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418 results
Reference File, "Saluting"
(Item)
- Truman Gerald R. Ford John F. Kennedy The following Presidents did return the salutes ... : Dwight D. Eisenhower Jimmy Carter Ronald Reagan George W. Bush A Presidential Library Administered by the National Archives and Records Administration Jr
Reference File, "Saluting"
(Item)
- Truman Gerald R. Ford John F. Kennedy The following Presidents did return the salutes ... : Dwight D. Eisenhower Jimmy Carter Ronald Reagan George W. Bush A Presidential Library Administered by the National Archives and Records Administration Jr
- esteem as an ex-president could influence the way scholars write about him in the future, and also the way the public begins to view that pre~idency. Ronald Reagan: "A president who was brought to office by two landslides in the ! 980s, who left office
- . And when he chose LO address the country on the energy cri is, he deliberately picked the format of the fireside chat. In the 1980 campaign, even Ronald Reagan quoted from FDR to such an extent in his acceptance addre. s that the New York Times titled its
- ... They cheered every time he had a good line ... They didn ·t care what he said. They were just happy to be there with Ronald Reagan." Even when the press reported it, "it didn't make any differ ence at all." "What kind of reporting does make a difference
- possibilities. Since only a handful of Republicans give Gov. Nel son Rockefeller any chance, most of the Republican power brokers have turned to examine the party's biggest aew attractions-Ronald Reagan and Charles Percy. Both have latent strength out of all
- likenesses of Presidents beginning ith John Quincy Adams through Ronald Reagan. All are original prints or produced from original nega tives. Included are tintypes, daguerreotypes, albumen prints, gelatin silver prints and chromogenic development prints
- U.S. Inter vention in the Dominican Republic"; Ronald W. Fletcher, "Military Reform: The Congressional Connec tion"; Kathleen Hulser, "Colorful Landscapes: Billboards and the Debates over American Public Space, 5 1900-1965"; Jonathan A. Lee
- Winston Churchill (left). Billie Shaddix (Ford) aid of the pic ture below: "This photograph I love. Everyone marching to their own drummer." 2 "Always together" Mary Anne Fackelman-Minor said of Ronald and Nancy Reagan (left). Michael Geissinger (above
- ? Do you work hard? Do you sleep all the time? Is your memory failing?" He laughs! Johnson wouldn't laugh at that, would he? So it's a strange thing. I've never thought of this. But a White House conference that condemns Ronald Reagan, it might make
- Jimmy Carter residential Center in Atlanta, the number of presidenti libraries in the U.S. has grown to eight. Plan are already underway for a Ronald Reagan Library at Stanford University in California, and although discussio of a Richard Nixon Library
- . Ronald Reagan Library. Lyndon B. Johnson Library The LBJ Library is one of ten prcsidcn1ial libmrie.~ admini,1t·rcd by 1hc i'-a1ional Ard1ives and Record., Ad111inis1 r.11 i,>11.
- Kennedy won the Democratic nomination over Stuart Symington. Hubert Humphrey. and Lyndon Johnson, Strauss said In 1976,Jimmy Carter won it over Sen. Henry Jack son. Morris Udall. and Humphrey. ln 19 O. Ronald Reagan beat out G rge Bush and Sens. Howard
- a (Ronald Reagan) The Governo r o f Colorado (John A . Love ) The Governo r o f Connecticut (John N , Dempsey ) The Governo r o f Delaware (Charles L . Terry , Jr. ) The Governo r o f Florida ^ (Claude R. Kirk) ,, for ^ the The Governo r o f Georgi
- y t Ralph Maugha n 5 Dennis J . Czarkowsk i t Ronald MacDonal d t Marker L . Nichol s n G . Wheele r III 4 Frederick T . Allen d H . Dabne y Mr. Rober t Melchior i SP 3 R . F . Kuklinsk i Mr. Denni s Sha w SP 4 James L. Powers III Mr. Willia m
Oral history transcript, Adrian A. Spears, interview 2 (II), 4/14/1989, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- gotten married here or lived here, and I felt that the influence that the military would have would make it very hard to do anything with him. And I would have said the same thing today, because he was a popular man just like [Ronald] Reagan was popular
Oral history transcript, Joseph A. Califano, interview 10 (X), 9/23/1987, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- seat. The other thing I should mention, and I notice [Ronald] Reagan's name here somewhere in my notes, I don't know whether Reagan was a declared candidate or not but Brown was worried about Reagan. I don't know whether he said anything at this time
- and wise enough. Sometimes I am totally convinced you'll have a mandatory seventy [year] retirement [age], which would preclude Ronald Reagan from being the candidate. But LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT
- he preferred briefs or boxer shorts. Ronald Reagan was emphati cally a man of Hollywood: Shribman noted that one biography of him is aptly titled President Reagan: The Role of a Lifetime. Noting chat the campaign com petition between George W. Bush
- the block grant is now developing, the Ronald Reagan theme that plays itself out again. Less of a support for the block grant, much more still for the categorical, even despite the Nixonian approach to block granting things also. Nothing close to the success
- . Thomas admires him further for "doing the most u eful work of any liv ing ex-president." Ronald Reagan: "There was a Reagan revolution," Ms. Thomas affirmed, ··and it continues today." She applauded Reagan for contributing 4 significantly to the dO
- sign this thing. You got to pick out a good place for him. Mr. LBJ and, of course, I can't get Ronald Reagan. And I think we are through trying to get signatures now because there 7 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
- thirty-five, forty, forty-five minutes even though it was only supposed to be a half an hour. But President Ronald Reagan used to stand there and Helen Thomas, the senior correspondent, would say, "Thank you, Mr. President," shutting off the news
- of which was dedicated by President Johnson. Then I had my troubles with a new governor of the state, one Ronald Reagan, in the course of which he won and I lost. Then I became a faculty member again. K: Maybe a battle, but not the war? CK: Well
- THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON MRS. LYNDON B. JOHNSON, Daily Diary 1966 5, 1966 Mrs. Johnson began her day at (Place) Ranch Date Saturday, March Entry No. Time Activity H.G.: Krims, Lynda 12:45 In SS car drove to Reagan Ranch. Joined President
- and the White Hous will be adorned with a downright rn ron." Liz drew the curtain of harity across that one, say ing ') won't even comment on that." Liz admir s the way Ronald Reagan used humor to deflect criticism of his administra tion. His self-deprecation
- into the · · ·- .... - ·· ·· · -:·~-~·:::::-~>.;::: instance, of the sente~.ce: "To wings of platitude. But it is a NOTES rugbt our nation is accomplish very foolish thought. In the \ ing more for its people. than first place, it is a -government Ronald Reagan t.i s.u a 11 y . has ever been accomplished
- of anything: they are results. Nobody reflects that better than Ronald Reagan. He is not the cause at all of the country being conservative. His presidency is the result of a conservatising trend that began when he was still a liberal Democrat and head of one
- in Austin condemned the civil rights portion of Harry Truman ·s Fair Deal as a farce and a sham, an effort, he said. to set up a police state in the guise of history. But if Ronald Reagan, who voted four times for Frank lin Roosevelt, could change his mind
Oral history transcript, Joseph A. Califano, interview 63 (LXIII), 4/17/1990, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- of the things [Richard] Nixon learned when he went with [Clement] Haynsworth and whatever the other guy was, and of the things [Ronald] Reagan learned with [Robert] Bork--[G. Harrold] Carswell--that Supreme Court seat is something that the Senate takes very
Oral history transcript, Richard Morehead, interview 2 (II), 7/2/1987, by Christie L. Bourgeois
(Item)
- John Connally and LBJ; Connally's efforts to get governors' support for LBJ's actions in Vietnam; clashes between Connally and Ronald Reagan; the purpose of JFK's 1963 trip to Texas; how things changed in Texas when LBJ became president; a LBJ Ranch
Oral history transcript, Lawrence F. O'Brien, interview 16 (XVI), 11/21/1986, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , Jeff Cohelan, the New York Times, Newsweek; John Gilligan; O'Brien's June 1966 trip to California and his report on the political climate there; Ronald Reagan; evidence that negative comments by U.S. congressmen regarding Vietnam were being used
- with Lyndon Johnson, named Senator Charles Mathias from Maryland. He's from this congressional district. voted for equal rights. But he has always So he was the senior member on the Senate Judiciary Committee when Ronald Reagan was elected president
- chose Jimmy Carter. He was highly moral, conscientious, patri otic, hard workina, and nol a Washington insider. "But,'" Shields observed, "h se med to change h.is mind a lot. So in I 980 along came Ronald Reagan, who had not changed his mind since 1964
- office, only two presidents who have survived the two full terms that they are now limited to by the Constitution, and walked out of that office with-- LC: Grace? DC: With grace, right. And those two were Dwight D. Eisenhower and Ronald Reagan. LC
Oral history transcript, Joseph A. Califano, interview 21 (XXI), 2/22/1988, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- for presidents to have litmus tests, and all the flak that [Ronald] Reagan takes for having them is just because he has got the wrong litmus test, not because he's got a litmus test. And we ought to get into that. You ought to get that appointment of that judge
- put upon the Department of Labor directly and through the governor of the state. Governor [Ronald] Reagan did everything possible to assist the growers. I think, actually, that one of the better chapters in the Labor Department's activities under
Oral history transcript, Edmund Gerald (Pat) Brown, interview 1 (I), 2/20/1969, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- Kennedy in California two years previously in the campaign for the presidency . [I] then succumbed to the motion picture actor Ronald Reagan, myself, when I sought a third term . Since that time, I have been in the private practice of law . been
- in the White House, the answer was, "I learned never to open my mouth around you." In a serious vein Th mas flatly denied the stories that Ronald Reagan was slipping mentaUy near Lheend of hj tenure. Hi managerial ty]e may have convinced observer. that he wa
Oral history transcript, Joseph A. Califano, interview 25 (XXV), 3/17/1988, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- of detachment and LBJ allowing cabinet officers to run their own shops? C: Well, he allowed people to run their own shops on things--in no way the way a President [Ronald] Reagan or even a President [Jimmy] Carter allowed people to run their own shops