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  • 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
  • . Henry Fowler. Secy of Treasury Hon. Richard Helms, Director of CIA Hon. Earle Wheeler, Chairman, JCS Hon. Price Daniel, Director of QEP Deputy Director of OEP, M . M . Merker Mr. William Lawrence of OEP Hon. Leonard Marks, Director of USIA Walt Rostow
  • 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
  • ' photographs of the meeting; O'Brien's speeches and travel during the 1970 congressional elections; O'Brien's stop in Chicago and Mayor Richard Daley's influence there; Hubert Humphrey as the titular head of the DNC rather than LBJ; LBJ's and Truman's interest
  • , and for that reason had a difficult time. G: Let's talk a little about politics surrounding this period of time. Both Mayor [Richard] Daley and Mike Mansfield and a number of others cited the possibility of a draft, that even though LBJ would remove himself from
  • with the President - President DID NOT TALK w/Amb. Sol Linowitz Rusk • : Larry • Levinson George Christian (pl) IZZIZIIZIZIZZZZZZIIZZIZZIZZZIZIZI f Mayor Richard Daley - Chicago, Ill. i __^ Sen. Mike Mansfield .. I ^ Carl Albert • Secy 10:14 , : Sen
  • Cafritz Mr. an d Mrs. Chester C. Carter Sen and Mrs. Clifford Case Mr. and Mrs. Nash Castro Hon and Mrs. S. Douglass Cater Mr. and Mrs. Martin Comart Hon and Mrs . Oscar Cox Hon and Mrs. William J. Crockett Hon and Mrs. Richard J Daley Mr. Richar d Davis
  • , and members of the Bureau of the Budget Edward R Murrow To the East Room w/ Secy Udall to meet w/ members of National Congress of American Indians Bob McKinney f Mayor Daley Jim Hagerty, Frank Sen. Russell Director Gordon Sen. Talmadge Mrs. Mary Lasker Jerry
  • l Hilto n (Sout h Imperial Suite ) 8. Cook County , Illinoi s Fun-raisin g dinne r (Mayo r Daley ) * Selecte d names should be underscored. SEE VERSO FOR TRAVEL ACTIVITY AND CODE May 8 , 196 2 Expenditure Code TELEPHONE CODE: f t Lo LD - from
  • 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
  • , N.Y. CAVANAGH, Jerane P., Mayor of Detroit. of Catholic Charities COLLINS,John F., Mayor of Boston,Mass. GUNTHER, John J., U.S. Conf. of Mayors DALEY,Richard J., Mayor of Chicago, Ill. HADDCCK, Hoyt S., Four Freedoms, Inc. GOLDNER,Herman W., Mayor
  • efficient. For those machines, your communications were totally irrelevant. But by the time he became president, the machines were pretty well dead. [Richard J.] Daley was still alive; [David] Lawrence was still working, but the rest were pretty well gone
  • of their city. Mayor Richard Daley reportedly picked up the idea, and he sponsored sessions to examine how the themes of race and social jus­ tice in To Kill a Mockingbird apply to modern-day Chicago. ayor Garcia' idea was that the powerful forces of place
  • . Mayor [Richard] Daley was incensed at it and probably called the President or one of the president's assistants and the President was very much annoyed. And I was one of those who was in the meeting with the President at about seven o'clock at night
  • , Alvia J. Wardlaw Not Pictured: Radcliffe Baile);, John T. Biggers, Elizabeth Catlett, Michael Ray Charles, Michael Cummings, Colette Gaiter, Richard Gary, Greg Henry, Jacob Lawrence, Steiphen Marc, Erick M. Murray, Gordon Parks, Faith Ringgold, John T
  • : And Richard Daley. K: Yes. M: What I need to know is, what is fact and what is fiction? K: I'll give you what I can, but obviously I hope that you'll be asking other people on this. M: Sure. K: Because this is one of these classic cases where a man's
  • had two influential senators, too. e: Oh, yes. So we had to counteract that, and we pulled all those little kids up and sat them down in the House hearing room. It all worked out. The other one was when Mayor [Richard] Daley of Chicago got
  • Urban League The Vice President Roy Wilkins , Exec Director, NAACP Judge Leon A. Higginbotham Q U. S. District Court Clarence Mitchell. Ill , State Senator, Maryland Hon. Robert Weaver. Secy of HUD Richard (Dick) Hatcher, Mayor of Gary, Indiana Hon
  • -yite-wal- 4a -sEkfatHaisc- Ch-i gag e Deputy-Ma-y-o-r- ei -Ghri-e-a-g-o Bav e -Sta'hJ.- - l:25p Presiden Joined i n th e roo m b y Mrs . Johnso n and Lynda The Presiden t le t Mayo r Daley listen t o part o f the tap e fro m Chuc k tha t Lynd a had
  • . There was a conversation I had with Mayor [Richard] Daley, initiated by him, where he expressed great concern about Vietnam, where it seemed to be tending, what it was causing by way of disruption and growing public concern. You wouldn't find a greater hawk than Dick Daley
  • Richard Daley about rising concerns about Vietnam; William Fulbright's opposition to U.S. involvement in Vietnam; Bob Hardesty's work providing congressmen with statements and material for their newsletters that were favorable to LBJ's legislative program
  • for vice president—that he didn’t think they would win the election—and there are some people who think they didn’t. (Laughter) Mayor Daley helped a good deal in Chicago. G: What do you think about that? V: What do I think? G: About the irregularities
  • as hell and what have you. He thought they had no political sense and that was confirmed when they tried to cut off funds from Mayor [Richard] Daley without even following the provisions of the statute. (Interruption) There's September 2, when I'm saying
  • Convention Delegates 5 ILLINOIS – A [1 of 5] [Loose material] [2 of 5] Congress-Illinois [3 of 5] Governor-Illinois [4 of 5] Senate-Illinois [5 of 5] Illinois Convention Delegates 6 ILLINOIS - B - PRIMARY Includes a text of a Mayor Daley press conference
  • Governo r an d Mrs . Phili p .H. . ..Hoff , Mrs. Johnso n State Senato r Frederic k J , Fayett e cand. fo r U . .S , Senate, Stat e Senato r Bernard O'Shea Cand. fo r Congress : Mayo r o f Rutland - - Joh n Daley , r.and. fo r Lieut . Governor ; Bernard I
  • Action is its flexibility. That is, it could be something different in New York, it would certainly be something different in Chicago where Dick Daley was in charge, and it would certainly be something different in Saginaw. And that was the point
  • to Adam Clayton Powell's Education and Labor Committee; testimony before Congress from Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley and businessmen regarding the poverty bill; Job Corps; whether or not Congress understood Community Action Programs; criticism of Adam
  • CHANDLER, Otis Justice and Mrs. GOLDBERG CLF.MENI'E, Carmine The Secretary or the Treasury and CLIFFCRD,Clark M. Mrs. DILLON CCE,Richard L • The Secretary of Defense and COJLES, John CRONIN,Hume Mrs• McNAMARA The Postmaster General and CUMMINGS, Milton DALY
  • Lady Bird views January & March 1968 films at Anacostia Naval Film Lab; Lady Bird & Lynda Robb shop for Chuck Robb's birthday; LBJ lunches with Mayor Richard J. Daley; Daley wants the Johnsons to attend Democratic National Convention in Chicago
  • 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
  • City, it wasn't greatly different from the ordinary operations every day. I believe Joe Califano and his staff had primary control of that. F: I know in the latter days some coolness developed between him and Senator Richard Russell over
  • of Illinois Stone Wells ( Lux Gov Preston Smith speaker Byron Tunnell Connally with the President of Chicago and Gov. and Mrs. Otto Kerner arrived waited to see President East ) Carr , Smith , Tunnell & Connally saw mayor Daley & group Brouen Gov Cong Jack
  • : Was this fund raising? K: Yes, the President's Club, with [Richard] Daley. I was in the President's bedroom--Ben didn't know this--when he called him and offered him the job as head of HEW. And Ben explained that for business reasons he couldn't take it on. I
  • 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
  • to Cabinet Rm - meet with Ohio and California delegations - Ken O'Donnell, Chuck Daley To Oval Rm - dictating JV and Postmaster General Cong. Jack Brooks Walter Jenkins Jerri Whittington // 7:15 to the lounge signing mail McCammon Vicky Attorney General Rob't
  • another room. Called Mme. Shoumatoff re: coming this weekend to do the President's "ranch-type" portrait. 6:00 Left by chopper with Helene, Ashton, and Woody Taylor. 6:30 Returned to the ranch. To the President's room right away to see Mayor Daley
  • problems with city hall during this stage? H: I feel any problem we had was probably in Chicago. It was not with Mayor [Richard] Daley. He was a very powerful mayor, who did not look lightly on a neighborhood developing its own power base without it going
  • to Kennedy. [Richard J.] Daley made his commitment. He was, as you know, the king of Chicago at that time, and a terribly interesting and able man. He made the commitment, and, of course, John Kennedy promised him everything from soup to nuts. Anything
  • Johnson, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Carter, now Reagan. Since 1968 when Nixon came in and he wanted to do away with the Great Society, he wanted to close the Job Corps centers and finally relented. This year, 1981, there is a greater number of slots
  • the polls closed, by direct communication with Governor [Richard] Hughes and the state chairman. I was reluctant to accept their initial report that was pessimistic. Hughes was very candid. He said, "It's going to be close but it doesn't look good." New
  • 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