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  • of say, "Well, we expect you to say that," you know. But you know--while the "New Left" calls the New York Times and the Post the Establishment press, Spiro T. Agnew doesn't. Nor does Richard Nixon. Maybe we've come a long ways when the supporters
  • First meeting with LBJ in March, 1946; Ganson Purcell; James Rowe; Sam Rayburn; W. Averell Harriman; Truman’s anti-inflation program; General Counsel for AEC; Herbert Marks; Kenneth D. McKellar; Dr. Edward U. Condon; General McArthur; Richard
  • in Texas and with the FBI alone. But eventually, over a matter of days and after a lunch with Richard Russell, the senator from Georgia who had been Johnson's mentor in the Senate, Johnson changed his mind. "l became interested in the Johnson tape
  • HIVE, ~xr, WITH PRESIDENTIAL NOMINEE RICHARD II'. NIXON. • ; i! ;H 0~1 ~JO~~BER TWO, INSTANT, AT SEVEN TEN A.ti!., MRS. '. ; CHEN~AutT• S CAR VAS OBSERVED IN THE PARKING GARAGE AT, :1 'ftc'!O FIVE ONE ZERO VIRGINIA AVENUE, N.W. ·: .1 I ·I
  • was it that [Richard] Helms became head? Because I was there that day and he was very complimentary about Helms. We all met upstairs in the living quarters and then went downstairs for the Helms swearing in. I would say that was in 1966 sometime, wasn't it? G: I'll
  • by Nixon, who discussed this with me as a result of a detailed conversation with the President-Elect. The Nixon Administration ran with it. I was asked by the President to co-chair a citizens' committee to carry on this advocacy. I considered it totally non
  • continued advocacy work for postal reform as co-chair of a citizen's committee; legislation enacted under Richard Nixon to give the Post Office Department more independence and the ability to self-finance; lack of political interest in the Post Office
  • say that he was less an initiator of legislation than he had been prior to that time. G: I guess one could explain his ability in the House of Representatives as a result of having worked for Richard Kleberg and being an assistant, but how did he
  • the press. You must remember a little piece of political background. There was a senator in Georgia at that time named Richard Russell. Richard Russell had been the foremost opponent of Jack Kennedy in the Senate, and in the lame duck period between being
  • ; affirmative action; Jerry Holleman; John Hope Franklin; Gwendolyn Tice; Percy Williams; Jerry Bruno; staffing and funding the commission; Bobby Troutman and the conflict between LBJ and RFK; Richard Russell; the Lockheed plant in Marietta, Georgia; Plan
  • Virginia primary and what JFK learned from it; the JFK/Nixon debates; JFK's handling of the Bay of Pigs incident; O'Brien meeting with each cabinet member to review roles in the Kennedy Administration; JFK's and O'Brien's time spent learning their roles
  • · OF'. THE NiXON ADMINISTRATIONo c: \ FAILURE TO CONSULT WiLL' CREATE· DOUBTS ABOUT AMERICAN POLICy· AND ~ F'l,JTURE AMER:cAN• SUPPORT· OF", EUROPE iN THE· FACE OF tNCREASED sovIET v, PRESSURE A! A.TI ME -~HEN ~E~MAN ~CL I CY TOWARD THE USSR Is l) ' { iTSELF''.tN
  • , you will remember, Vietnam was coining into the fore and President Johnson was not getting too good a receptivity in the United States. Neither is President [Richard] Nixon at this moment--a very similar situation at this very moment. The feeling
  • , changes in the way they ran their institutions, could look to something steady and say "Here's what we have to live by." Well it grieves me to say so, but when President Nixon came in, he shattered that--that growing coherence of doctrine--and we began
  • tendency in a campaign. Your own people are apt to react strongly to hard-hitting spots. We had that with [Spiro] Agnew and then Nixon at a later date, by the same Tony Schwartz. G: Oh, really? O: Yes. G: Which spots in particular? O: We had one
  • organizations found in Philadelphia under the leadership of Bill Green, Chicago under the leadership of Richard J. Daley, Minnesota under the leadership of the Democratic-Farm-Labor group, and in Albany, New York; O'Brien's concern about the two-party system
  • , and memoranda, including Julia Child letter. Range: 1960-1971. 1 [First Family Correspondence] Letters between Kaltman and LBJ (3), Lady Bird Johnson (2), Lynda Johnson Robb (2), Luci Johnson 1 Nugent (3), Patricia Nixon (1), and Tricia Nixon (1). Range: 1966
  • . On Travel President’s Will Telephone Memorandum Telephone Memorandum Telephone Memorandum Telephone Memorandum Clippings pertaining to Transition into Nixon Admin. UPI Reports – Nixon Budget and Contracts GSA Disposal & Collection Activity – Report #69-10
  • in which Eisenhower was elected. Then along in about December was when it really began to jell. Lyndon himself hadn't decided at the time and hadn't taken any--he was there to see who was going to be the Democratic leader. He had urged [Richard] Russell
  • INTERVIHJEES: GOVERNOR AND NRS. RICHARD HUGHES (Betty Hughes) INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: The Hughes' home in Princeton, New Jersey Tape 1 of 2 F: First of all, Governor Hughes, tell us briefly where you came from, how you gradually moved up
  • See all online interviews with Richard J. Hughes & Betty (Elizabeth) Hughes
  • Hughes, Richard J. (Richard Joseph), 1909-
  • Oral history transcript, Richard J. Hughes and Betty (Elizabeth) Hughes, interview 1 (I), 8/6/1969, by Joe B. Frantz
  • Richard J. Hughes
  • 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
  • Plane CP RTRR - Commercial Plane Restaurant Tips Train Notes concerning the Senator's Activity There was a crowd of Nixon supporters -- mostly ladies -- outside the Adolphus Hotel and inside the lobby lead by Congressman Alger. LBJ was informed
  • now, that it was the Kennedy organization that arranged for it, that gave him the text of his speech. MG: You discussed your negotiation discussions with John Connally of Texas. What about some of the other party leaders like Mayor [Richard] Daley
  • inner circle; Humphrey's compassion; George Wallace's candidacy in 1968 and its effect on Humphrey; the Jewish vote; 1968 concern over violence and crime in the U.S.; Humphrey's knowledge of Nixon's communication with Anna Chennault; the October 1968
  • to Chicago, and Mayor [Richard] Daley hit the fan, and then it did escalate pretty rapidly. But I was never aware--I was never called on to play a role of having to make all these kinds of little adjustments to accommodate congressmen. There may have been
  • , 20, 1968 1968 1968 1968 1968 1968 1968 1968 1968 1968 Page 3 7 1/Gf 7 President Johnson Meets with President Thieu of South Vietnam in Hawaii Backup for Hawaii Trip 1 of 2 2 of 2 'i )1/,;, ~ . 9/ ; 3/ ·~·, Meeting with Richard M. Nixon
  • 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Davis -- I -- 12 meant I spent about eight weeks with Richard Nixon and about eight weeks with John Kennedy, and got to know both of them in a reporter/source
  • left Congressman [Richard] Kleberg's office. G: That was in 1935 was the year that he left. L: Yes. As I recall, he was still working with Kleberg when I first met him, but he subsequently left. G: Do you recall the substance of your first
  • to see what some of the real importance of this was, not only to the defense of the country, but also to the prestige of the country. At the same time, it was pretty clearlY a good political issue. He had met with Senators [Richard] Russell and [H
  • /show/loh/oh ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] Reedy -­ XIII -­ 17 G: The next day he wrote to [Richard] Russell that he was going back to Texas and let things settle down for a while. Can you recall
  • he came through the office, which he always did when he was in Washington, and I saw him in Vietnam. But I wasn't a primary point of contact between the RD operation and our office; that was mostly [Richard] Holbrooke and-- G: I have to say you
  • in Philadelphia. 1936 He was a very violent young man even then. But no, I don't remember any relations with Lyndon. F: What about Richard Russell? D: I think Lyndon was a great admirer of Russell. And I remember when Russell-- LBJ Presidential Library
  • 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
  • -breaking. He had chairmen like Richard Russell and Willis Robertson. M: A Virginia senator then. L: Yes, a senator from Virginia. As chairman, at various times, [of] Banking and Currency, Robertson, I think, 1959-61, Fulbright before that; Richard
  • remedy for discrimination? K: Yes. G: Did he? K: Why do you question that, because in my recollection that was a given, and he was very proud of the way that he had persuaded [Richard] Russell and some of the other southern 10 LBJ Presidential
  • Baker, Robert Kennedy and wiretapping; President Kennedy’s record; LBJ on civil rights and voting rights; Richard Russell; the LBJ Presidential Library; the appointment of Abe Feinberg’s brother to the Circuit Court; relations with Pakistan; first visit
  • proricled to Richard he 1ot me aa a •ub•tlbate. I'm not e•pecially ••1•r to do it, but I •mppo•• it wowd be a pl1&• with FllltoD, and I think the dl•trict can event11&lly be recapturecl. Bllt I want yOGr --- GO Doe't Go --- b. c. PMG •ipal. Dear
  • Speech Still Heard after 15 Years,” by Max Gates, Ann Arbor “News,” May 20, 1979 Printed Material: “Annuals of Legislation – Medicare,” (4 part series of articles by Richard Harris), The New Yorker , July, 1966 Printed Material: Early and Periodic
  • Hornig Dr. Stephen J. Wright The Honorable Richard Helms Dr. Herbert F. York The- Honorable Leonard Marks United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency The Honorable James E. Webb Mr. William C. Foster Representative E. Ross Adair
  • , the youngest man to ever hold that, in years and in seniority. One thing that gave him a lot of satisfaction was that he was nominated by [Richard] Russell of Georgia, to him the always top senator, and he was seconded by Theodore Francis Green of Rhode Island