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  • DIARY LBJ President began his day at (Place) Day Time Telephone 11 In Out Lo 4:23p RANCH f or t Activity LD 4:04p Arrived 4:09p Lewis Ranch t Hon. t Jim Richard Nixon (b. 2) - Miami Jones to Main Ranch House - , --and to office briefly 5:40p
  • ' s offic e --for glasse s fittin g To Ova l Of c Tom Joh nson an d Ron Ziegler , wh o is President-elec t Nixon' s pres s spokesma n Jan 8 , 196 9 The Whit e Hous e Wed. Walt Rosto w Hon. Joh n Macy , Chairma n o f the U.S . Civi l Servic e
  • about the Bill, but did not say he was against it. Speaker McCormack said that Ford will be under pressure to pass it. The President asked how much help may be expected from Republican leaders outside the Congress. Mike Manatos reported that Richard
  • page 2 Scope and content note: This collection contains materials collected by Charles S. Murphy in his role as the central coordinator in the Lyndon B. Johnson White House to assist in the transition to the Richard Nixon administration. The series
  • Vic e Presiden t - a t hi s Washingto n residence Hon . Richar d Nixon , Ke y Biscayne, Florid a 2:30a retire d 7:58a Cong . Car l Albert returne d th e President's cal l - di d not talk - Presiden t aslee p 8:58a t e - ^^ th 1: 55a y
  • Act (1964) 1964 Election 1968 (Year in general) 1968 Campaign Nixon, Pat Nixon, Richard M. Nixon, Richard M. - "Checkers" Speech Nixon, Richard M. - White House Material see also White House Tapes and Taping System Nixon, Richard M. - White House
  • had an opportunity to observe his relationship with Richard Nixon when Nixon was vice president. They'd come down to Florida, wouldn't they, at the same time? S: Yes. G: How did they get along? S: They would get along very well. G: Did they? Do
  • agreeing to be JFK's running mate; LBJ's relationship with Richard Nixon.
  • . Governor, the big interest of course in '62 was your campaign against Richard Nixon, and the feeling that Richard Nixon was using California as a testing ground for a comeback for the Presidency . I wondered if you would talk a little bit about the issue
  • oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 7 But, as I recall it, in the late summer of 1960, with the campaign heating up, JFK moved ahead of Nixon in the polls. Foreigners contemplated the realistic possibility of election
  • interest in Richard Nixon's economic policy-making; visits to the LBJ Ranch after LBJ's presidency; the Bart Rowen article that quotes LBJ as saying Walker had "elbows"; deer hunting with LBJ, Jake Pickle, and Walker's son, Chuck; Walker's phone calls
  • is named to the post upon the resignation of Senator Connally from the committee. 7/11 Eisenhower is nominated for the presidency at the Republican National Convention; Richard Nixon is chosen as the vice-presidential nominee. 7/16 Truman signs a new
  • was received. O: It was received well by the audience, but you'd expect that. It's the Democratic Party chairman making a speech attacking a Republican administration, specifically Richard Nixon. As far as general press reaction, my recollection
  • elections; O'Brien's desired role as spokesman for the Democratic Party during Richard Nixon's presidency; Bob Strauss' efforts to raise money for DNC programs and to pay off debt; going to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and networks to try
  • people to do research for me. I'd tell them what I'd want them to get, and they'd get it. G: During the fifties, who was the best political sage on the Hill? R: [There were] two or three. Richard Russell, unquestionably, was number one. G: I
  • Reedy’s role as policy advisor while LBJ was Senator; airline machinists’ strike of 1966; influencing LBJ’s decisions; writing memos to LBJ; Richard Russell; Eugene Millikin; Sam Rayburn; what makes a good Senator; Millard Tyding’s loss to Joseph
  • -of-court settlement was reached. That did not occur until August of 1975. When Jerry Ford pardoned Nixon and the public comment I made in response to media requests simply was that I had no desire from the outset to see Richard Nixon in jail. I didn't
  • with documents regarding the relationship between O'Brien and Howard Hughes; the settlement in O'Brien's civil suit against the Committee for the Re-election of the President (CREEP); O'Brien's response to Gerald Ford pardoning Richard Nixon; Maurice Stans
  • the apparent coolness (now it never developed into bitterness), that developed between Senator Richard Russell and President Johnson? T: No. And I don't believe that there was ever coolness there. I think that Russell was disappointed with Johnson
  • ~~OTES COPYRIGMTFQ_ Pwblieation Reqi;iru Pwrmlnion ui Ce~yri.JbL HolGIA W, Thema1 jehAseA ­ ~,... ........ ·.­ - 5 ­ EYES ONLY FOR THE PRESIDENT 0 Secretary Rusk: Nixon is aware of all three points. He has great interest in getting this as far
  • Nixon, Richard M. (Richard Milhous), 1913-1994
  • [Hubert] Humphrey, Senator [John] Kennedy announces his candidacy, and then on the Republican side, Vice President [Richard] Nixon announced his. Still no personal activity on the President's part, and you weren't aware of anything at this early stage
  • ; Pat Nixon; Marvin Watson; visiting Acapulco and Mexican President Miguel Aleman and his family; LBJ's relationship with Senator Richard Russell; Sam Houston Johnson's hospitalization for alcoholism; a Johnson family history of alcoholism and depression
  • I condone all these things but I do think I recognize the human frailty in every person and I think this goes to that same question. (Interruption) G: Anything on the 1968 presidential race between [Richard] Nixon, Humphrey with George Wallace
  • 11 that. But an)~ay when he submitted the names--and I ' l l just say the Sanders' nomination and others--it was after the election. Richard Nixon had been elected President, and there was some indication at tIn t point that Mr. Mitchell was going
  • : Was there a way during these stops, these speeches, to have monitored what the Nixon-Lodge campaign was saying and answer their charges or their accusations? R: They were being followed closely in Washington, and we'd get on the phone every time we had a chance
  • between the convention and election due to a lack of political stability; the JFK/LBJ 1960 campaign kickoff parade in Boston; LBJ drinking too much in El Paso at the beginning of the campaign; the nature of LBJ's campaign speeches; the Richard Nixon-Henry
  • INTERVIEWEE: THOMAS H. KUCHEL INTERVIEWER: MICHAEL L. GILLETTE PLACE: Senator Kuchel's office, Los Angeles, California Tape 1 of 1 G: You came to the Senate in 1953, I suppose. You were appointed to replace Vice President Nixon, as I understand it. K
  • election; Wayne Morse; the Lewis Strauss nomination; the McCarthy censure and the Watkins committee; LBJ’s relationship with Richard Nixon; relationship between Republicans and Democrats in Senate; civil rights legislation; statehood for Hawaii and Alaska
  • caucus of twenty-two senators had a lot of power in the Senate, led by the sacred cow of the Senate, Richard Russell of Georgia. And even Lyndon had to tread lightly with Dick Russell, who had his own power and was, in addition, extremely able and a very
  • http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Cohen -- II -- 17 investigation of the Nixon Administration
  • ' advice on how to relate to LBJ; Cohen's tax advice to LBJ after the presidency; LBJ's decision to give the LBJ Ranch to the National Park Service; LBJ's interest in funding medical research; the laws relating to LBJ and Richard Nixon donating their papers
  • , Nixon Administration 12/68 Federal Government Workers, 1964-67: Number Of, other Statistics Federal Disaster Assistance Federal Government: Role of Government As 1964 Campaign Issue Federal Courts, See Justice Department First Company, 1967 Firestone
  • President Clinton never men­ tions are ""Lyndon Johnson""----cven ··1ast year when he rattled off the names of other presidents besides himself who had tried to reform America's [healthl system. he cited Harry Truman, John Kennedy. and Richard Nixon. I
  • and a possible future president. F: We're moving ahead. H: Yes. F: But did he ever express himself on Richard Nixon vis-à-vis Johnson? H: You mean as being elected president? F: Yes. H: No, not that I can recall. If he did, it was, "If Dick
  • be not But again I could say that about Jack Kennedy or -F: That's just par for the course. C: Nixon and everybody else. Nixon, I remember when he was placed on the old Un-American Activities Committee. As a matter of fact, I told him since he's been
  • . 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
  • as Press Secretary to Robert Kennedy from 1966 to 1968, and as manager of George McGovern's Presidential campaign in 1972. He is the author of Perfectly Clear (1973), U.S. vs. Nixon (1975), and Remote Control (1978).
  • correspondent in which capacity he covered the adminstrations of Eisenhower, Kenney, Johnson and Nixon. He was one of three journalists present to witness the swearing in of President Johnson aboard Air Force One after President Kennedy's assassination. After
  • . Richard. Schweiker Platoon Sgt. James H. Holder, USA :1 YN1 Allen A. Smith, USN [ I Staff Set . Wm. N. O'Hara, USMC Staff Sgt. Henry Waller, USAF Wednesday White House 8-12-64 To Oval Office w/ Secretary McNamara Secretary J Valenti pl General David
  • 12021213 ] http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/pres/nsf President Ferdinand Marcos, Robert Murphy, Richard Nixon, Lawrence O'Brien, Nelson Rockefeller, Sargent Shriver, and William Westmoreland. · · · Date range: 1966-1969 7 linear feet, 10 linear
  • real happy that we'd come. There were two young Rowes home, Clarissa and young Jim, and B ill Bundy and their son, who is studying government at Harvard under [Richard] Neustadt, and Mrs. Stroud [? ]. Lyndon was in a mellow mood, amusing, jovial
  • Jorden, or W. Thomas Johnson, that summarizes and analyzes the briefing. The file contains occasional memorandums from Henry Kissinger and other members of President Richard Nixon's National Security Council staff. It also contains cables and reports from
  • candidacy. 1”. PL/Kennedy, Robert Political Affairs/Kennedy, Robert. PL/McCarthy, Eugene Political Affairs/McCarthy, Eugene. PL/McNamara, Robert/Pro/A-Z Political Affairs/McNamara, Robert/Pro/A-Z PL/Nixon, Richard M. Political Affairs/Nixon, Richard M
  • , Richard Nixon used a dog as a prop. Nixon was Dwight Eisenhower's vice presidential running mate, and the speech - unofficially named after the dog - saved his spot on the ticket. In rebutting allegations that a group of supporters had created a slush fund
  • , Richard Nixon used a dog as a prop. Nixon was Dwight Eisenhower's vice presidential running mate, and the speech - unofficially named after the dog - saved his spot on the ticket. In rebutting allegations that a group of supporters had created a slush fund
  • with the Post, but I went with the Post in 1952. F: That's right. At \
  • of the Senate. G: What about Richard Russell? Did you ever hear LBJ talk about him? H: No, I never did hear him talk about Richard Russell. I was in the room out at Phoenix; I was the advance man on the Phoenix meeting for LBJ. I was in his room. He got
  • much worried about Johnson when Humphrey was running against Nixon. pretty late. I felt that Johnson was sitting on the fence until I have no concrete proof of this. But, knowing that [Governor] Connally was talking for and reputed to be raising
  • programs; Parten’s opinion Nixon; future problems with Congress under Nixon; the energy problem.
  • Parten, J. R. (Jubal Richard), 1896-1992
  • of activity, not like apparently President Nixon does, going alone in a room with a pad of yellow paper and thinking something through. J: Yes, he liked to be around people, particularly people that he had developed a trust or a feeling of rapport