) programs that existed in the Johnson Administration; problems enacting civil rights legislation; Finch's
  • and his discussion with you as he was leaving the presidency. Do you want to recount what you can of that conversation? F: I may have mentioned when we talked before, that the day after the [Richard] Nixon election in 1968, when we were in New York
  • LBJ's meeting with Richard Nixon and members of Nixon's Cabinet following the 1968 election; LBJ's interest in finding a cure for cancer; problems enacting civil rights legislation, such as "white flight"; problems with the implementation
  • in accCll'danot. with r.,etrictlone contained in the donor'• deed of qift~ GENERAL SERVICES ADMINISTRATION -1 I NOTES OF THE PRESIDENT'S MEETING WITH THE PRESIDENT-ELECT RICHARD NIXON November 11, 1968 PRESENT AT THE !v1EETING WERE: The President President
  • Folder, "[November 11, 1968 - 3:00 p.m. Meeting with Foreign Policy Advisors and President-Elect Nixon]," Meeting Notes Files, Box 3
  • . ..c~~ .· f''~~-_N'"-r~··_ b_.·~· _ J.1~· ~..": ~ ··.'.-:i·_:~ \ : Y' ~; ·~ - ·~7 t;. ._ ADMINISTRATION. NA FORM 1"29 (8-85) . ; NOVEMBER 11, 1968 - 3 p. m PRESIDENT'S M EETING WITH PRESIDENT­ ELECT NIXON The President President-Elect Nixon
  • Folder, "November 11, 1968 - 3 p.m. President and President-elect Nixon," Papers of Tom Johnson, Box 4
  • ';lntry. After the 2.0th President I . . h. . Nixon speaks for th,. country and President Johnson supports im in every um $1.) (f,..j.,' ~r way he _c an. There rill be timely r:flccilugs with Ambassador Murphy now, and later with the s1cretary o~ Stat
  • CHRISTIAN DISCUSSES HIS RESPONSE TO PRESS CONCERNING MISINTERPRETATION OF NIXON'S STATEMENT ANNOUNCING APPOINTMENT OF ROBERT MURPHY AS NIXON'S LIAISON DURING TRANSITION, INCLUDING STORY THAT LBJ WAS IRRITATED WITH NIXON
  • November 20, 2008 Reference No. 13909 Processing Note A: represents President Johnson; B: represents Richard Nixon. Transcript only of this conversation; there is no recording. A copy of this transcript was interfiled on this date from the Alpha
  • LBJ DISCUSSES HIS UPCOMING STATE OF THE UNION MESSAGE AND STATEMENT HE WANTS NIXON TO ISSUE IN SUPPORT OF LBJ'S REMARKS IN THE MESSAGE ON THE SURTAX
  • Nixon, Richard M. (Richard Milhous), 1913-1994
  • Telephone conversation # 13909, transcript, LBJ and RICHARD NIXON, 1/10/1969, 5:11 PM
  • RICHARD NIXON
  • RICHARD NIXON
  • Reference No. 13618a November 25, 2008 Processing Note . Transcript only of this conversation; there is no recording. DATE: 10/31168 TIME: 6:05 PM CALLER: Hubert Humphrey, Richard Nixon, George Wallace Pages ofTranscript: 15 pages Barbara Cline
  • *TRANSCRIPT ONLY OF THIS CONVERSATION; THERE IS NO RECORDING; LBJ IS MEETING WITH JIM JONES AT TIME OF CALL; HHH, RICHARD NIXON, AND GEORGE WALLACE WERE REACHED BY TELEPHONE; TIME FROM DAILY DIARY
  • Nixon, Richard M. (Richard Milhous), 1913-1994
  • Saturday t or t Activity LD (include visited by) President departed the front lawn --in his car. . . and to landing strip area to greet Mr. Richard Nixon and party Also aboard: The Governor of Maryland, Hon. Spiro T. Agnew /\,.- Nixon aides ; Dwight
  • Former Vice President, Richard Nixon, to the second floor where he met With the President in his bedroom. Bill Moyers told newsmen that they talked informally about Nixon's recent trip to Europe. Bill Moyers ^ r ^ . . ^ Mrs. Johnson called Jusnita
  • : W. Thomas Joltnson FOREIGN POLICY MEETING NOTES ON NOVEMBER 26, 19~~r-HTIZEU FAMILY DINING ROOM SANITIZED Authority N L J - c_ g _s THOSE ATTENDING: By ~ ~MRS, Date /~-9-B'f lf-o The President Secretary Rusk Secretary Clifford Robert Murphy (Nixon
  • Secretary Clifford: Scoop thought that the Nixon honeymoon would be short. Nixon is anti-Democrat. Because of no relationship, Senator Jackson doubted he would have much influence. He also thought that Nixon was going to unload on him. PUEBLO fl I
  • visited by) departed Oval Office to meet President-Elect and Mrs. Richard M. Nixon and daughter Tricia. President met the Nixons on the South Grounds, proceeded from there to Oval Office with President-Elect Nixon. Mrs. Nixon and Tricia went
  • of South Vietnam--I never could say that man's name--again hoping that that was going to move the whole process forward. I think the amount of time he put into like the briefing with Nixon and briefings 1 LBJ Presidential Library http
  • consulting with Clark Clifford; transition activities the last two months of LBJ's administration; miscommunications between LBJ and Nixon and their staffs; Henry Kissinger's criticism of LBJ's foreign policy; Nelson Rockefeller; LBJ's frustration
  • member of the JCS behind this plan now. We will lose two men on the JCS next spring -- Wheeler and McConnell. If we wait for Nixon they will put off those matters they can put off. It could be a year before a Nixon team is ready to do this. If we get
  • with Liz. Worked with Liz. 3:20-3:50 To the theater with Simone to see "Not as a Privilege" (movie on health education in Denver). 3:55 Returned to the second floor. 4:15 Called Mrs. Nixon to invite her to come visit and look over living quarters. Rested
  • : Strauss is like a stone wall. He won't revalue. - - We 1 ll be working out our Budget. -- Nixon says we shouldn't extend surtax. -- Mills says unless Nixon fights for it, the surtax won't be extended. -- We'll spend $186 this year. We should take in about
  • know Colson. He comes from Massachusetts. He was on the staff of Senator Leverett Saltonstall at one time. You must know him." I repeated I didn't. He identified him then as a member of Nixon's White House staff, at which point I think I had some vague
  • Charles Colson; memos Richard Nixon's staff wrote and distributed attempting to hurt O'Brien's reputation, including one that suggested a conflict of interest between O'Brien as head of O'Brien Associates and Democratic National Committee (DNC
  • to meet that timing. ' : ', / f1 ~ ·: - 2 ­ ', • \ •',•• .: ~~· ~. .. ,· ,., ~ ., ,. ., 4. If we don't get agreement, make a unilateral declaration. We have a major problem on our hands. They may figure they help Nixon by staying
  • Nixon, Richard M. (Richard Milhous), 1913-1994
  • of the Oklahoma Republican Committee. In 1962 you were elected governor of Oklahoma, the first Republican governor of the state, and served as governor until 1966. In about that year I believe you became Nixon's national campaign manager and also opened
  • Political biography; meetings with President Johnson; impressions of LBJ; development of Republican Party in Oklahoma; work as Nixon's national campaign manager in 1966 and 1967; impact of LBJ's administration on state of Oklahoma
  • Administration or a Nixon Administration to go on with. Bunker may not be putting it to them stiffly enough. I consider this a deep issue of good faith. Secretary Rusk: What if Nixon's people say be tough. They are whip-sawed too. They have a problem
  • Nixon, Richard M. (Richard Milhous), 1913-1994
  • are making an effort to throw the election to Humphrey. He said Nixon had been told of it. Nixon told Smathers he did not want the President to be pulled into this, that wrong results could flow. Nixon said he is afraid we would be misled. Senator Smathers