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  • that I wasn't on drugs. [Laughter] That's P-A-S-S- -D. [Laughter] l 've not talked a lot about v hat happened in [the election cri­ sis in] Florida, but I do in this book. My really good pal, Bob Strauss, for whom you've named the Robert S. Strauss Center
  • Defense Ministe r Gerhar d Schroede r o f th e CD U Finance Ministe r Fran z Jose f Strauss , wh o is als o chairma n o f the CS U Rainer Barzel , Chairma n o f the CDU/CS U parliamentar y grou p Helmut Schmidt , chairma n o f the SP P parliamentar y grou
  • , Deputy UnderSecy of Treasury, Wash, DC~ Robert S. Stevenson, Chrm, Allis-Chalmers Mfg. Co. , Milwaukee, Wisc_. W. A . Strauss, Pres. , Northern Natural Gas Co. , Omaha, Neb. Watson F. Tait, Jr. , Chrm of Bd, Public Svc Elec. fa Gas Co. , Newark, N. J
  • Bros . , Inc . NY C Leonard H . Goldenson , Pres . , AB C • • Richard -Goodwi n William T . Gossett , Bloomfiel d Hills , Mich . Walter A . Haas , Jr . ; Pres . , Lev i Strauss & Co. , Sa n Francisco, Cali f Robert V . Hansberger , Pres . , Bois e
  • Leonard S. Silk, Member Editorial Board The New York Times William I. Spencer, President Citibank, N.A. 1:45-4:00p.m. Panel 2: Priorities for Partnership Speaker: Robert Strauss Special Representative for Trade Neg-otiations Moderator: Ben Love, Chairman
  • at the 1976 Demo ratic Convention, she required a cane. When Bob Strauss felt moved to advise Jordan on how to give that famous speech, . he retorted, '·Bob, if you can get me up the damned st ps, I· 11111ukethe damned sp ech.'' Other factors were al play
  • but that Strauss is playing for high stakes -- the Chancellorship in 1969. Both he and Schroeder wanted Barzel' s job as Fraktion leader, and Barzel wanted to keep it. It was still uncertain who would end up as Foreign Minister. If Strauss entered the "Cabinet
  • for reflection before action. Robert Strauss, former Chairman of the Democratic National Committee and Ambassador to the Soviet Union, does not envy future presidents. "Today," he declared, "a president has a helluva time just marginally influencing the course
  • extension needed ~or entire draft element. US should continue to press for execution of Strauss' promise that this would be done. Indications to raise~ strength. are that fflG intends divisions to 90'1, On 11 August the Federal Govern­ ment asked
  • ,] it wasn't a short while, it was about three and a half years. In 1950 we organized a firm then known as Goldberg, Fonville, Gump and Strauss. F: What was the third name? LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon
  • will retire in the fall. Erhard seems the logical and probable successor because of his popular appeal and the difficulty the king-makers (Brentano-Dufhues-Strauss) will face in agreeing on an alternative. The present coalition (CDU/FDP) will probably continue
  • Strauss [4 folders] Judgeships Additional [includes additional Judges for Texas] 20 National Archives and Records Administration http://archives.gov National Archives Catalog https://catalog.archives.gov http://www.lbjlibrary.org/ Texas Customs
  • one of them--Anna Lord Strauss, the former president of the League of Women Voters, formerly a delegate to the United Nations. Mrs. Norman Chandler, the wife of the publisher of the Los Angeles Times, whom I hadn't known before. he had asked one
  • , Strauss, Hauer and Feld William Ru-.her. Sen .. Jenning-. Randolph Jack Kemp United States Representative, 31st District, New York President Ford Mary Dublin Keyserling President, Clearinghouse of Women's lssuei. Former Director, Women's Bureau
  • Intelligence); Media and Popular Culture-Rod Hart (Director, Annette Strauss Institute for Civic Participation). 6:00 p.m., LBJ Auditorium. May I An Evening With: "What If?" Three distinguished writers examine some crucial turning points in history: What
  • the government is pushing ahead. They now have the memo by Admiral Strauss and are studying it. In addition, they are working with the World Bank. Ambassador Woodward of State is heading up activity in the government on "water for peace". The World Bank
  • DATE CORRESPONDENTS O R TITLE -iP"H:t,-"0'!~~1---eta-t~~ re ..Go..ldberg' s Far EasteFn p. 11 rip,- ,, re Strauss 1 p. ..-€ RESTRICTION pp. hsr/1'l6 Ot.fPli' ,q~- - Ft'L-G.r Ct/- w wli, a,,,,r /J _ 'v(}fV.,.VN :I'A//~F~ ./f/GJ Pt7C.d/7q
  • , threatening to draft the President himself? DG: The one threat came from--was said to come from--a man who had approved and cleared the draft of the HHH Vietnam plank. I remember Fred Harris and I visited with Bob Strauss and the former governor of Texas
  • recall that particularly in the Strauss nomination, and there were other cases where they were close. Baker said to me on one case--I remember, "Bobby, how close did you figure it?" Senator Wiley of Wisconsin fooled me." we had that contact. "Well, I
  • Deming, and Ed Fried are in Europe and following this closely. The issue is complicated because Strauss, as Finance Minister, would probably resist on political grounds a response to this crisis simply in the form of an upward revaluation of the German
  • /charrl Tudor [:n itcd S tates Air For ce A lex V ictor - Ja rk Strauss Communications j\Jfanagem ent __z::)/1.~~r:~:;p ~ < ~ C. Hoberts I'h olog r uph A no(} t E.1.- pcrt William Jf. Caujiel Mgr. C_.~_S. Con t£nental Air L ins c. Ol fr er n ra he, Pro
  • Josef Strausses. ·This clearly would be ~ CONFIDENTI~L RECEIVED FE8., ~ 1S6S WH - 1•1r. va.urano DEPAH.T.MENT OF STATE UNu1m SEcnETAHY FOH. PoI,JTICAL Art,'Am:, /-0.5- January 8, 1968 (J,,o/~11 MENOR.ANDmf FOR: S - The Secretary tJtJ/J
  • possible successor. The iii . most likely successor, they feel, would be Barzel, although they think the Ruhr industrialists would prefer Strauss. They rule out Gerstenmaier. Although they do n_()t _k no~ .what went on between , the Presi d ent
  • /loh/oh 20 shattering, but it was the right way to operate. He reminded people who came, and I was at a couple of those--Germans who came trouping in afterward to assure themselves that the U.S. had not lost interest in Europe--Strauss, Schroeder
  • to for the necessary financing to carry out my programs. But they were not to look to me as a source of financing. That was the same when I was national chairman and Bob Strauss was treasurer. Bob and I had an understanding. Bob's job was to raise the money to keep
  • that. This Strauss is a member of the government in Germany, and he is a very strong man, a very smart man. However that is beside the point. We flew to Bonn, and then we came back on Air Force One. There were about eighty or a hundred people on Air Force One. I
  • of the Harvard Center for International Affairs, for the multi­ lateralists. The evidence at that time told against the multilateralists: the Pentagon had lost whatever interest it had earlier had in European based missiles; Herr Strauss, the German Defence