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  • Bio: Bernard Louis Boutin (b. 1923), businessman, New Hampshire political figure, and government official was mayor of Laconia, New Hampshire, from 1955 to 1959, and a John F. Kennedy campaign worker in 1960. He was Deputy Administrator
  • and 1950s. From 1961 to 1963, he served as a military aide to President Kennedy and then President Johnson, 1963-1965.
  • Bio: Joseph Leopold Block (1902-1992) was an executive with the Inland Steel Company. He was a consultant to the War Production Board from 1941 to 1945. Block also served Presidents John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, and Richard M. Nixon
  • Bio: Stewart Lee Udall (b. January 31, 1920, St. Johns, Arizona-d. March 20, 2010, Santa Fe, New Mexico) served three terms as a congressman from Arizona, then as Secretary of the Interior from 1961 to 1969, under presidents John F. Kennedy
  • , incidentally, was Bob [Robert F.] Woodward, who was offered the job, and who took it. This telephone call came to us in Santiago, Chile, where he was our ambassador and had been for about two weeks. Immediately after I said "No" to President Kennedy, he said
  • citrus restated their as reported Truise-D.osson govemment9 s faith 1n US Government1s that contained President However, stated that Lightbourne, Kennedy's letter in belief to his suggestion set tcrth in London•s 17h6bad been accepted
  • Biographical information; reporting political, congressional and military affairs; 1960 and 1964 Democratic campaigns; Cuban Missile Crisis; Cy Vance; Robert McNamara; crises operations; defense directorates; public affairs
  • with the candidate as we had in past campaigns. In 1960, I don't believe I saw anything of President Johnson when he was running with Jack Kennedy, as the Vice Presidential candidate. PresiC'.ential candidates at all. him as a reporter, at the We paid no attention
  • press conference jointly held by her and six other persons identifiE>d with the Kennedy and Johnson Administra­ tions: Senator Hubert Humphrey, Robert Kennedy Jr., Clarence Mitchell, Joseph A. Califano, Kenneth O'Donnell, and E:sther Peterson
  • probably brought up to a point, aside fro::! the usual afvising one does, when Mr. Kennedy appointed me to serve on an advisory panel or cormnittee on educ.:J.tion after his election anG prior to his assu:nption of office. M: You didn't campaign for him
  • : In 1956 you had that horse race between young John Kennedy and Estes Kefauver for the vice presidency, and Johnson shook a lot of people by taking Texas for Kennedy instead of for Kefauver. Were you privy at all to his thinking or strategy in this, or do
  • of your interviews you just mentioned in passing Robert Hill, who was Ambassador to Mexico, and I wonder if we could explore a little bit the relations with him. I had a feeling that they went a little deeper. R: Of course they would. You see, Bob had
  • Db you recall when this was in 1968? M: I would say probably August, some time like that. We were late on the bill. This was prior to the assassination of Robert Kennedy [June 1968], I would probably place it in a matter of time, two weeks before
  • from the collections of the Library of Congress, the National Ar­ chives, the Ohio Historical Society, the Chicago Historical Society, and the Hoover, Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower and Kennedy Presidential Libraries. From March 15 to April 25, 1976
  • to Charles S. Robb went on tem­ porary exhibition in the Library on the 20th anniversary of that event, December 9, 1967. It wm be on display until June of this year. beck as Lyndon Johnson's Mifitary Advisor"; Robert Hilderbrand, "The Johnson
  • . 12:44p President . Luci . Dorothy Force One landed at Kennedy International Airport, New York Nugent boarded helicopter w/ Jim Jones Territo Mr. Steve Martini Mrs. Anne Martini Dr. B urkely Joe Califano Johnson took ^HITE HOUS E Dat DENT LYNDO N
  • . Japan accepted full membership in the Or­ ganization for Economic Cooperation and De­ velopment in early 1964. Japan has partici­ pated in the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade since 1955 and is expected to participate actively in the Kennedy Round
  • at­ teJ.-:ding were: Douglas Dillon; David Rockefel!.~~:r ; Father Theodore H2sburgh, President of Not~e Da2e ; Adol~ ~erle; Robert Nathan; George Harrar, PresideD.t of t:ie RG-tkefeller Foundation, and Andrew McClellan and Ernest iee of the AFL/CIO
  • Hoover, Chairman Clarence J. Brown Herbert Brownell, Jr. James A. Farley Homer Ferguson Arthurs. Flemming Chet Holifield Solomon c. Hollister Joseph P. Kennedy John L. McClellan Sidney A. Mitchell Robert G. Storey MEMBERS, SUBCOMMITTEE ON RESEARCH
  • Roberts, Ray, 1913-1992
  • See all online interviews with NYA Interview & Albert W. Brisbin & Willard Deason & Charles P. Little & J.J. Jake Pickle & Ray Roberts & Fenner Roth
  • S. WHITE WITH A GROUP FROM LYNDON JOHNSON'S DAYS AS DIRECTOR OF THE NATIONAL YOUTH ADMINISTRATION IN TEXAS FROM 1935 to 1937 The NYA group includes: WILLARD DEASON J. J. (JAKE) PICKLE RAY ROBERTS FENNER ROTH ALBERT W. BRISBIN C. P. LITTLE The tape
  • of the treasury and Henry Fowler and Robert Roosa as undersecretaries; LBJ's request that Walker praise Fowler's abilities to the press; publicity for an ABA-sponsored luncheon attended by Robert Anderson, Robert Roosa, Douglas Dillon, and Henry Fowler; LBJ's
  • for Lyndon Johnson, he's the best man in the state ... and so on. My first direct contact came in mid-1959. I had gone to Washington from the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas to serve as special assistant and economic adviser to Texan Robert B. Anderson
  • . Robert S. McNamara, former Secretary of Defense: "Today there are 50,000 nuclear weapons m the world, roughly 25,000 U.S. and 25.000 Soviet Union. I don't know any anns control negotia­ tor ... who i so optimistic as to believe that in the next 10 years
  • Employment Act of 1946, its intended and eventual uses; tax reductions of 1964; regulating the federal budget; the war against poverty and its failures; local control of education; planning in a free society; President John F. Kennedy; rising
  • the word "planning." Because as John F. Kennedy once said, the very future of the democracies will depend upon whether they can compete with the more rigorous and brutal methods of the totalitarians through planning under freedom. This is a rather
  • . Rose Kennedy, Mrs. Joan Kennedy, Dr. Corridan re: plane crash - Ted Kennedy Talked to Lynda re: flight from Hawaii - man threatened wife, etc. 11:30 Dictating machine 3:30 Met Ashton's parents 4:00 Sun roof in bathing suit - read "The Best Plays
  • . 11:00a 5. 12:45p 6. 12:55p 7. 2:45p 8. 2:50p t 9. 3:35p 10. 3:45p 11. 5:30p Bryce Harlow, re: White House meeting at 5:30 today Sen Jackson, re: going to VFW meeting Sen Kennedy Senator Johnson opened the Senate Sen Kennedy, Smathers, Clark, Russell
  • t 4:45p 5:45p t 7:00p 7:15p t 10 11 12 Date Walter, re: trip to Ohio, etc. Tom Kennedy (United Mine Workers) Hawaiian group -- Sen Long and Fong and group of Hawaiian citizens interested in East-West Institute Senator Johnson opened the Senate
  • , 1960 visited by)* LD Expenditure Code Deer huntin g with Sen Kennedy at West Ranch lunch at LBJ Ranch: Mrs. Johnson; Mr. and Mrs. West; Mr. and Mrs. Gene Chambers Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Moursund, Sen Kennedy Sen Kerr (Okla) Dinner Sen. Kennedy left
  • governor in 1952 and then became governor when Governor William B. Umstead died, winning his own four-year term in 1956. In 1960 he endorsed John F. Kennedy, a candidate Hodges believed would commit himself to economic development and moderation on racial
  • Bio: McGeorge Bundy (1919-1996) was the national security adviser to Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. In 1949 Bundy became a lecturer of government on the Harvard University faculty. He quickly rose to become the dean of the College
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • Onassis, Jacqueline Kennedy, 1929-1994
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • Kennedy, John F. (John Fitzgerald), 1917-1963
  • not be anticipated. lb traced development of the democratic process in Vietnam, said when Geno Ky took second-place on the Thieu­ 1
  • . When the President decided to run for the Senate, Miss Juanita Roberts was a secretary of his and the daughter of J. J. Duggan, who LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories
  • the conversations from November 22, 1963 through March 1965, and plan to open the conver ations for April and May 1965 early next year. 4 Changing of the Guard: Director Middleton to Retire By Robert Hicks Public Relations Ot'ficer Harry Middleton, long-time
  • )' The LBJ School of Public affairs and The University of Texas at Austin. Professor Emeritus Robert Divine stressed that the U.S. fought in Vietnam for many of the same reasons it fought the other wars of this century. 4 Vietnam War Professors Qiang Zhai
  • . G. Lo£ of Colorado, a leader in solar energy development. The Award Com ittee of the LBJ Foundation is chaired by Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson and Dr Wil­ liam McGill and includes George R. Brown, Dr. Robert A. Good, Miss Linda Howard, Arthur Krim, Mrs
  • . BREWSTER SENATOR FROM MARYLAND ARMISTEAD I. SELDEN, JR. REPRESENTATIVE FROM ALABAMA The President The White House Washington, D. C. WILLIAMS, MAILLIARD REPRESENTAT I VE FROM CALIFORNIA ROBERT L, F. SIKES REPRESENTATIVE FROM FLORIDA FRANK HEWLETT VIRGINIA
  • : He preceded us. such. I'm not even sure whether I ever saw his report as I was told parts of it, at least. One of the first things I did when I got back in 1961, at President Kennedy's direction, was to go to the Vice President and tell him
  • and appointment of Robert Weaver as first Secretary; review and appointment of various other persons.
  • of, to illustrate his policies, Betty Furness as an illustration of a woman brought in; Robert Weaver as a Negro [was] brought in; and I mentioned to you once before John Hechinger. Hechinger himself was interested in how he was selected and said to be sure
  • person to act as cochairmen of the affair welcoming King back to the United States, but that Bunche will not accept until he knows who the white person will be. Rustin indicated that he had considered having Senators Robert Kennedy and Jacob Javits
  • to Labor. Labor put up the money for his newspaper in San Francisco. He says that in Arizona he feels that Kennedy has that delegation. He does feel, however. that there is a lot of work thnt could be done there. He is pretty confident that rat Brown