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2703 results
- LBJaide; and from the University of Texas: Vice Presi- dent William Livingston, Historians Robert Divine and Lewis Gould, Political Scientist Melissa Collie and Dr. Barbara Griffith from the Barker Texas History Center. Political Columnist Dave McNeely
Oral history transcript, Adam Yarmolinsky, interview 2 (II), 10/21/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- Kennedy, Robert F., 1925-1968
- Shriver's selection? Y: No. No, again, as I think I spelled out in that article of mine you've got ["The Beginnings of OEO"], I was aware of the fact that there was a task force under Kennedy. task forces. I guess there were several I was vaguely
- Kennedy, Robert F., 1925-1968
- Interviewer: Paige E. Mulhollan Date: M: March 7, 1969 Let's begin, sir, by identifying you. You're Fred Korth, and your most recent government service was as Secretary of the Navy from early in 1962--January--until October of 1963 in the Kennedy
- of the analytical-- G: Who was that? S: Robert Amory, who later on came over to be one of the three top people in the Budget Bureau. But Allen Dulles was then the director of CIA, too. I got a good overview of how CIA fit into the governmental picture
- was [Robert] McNamara's lawyer for those hearings. You may recall that as we saw the major issue in the hearings, the issue was whether or not the civilian leadership in the Pentagon and President Kennedy, at that time, had the right, in effect, to censor
- Oral history transcript, Robert J. McCloskey, interview 1 (I), 5/1/1984, by Ted Gittinger
- Robert J. McCloskey
- McCloskey, Robert J. (Robert James), 1922-1996
- See all online interviews with Robert J. McCloskey
- INTERVIEWEE: ROBERT J. McCLOSKEY INTERVIEWER: Ted Gittinger PLACE: Ambassador McCloskey's office, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 G: Could you give us an outline of the occasion upon which you entered the Foreign Service? What led to that? M: I had
- Pickle paid a beautiful tribute to the memory of Lyndon Johnson. Then Congressman Ray Roberts in a moving talk reminded those present of th man) sterling qualities of Jesse Kellam. Both Congressman Roberts and Congressman Pickle were former staffers of NY
- -a blazing wall of blooming plants and flowers kept com,tantl) fresh. THE EXHIBITION (continued) A tourist examines the bronze portraits of Lady Bird and Lyndon Johnson by the sculptor Robert Berks. The President's sittings for his portrait, Mrs. Johnson
- Oral history transcript, Robert H. Finch, interview 1 (I), 2/23/1989, by Michael L. Gillette
- Robert H. Finch
- Finch, Robert H., 1925-
- See all online interviews with Robert H. Finch
- , 1989 INTERVIEWEE: ROBERT FINCH INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. Finch's office, Pasadena, California Tape 1 of 1, Side 1 F: Well, I was giving you a [inaudible]. G: You were talking about the relationship between Lyndon Johnson
Oral history transcript, Richard H. Nelson, interview 1 (I), 7/20/1978, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- Shriver during the 1960 campaign. was at Princeton. paign. I That would have been my senior year during the cam- I worked for the Johnson-Kennedy ticket during that campaign. r was doing my senior honors thesis for the School of Public and Inter
- , the most interesting part of the hi'story of the period was the very depth of feeling on both sides between Robert Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson; the feeling of dislike or distrust, or suspicion, or whatever you want to call it, which influenced their every
- Senator Robert Byrd Postmaster General Larry O'Brien Barefoot Sanders Mike Manatos George Christian Jim Jones MEETING CONVENED: ,Cabinet Room at 6:16 p.m. MEETING ADJOURNED: 7:00 p. m. The President opened the meeting discussing the excise
- there mf asked Rostow for gist OFF RECORD: Congressional Delegation which attended the Ditchley Foundation Conference ATTENDANCE: W Rostow Senator Frank Moss Senator Moss wrote MW on June 2S Senator Edward "Ted" Kennedy asking for this appt. The Member
- Lawrence O'Brien Ambassador Averell Harriman -- mf xxx also there. Already in the pew when the President arrived were Gov. and Mrs. Nelson Rockefeller, and Senator Robert F Kennedy. Date-Thurs The White House Dec Day 7, 1967 Activity (include visited
- . Edga r Hoover (b . 8) In office with parents of the xxxxxxxyouth, missing in Mississippi : Mr. xxxxxxx Nathan Schwerner of NYC, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Goodman of NYC; Cong. William Ryan of NYC; and Cong. Ogden Reid of NYC -- also, Lee White, Walter Jenkins
- of a large amount of public opinion mail on recommendations for the 1964 vice presidential nominees. The following have specific subdivisions in this general file: Edmund Brown, Thomas Dodd, Robert Kennedy, Eugene McCarthy, Robert McNamara, Edmund Muskie
- Folder, "Gen PL/McNamara, Robert," WHCF PL, Box 21
- McNamara, Robert Strange, 1916-2009
- capable. b. He would be, like he has been, totally and unquestionably loyal. Robert Kennedy would be also - when there was no conflict with his unalterable, over-riding allegiance to the Vatican. c. In the event of your disability, executive.would
- . that visited. I went down with--one of the first high-level people I went down with President Kennedy. And we went LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More
Oral history transcript, William Hunter McLean, interview 1 (I), 5/11/1971, by David G. McComb
(Item)
- effort, of course, was in '60 when Johnson had some aspirations to be president, and John Kennedy was nominated for President and Johnson for Vice president. I might point out that once again that this campaign started in the early part of the year
- flexible; Humphrey's personality and how it changed during the convention: Humphrey's loyalty to LBJ and frustration over the situation; why John F. Kennedy beat Humphrey in West Virginia in 1960; 1960 opposition from Franklin Roosevelt, Jr., and meetings
- that Ted Kennedy had made--a good talk on Vietnam. I had talked with--who was it? MG: [Theodore] Sorensen? 1 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More
- lnveatipticm c:oncer.rl~ J'enle'• wherea'bouta on November 22, 1963•. and Immediately precedla1 daat at:e. Tbe ...._4 material relate• to &Zl FBI lra.veatlpUcm made shortly after tbe ••-alaatlan of Prealdezlt Kennedy wit:h reapect to alle;zadou ma4e lty
Oral history transcript, William A. Reynolds, interview 1 (I), 7/26/1978, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- How Reynolds came to work for Senator Robert Kerr in 1953; LBJ's relationship with Kerr and Richard Russell, especially regarding civil rights; cooperation and leadership among Russell, Kerr, and LBJ and why they were successful; Senator Robert
- there all my life except for World War II and the years I spent in Washington. I have no desire to live anywhere else. Any particular point which you want to [start with]? G: How did you get into Senator [Robert] Kerr's orbit? R: When I got out
- Folder, "McNamara, Robert," Office Files of Fred Panzer, Box 379
- McNamara, Robert Strange, 1916-2009
- McNamara, Robert Strange, 1916-2009
- ,~ frit•nd!--in• .: • No man 1sflawless;and this small ep1s&le"lrom. • * rfie war m v letnam 1sproviug once igain that ' eluding Sen."Robert Kennedy whether or not • ,.the past precisely -.defines thedlaw in Robert, , ·"wars are, won bloodilv
- be the ultimate. F: Did you get to know President Kennedy or Senator Kennedy through Senator Johnson, or was this developed independently? M: I met Senator Kennedy in the 1960 campaign. At the time I was acting as an aide in the campaign for Senator Johnson
- Concepts ' indicates that on May 4 and 5 the Hon. David M. Kennedy, Chmn of the Commission--Chmn of the Board, Continental President's Commission on Budget Illinois National Bank and Trust Company of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois Concepts met for the first
- . Ramsey, General Vice President Jerry Whittman, Eastern Frank Heisler, Air Transport Coordinator Bob Mauney - Northwest Robert E. Stenzinger, Grand Lodge Representative Vernon Jirikowic - Research Director i ! William Schenck - Grand Lodge Representative
- then in charge of the land division, but apparently was a sort of a liaison man. Ramsey Clark was the first one that called me. F: Did you know Ramsey? G: Yes. And then after that, Robert Kennedy called me, and I was asked to come up to ~Jashington
- . He appointed Governor (John S.) Battle, former Governor of Virginia, Governor (Doyle E.) Carlton, former Governor of Florida, and (Robert) Bob Storey, who was then Dean of Southern Methodist Law School and immediate past president of the American Bar
- not believe, by the way, that he ever left office because of political pressures from Robert Kennedy or anybody else. He told me months before, oh, I would think at least a year before he had to run again, he said, "You know, my family are not long-livers
- , and Taylor by an appoint ment he igned naming one Robert Gamble to be Navy Agent for the port of Pensacola, May 4, 1850.) Eleanor Crook regretted the two sub stitutions in a letter to Library Director Harry Middleton: "As with Andrew Jackson, it has proven
Oral history transcript, Joseph A. Califano, interview 13 (XIII), 11/17/1987, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- at the increase. He said we couldn't let it stand; it would kick off inflation; it would violate the wage-price guidelines and we had to roll it back. [He] told me to talk to people in the government--[Robert] McNamara, [Henry] Fowler, what have you
Oral history transcript, Joseph A. Califano, interview 24 (XXIV), 3/16/1988, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- or John Kennedy, or Robert Kennedy, if it's really a terrific speech, and he can write the best, you know that Goodwin wrote it before it's even delivered. And that's caused problems for him with everybody that he's worked for. But in any case, we
- . President Kennedy, I think, was equally clear that the assassination of Diem and [Ngo Dinh] Nhu was a terrible thing, but I believe had tended to side with those who felt that there was reason for putting pressure on Diem and hoping for change, without
- rendition of 'Taps." LBJ Library public relations officer Robert Hicks served birthday cake and lemonade to UT students on the campus West Mall. atb. Catherine Robb spoke at the LBJ Grove. 2 From the Photo Archives The continuing Middle East cri
- . Robert McNamara came in in 1961 and had some very strong ideas about it. He and I had a number of long visits about the matter. I gave him the information that I had going back to the genesis of the Department itself, when he took over the Department. He
- everybody with every other person that was ever out here, but these things that were accomplished after Kennedy was assassinated and Lyndon became President, I don't think they'd have gone anywhere but for Lyndon Johnson's big push as a President. And I
Oral history transcript, Lawrence F. O'Brien, interview 24 (XXIV), 7/22/1987, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- Support for Hubert Humphrey's nomination from George McGovern and Edward Kennedy, but not Eugene McCarthy; McCarthy's complaint that the Democratic National Convention had not been fair; O'Brien's August 27, 1968, memo discussing the campaign
- , of course, there were ongoing negotiations involving the liberal wing of the party, the [Robert] Kennedy supporters and the McCarthy supporters, to see if they couldn't mount a unified effort on their part to stop Humphrey. As I indicated earlier
Oral history transcript, Orville Freeman, interview 4 (IV), 11/17/1988, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- LBJ's views on the food stamp program; the connection between civil rights and food programs; President Kennedy's involvement in food-related aid; funding and congressional support for the food stamp bill; Department of Agriculture involvement
- and Robert Kennedy went down to Mississippi and I think they met with you when they came back. Can you describe that sequence of events in your. . . ? F: I don't remember too vividly. We were doing everything we could, and step by step that thing
- in 1966 and Robert Kennedy’s involvement; a connection between U.S. support for Israel and Jewish support of Vietnam; LBJ’s Middle Eastern policy; the War on Poverty; the HARYOU-Act Program; Patrick Moynihan’s report on the black family; War on Poverty’s
- in the UN. A: Oh, yes. This was when Kennedy was in office. I was serving in the Subcommission for the Prevention of Discrimination and the Protection of Minorities of the United Nations, and I was hearing so much static about what a terrible country we
- : One of the themes that seems to run through the late fifties is politics looking on toward 1960, and the candidates lining up and frustrating each others' efforts in terms of legislation. I was wondering, in par- ticular with regard to Jack Kennedy
- Oral history transcript, Robert J. McCloskey, interview 1 (I), 5/1/1984, by Ted Gittinger
- McCloskey, Robert J. (Robert James), 1922-1996
- See all online interviews with Robert J. McCloskey
- INTERVIEWEE: ROBERT J. McCLOSKEY INTERVIEWER: Ted Gittinger PLACE: Ambassador McCloskey's office, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 G: Could you give us an outline of the occasion upon which you entered the Foreign Service? What led to that? M: I had been
