2 KEY AIDES QUIT JOHNSON'S STAFF

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP75-00149R000300180005-8
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
November 11, 2016
Document Release Date: 
November 25, 1998
Sequence Number: 
5
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
September 16, 1965
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP75-00149R000300180005-8.pdf97.19 KB
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NEW YORK TIMES SEP 1 6 1965 Sanitized - Approved For Release : 2 KEY AIDES QUIT JOHNSON'S STAFF. Goodwin and Busby Served as White House Idea Men C PBY POMFR ,T 5 WASHINGTON, Sept. 15- The White House announced to- clay the resignation of two of, President Johnson's key aides,1 Horace Busby Jr. and Richard N. Goodwin. Both have been idea men and speech writers for Mr. Johnson in their $28,500-a-year jobs asl special assistants to the Prosi-~ dent. Mr. Busby, a Texan who has long been an intimate of the President's, has been serving as Cabinet secretary, with respon- sibility for liaison between the Executive departments and the White House. Recently he .was also assigned as deputy to Mc- George Bundy, Special Presi- dential Assistant for National Security Affairs. Mr. Goodwin, an articulate man and a facile writer, has been a star in Mr. Johnson's firmament for a much shorter time than Mr. Busby. The Pres= ident has come to rely heavily on him to translate the goals of the Great Society into plat- form English. Mr. Goodwin has also been responsible for White House liaison in urban affairs, civil rights and the arts and Au- inanities. Fellowship at 'Wesleyan Ile will leave Sept. 20 to ac- opt a fellowship at the Center or advanced studies at Wes- cyan University at Middletown, onn. His White House duties will be taken over by Harry C. cPherson Jr., a special assist- ant to the President w'ho for- nerly was Assistant Secretary )f State for Educational and ultural Affairs. No arrangements have yet een made to replace Mr. Busby. lthough his plans are not defi- lite, he is expected to return to work as a management consul- ant. It is known that President ohnson tried to persuade both non to stay on his staff. Both ecided, however, that the time iad come for them to return o private life. Mr. Busby, who is 41 years Id, first joined Mr. Johnson's taff in 1948, when the Presi- lent was a Congressman. He ias either been on Mr.' r. John- ?on's staff or close to him in FOIAb3b an advisory capacity ever since. Mr. Busby was appointed a special assistant to the Presi- dent in April of 1965. He had been running ,his own manage- ment consulting firm in Austin and Washington. The firm spe- cialized in economic research and published a ,newsletter for businessmen. Mr, Busby at first agreed to stay on the President's staff only through the. election last November.. Mr. Johnson pur- suaded him to stay longer, but Mr. Busby is understood to have decided finally to resign because he wants to increase his income and feels more com- fortable running his own busi- ness than working for someone else. There has been some gossip at the White House that Mr. Busby was disappointed when the President appointed Bill D. Moyers instead of Mr. Busby to take George E. Reedy's place as press secretary. But Mr. Busby says he was relieved when he did not get the assignment because he feared that it would interfere with his plans to return to private business. Mr. Goodwin, who is 33 years old, clerked for the late Justice Felix Frankfurter after gradu- ating from Harvard Law School, then became special counsel for the House Subcommittee on Legislative Oversight. He went .to work for Senator John F. Kennedy in 1959 and wrote speeches for him during l you have been unsparing. Ito- his campaign for the Presidency. Mr. Goodwin served for a white as assistant special council to President Kennedy, then took. on assignments with the State Department and the Peace Corp. In March of 1964, he re- turned to the White House to work for President Johnson. Mr. Goodwin has told friends that he had decided to return to a private career either in the law or business and that the, Weslyan fellowship offered and pportunity to make the transi- tion. He will he paid $15,000 for the academic year ending in June, will occupy a house rent- free, and will be supplied with an office and secretarial assist- ance. He intends to do research and write. Neither Mr. Busby nor Mr. Goodwin, however, in- tend to write memoirs. Mr. McPherson, who is 36 years old, was born in Tyler, Tex. After he graduated from the University of Texas Law School in 1956, he joined the staff of the Senate Democratic Policy Committee, which was headed by Mr. Johnson. He was named Deputy Under Secretary of the Army in 1963 and an Assistant Secretary of State in August of the next year. The White House released a warm exchange of letters be- tween the President and Mr. Busby and Mr. Goodwin. To Mr. Busby, the President said: "As a counselor you have been wise.. As an administrator ward yourself. As a friend you' have been, and you are, a never- failing source ? of strength to me." Mr. Johnson wrgte Mr. Good- win that his service had been "a blessing to the country,-for within the high councils of Gov- ernment you have articulated: with great force and persuasion man's hunger for justice and his hopes for a richer life." Sanitized - Approved For Release : CIA-RDP75-00149R000300180005-8