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  • . DATE: 3/13/68 TIME: 5:00PM CALLER: Richard Daley Pages ofTranscript: 7 pages Barbara Cline Archivist (A) THE PRESIDENT returning Mayor Richard Daley's call (B) 5:00p, March 13, 1968 I'm sorry I missed you. A I was in a Cabinet meeting
  • Daley, Richard J., 1902-1976
  • Telephone conversation # 12810, sound recording and transcript, LBJ and RICHARD DALEY, 3/13/1968, 5:00PM
  • RICHARD DALEY
  • To the Diplomatic Reception Room -- with the President, greeted Mr. and Mrs. Nixon as they arrived for lunch. Entry 7LPH No. Activity 1:20 To the second floor for lunch with the President and the Nixons. (1:22 to 1:33) Marvin Watson
  • with [Richard] Nixon and Wallace on law and order. But we're going too far on the justice emphasis. Let's emphasize order and justice." Then you have Geri Joseph, a great liberal, commenting that "if the election depends on law and order, we won't win
  • Caucasian vote; how Humphrey compared to Richard Nixon and George Wallace on order and justice; campaign staff debate over whether Humphrey should release a clear Vietnam strategy and whether Humphrey should resign as vice president; concern that policy
  • WITHDRAWA1L SHEET (P'RE.S:IDEN,TJAL LIBRARIES) - - -- I • . l AUGUST 10, 1968 - 12:25 p. m. Briefing of Vice President Nixon and Governor Agnew The President Secretary Rusk Director Helms Cyrus Vance Former VP Nixon Governor Agnew
  • Folder, "August 10, 1968 - 12:25 p.m. President's briefing of Former Vice President Nixon and Gov. Agnew," Papers of Tom Johnson, Box 3
  • hearings. Oliver Stone's film "Nixon" included a part based on Butterfield s character; and the part was played by-Alexander Butterfield. Mr. Butterfield began by ob­ serving that the title of his talk could well be "Richard Nixon: The Oddest Man I Ever
  • President-elect Richard Nixon _____—, i ;. Looked at a dictated draft of proposed wire being sent to Richard Nixon (dictated to mf by Harry McPherson) as well as another draft of wire to WP Humphrey f Cong. J. J. Pickle - Austin
  • Jan 15, 1969 The White House Mayor Richard Daley - Ch icago Rostow - pl Walt Rostow Wednesday Jan 15, 1969 The White House Signing Ceremony for the President's Budget Message for 1970 ~ To Oval Ofc Dean George P. Schultz. Dean of the Graduate
  • , William Roosevelt, Theodore Taft, William Howard Wilson, Woodrow Harding, Warren G. Coolidge, Calvin Hoover, Herbert Clark Roosevelt, Franklin Truman, Harry Eisenhower, Dwight D. Kennedy, John F. Johnson, Lyndon Baines Nixon, Richard M. Ford, Gerald Carter
  • and Eisenhower, costs for Presidential aircraft, research on President Eisenhower's participation in Richard 10/19/17 open open open open open 2 National Archives and Records Administration http://archives.gov http://www.lbjlibrary.org COLLECTION
  • . To sum it up, they found that their membership generally was hell-bent to get to the polls and vote for Richard Nixon. G: Had Nixon's campaign encouraged this support? O: There were committees of labor for Nixon as there were John Connally Democrats
  • 11 /13/68 Ro stow to the President .,,,...,, l•:aa»' ••'o "' .,, • 11/11/68_ A Secret 2 p Dupes in Diary Backup " 11 / 11 /68:' e~empt /lv/14 ft' ..iw ~-43 box 115 and Files WWR. •Nixon-Vietnam.• box 5 EXEMPT NW 93-419,4/94 tr~ 9J2
  • Nixon, Richard M. (Richard Milhous), 1913-1994
  • things Teddy said about anybody are you and Nixon. would see him. You two never Now Nixon sees him, and he thinks he's a great hero. You can take Teddy into camp in fifteen minutes." Johnson said, LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org
  • ; 1968 convention; Anna Chennault and Nixon; LBJ and the Kennedy people
  • , Utah), Aug. 14-17, 1964 Lady Bird Speech, Whistlestop, Oct. 6-9, 1964 Lady Bird Speech, Whistlestop, Oct. 6-9, 1964 Virgin Islands with Lady Bird, June 2-6, 1965 Volunteer Program [loose items] Pat Nixon Nixon Staff Nixon and Sports [loose items] Pat
  • 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
  • a pathetic picture of kCarthy in his final days: "He was not going t his Senate office any more. he was drinking hea ily, he was talking about th betrayal fall of his riend . ineteen fifty-six as an election ear, and Richard Nixon was giving a speech
  • . 1978 21 Briscoe Clippings - Jan. – Mar. 1978 21 Briscoe Clippings - 1978 21 Briscoe Clippings - 1978 21 [Governor Connally – Briefing book (2 files)] 22 [Script: Connally on TV – “Democrats for Nixon”] 22 Quotes 22 1. Unused Colson Material – Baldson 22
  • of things. Now, his relationship with Vice President Nixon, what did he think about Nixon? E: I have not the foggiest idea. G: He never talked about Nixon? E: No. G: What did his staff think about Nixon? Did the staff have any attitude toward Nixon
  • in reaction to that episode. It was as though Richard Nixon, as though the people--what was this--? B: Caracas. B: Caracas. That the mobs, the masses in Caracas had somehow or another been inflamed by this person Richard Nixon. It was an unreasoning thing
  • considered [the] Deep South as part of a victory effort for Kennedy. We had in Tuscaloosa, which we attended in 1960, the [Richard M.] Nixon debates, the Kennedy-Nixon debates. And of course, this helped considerably because Nixon was not popular
  • 1960 Democratic National Convention; Alabama citizens' opinion of John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon; the Kennedy/Nixon debate in Tuscaloosa, Alabama; LBJ's and Lady Bird Johnson's 1960 campaign trip through Alabama; LBJ's ambition; LBJ as vice
  • Reference No. 12816 April 7, 2008 Processing Note A copy of this transcript was interfiled on this date from the Alpha transcript series. There is no recording to go with this transcript. DATE: 3/14/68 TIME: 5:57 PM CALLER: Richard Daley Pages
  • Daley, Richard J., 1902-1976
  • Telephone conversation # 12816, transcript, LBJ and RICHARD DALEY, 3/14/1968, 5:57PM
  • RICHARD DALEY
  • contributing aspects to it. It was considered a plus. Some pundits and observers felt that it might have been an overt attempt on the part of Lyndon Johnson to help Hubert Humphrey. There might have been an element of that in it. G: Nixon certainly felt
  • to Vietnam; the Anna Chennault situation and suspicion that Richard Nixon might be influencing the South Vietnam government to delay peace negotiations; Humphrey's response to Nixon's behavior; requests that Humphrey use prepared statements and not speak off
  • 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
  • at the Library in October. Although Dr. Leuchtenburg's par­ ticular subject was the relatiomhip between FDR and Lyndon Johnson, he concluded his remarks with an observation about the shadow "Roosevelt continues to ca~t" over all modern presidents. "Even Richard
  • , especially journalists, and in some cases people who were too young to remember that period, how absolutely taken aback they were, floored, by his enormous skill, especially in dealing with Congress. 3 again and treat him with some dis­ passion. Richard
  • "FIRST 1/2 ONE CALL"; "SECOND 1/2 IMPORTANT (NIXON)"; "22 NOV 5:50PM TOP THEN BOTTOM"; "NIXON" WRITTEN ON DICTABELT; CONTINUES FROM PREVIOUS RECORDING AND ON NEXT RECORDING
  • "FIRST 1/2 ONE CALL"; "SECOND 1/2 IMPORTANT (NIXON)"; "22 NOV 5:50PM TOP THEN BOTTOM"; "NIXON" WRITTEN ON DICTABELT; RECORDING STARTS AFTER CONVERSATION HAS BEGUN
  • "FIRST 1/2 ONE CALL"; "SECOND 1/2 IMPORTANT (NIXON)"; "22 NOV 5:50PM TOP THEN BOTTOM"; "NIXON" WRITTEN ON DICTABELT; LBJ IS ON HOLD THROUGHOUT MOST OF CALL BUT SPEAKS BRIEFLY WITH UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN WHILE ON HOLD; SMALL CHILD IS AUDIBLE
  • "FIRST 1/2 ONE CALL"; "SECOND 1/2 IMPORTANT (NIXON)"; "22 NOV 5:50PM TOP THEN BOTTOM"; "NIXON" WRITTEN ON DICTABELT; SMALL CHILD IS AUDIBLE IN BACKGROUND
  • "FIRST 1/2 ONE CALL"; "SECOND 1/2 IMPORTANT (NIXON)"; "22 NOV 5:50PM TOP THEN BOTTOM"; "NIXON" WRITTEN ON DICTABELT
  • Bio: (1936-1996) First female African-American Senator elected to the Texas State Senate, 1966-1972; U.S. Congresswoman, 1972-1978; Member, House Judiciary Committee during Nixon impeachment hearings; Delivered keynote address at Democratic National
  • Bio: Charles Springs Murphy was chairman of the Civil Aeronautics Board (1965-1969) and, as a special counselor to President Johnson, supervised the transition to the Nixon Administration.
  • millions of Republicans that don't want to vote for Richard Nixon, but they're not going to vote for Jack Kennedy; they're not going to vote for Hubert Humphrey; they're not going to vote for Adlai Stevenson. They're going to vote for Nixon in preference
  • , and Nixon was elected vice president. He was senator and was completing his first two years of a six-year term, and [Earl] Warren appointed Tom Kuchel in December of 1952 for two years. That's our law. He could only appoint until the next general election
  • to state controller and U.S. senator; Small's work as departmental secretary in the California governor's office; Kuchel's involvement with the Davis-Bacon Act; Richard Nixon's personality; the relationship between Kuchel, Nixon and William Knowland
  • Sat, Aug 10 Dictated at the ranch August 2-17, 1968 1. 10:30a Secretary Rusk, Director Helms, Amb. "Vance arrived to front lawn w/ Pres 2. 12:00n Mr. Nixo n arrived 1:15p LUNCH - Mrs. J Nixon, Agnew 3. Rusk , Helms , Vanc e Nixon aides: Bob
  • President Nixon''s first appointee, announced only a week after the election. Nixon soon made Harlow a counselor to the president in all fields of national affairs.
  • LBJ Connection: Assistant Librarian, House of Representatives, 1938-1940; Chief Clerk, House Armed Services Committee, 1950-1951; Special Assistant and Deputy Assistant to President Eisenhower, 1953-1961; Adviser to President Nixon, 1969-1970
  • sunk Nixon, apparently. But he didn't use these things. M: Johnson could have what? D: Sunk Nixon. May I tell you what these are right now? After a while we'll have these on record. There are allegations--we know, of course, that Richard Nixon
  • Contacts with LBJ as VP; LBJ and civil rights legislation;LBJ's involvement with the downfall of Joseph McCarthy; HHH's position on Vietnam during 1968 campaign; RFK; Dallek's comments on Richard Nixon's involvement in the 1968 Vietnam peace
  • :47p t 4:45p 4:50 y Thursda n Charles Zwic k t Rosto w - pl President-elec b. 1 p To t Richard Nixon , 39t h Floor , Hote l Pierre , Ne w York City m Johnso n - i n 4:53 Presiden t t o mjdr's offic e 4:56p Presiden t t o Ova l Offic e 4:58p
  • 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Newman -- I -- 7 And you've got to remember one thing. This is true now and has been true in this whole controversy with Nixon's papers. The moment a man becomes
  • on donations; 1969 tax law; physical move of material to Austin; typical appraisal workday; comparison of working conditions on LBJ and Nixon papers; controversial Nixon deed of gift; President Eisenhower memorandum; personal association with LBJ; Pentagon
  • 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
  • with President Johnson to try to be sure that their mutual good friend, Mr. Fortas, became chief justice before the 1968 election. That would avoid the possibility that Richard Nixon, of the same party as Earl Warren, would have a chance to make the appointment
  • rights; LBJ’s speech at University of Michigan launching the Great Society legislative program; LBJ’s success dealing with Congress was legendary; objections to Justice Fortas in 1968 as political maneuver to prevent Nixon making an appointment; Democrats