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33 results
- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh November 21, 1968, Washington, D. C. B: Sir, to begin with, do you remember the first time you met Lyndon Johnson? K: Yes. I wrote something about that in a book I recently published [Memoirs: Sixty Years ~ the Firing
- to catch up. M: Were you surprised when Lyndon Johnson accepted the vice presidential nomination? P: At that time, yes, sir, very much. It's sometimes difficult to look far back with all the things that've happened since then and really appreciate how
- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh November 8, 1968, in his part-time home in New Orleans, Louisiana B: I have the machine on now, so if we can go ahead and start. I'd think a logical starting place, sir, would be with when you first met Mr. Johnson. C
- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh November 21, 1968 B: This is the interview with Mr. John A. Schnittker, the Under Secretary of Agriculture. Sir, would you start by outlining your career up to the time of your appointment as Under Secretary here? S: Yes
- /exhibits/show/loh/oh V. Dr SALLE February 4, 1969 B: This is the interview with Governor Michael V. DiSalle. Sir, if I may, subject to your additions and corrections, just outline very briefly your background. You were born in 1908 in Toledo; law
Oral history transcript, Kenneth P. O'Donnell, interview 1 (I), 7/23/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- I NTERVIEl~EE : KENNETH O' DONNELL INTERV I EHER: PAIGE E. MULHOLLAN PLACE: Mr . O'Donnell' s office , Park Square Building , Boston , Massachusetts Tape of 2 M: let ' s get your i dentification on the beg i nning of the tape here , sir
- 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
- into the Academy in larger numbers? And getting some Negroes on the faculty?" I said, "Yes, sir." And he went on with this man, and I came back home with my wife. We were in the car, I told her what he had said, And she says, "Shoot, he isn't going to remember
- 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
- he'd come home, all during the winter months we'd have fresh corn and fresh string beans, black-eyed peas, et cetera. G: Do you remember what part of 1959 you went to work for them, whether it was the late part of the year? 0: Yes, it was in the fall
Oral history transcript, Edmund Gerald (Pat) Brown, interview 2 (II), 8/19/1970, by Joe B. Frantz
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- for it, and they put on the ballot an initiative measure that prohibited a legislature from ever compelling a person to sell his home to any reason � � LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral
- and accepted the vice presidential nomination? W: Yes, I was. I was very surprised and very shocked, in fact. F: What was the reaction of the New York delegation generally.? W: Well, I don't know, because I was already on my way home; I thought
- [For interviews 1 and 2] Family relationship with LBJ; visits of LBJ to Weisl home; Preparedness Subcommittee after Sputnik launch; role as special counsel; Department of Defense bureaucracy; Eisenhower Administration; cabinet secretary; George
- . When did you go to bed? R: I don't remember. F: Was it real late? R: It seems to me that it was about eleven o'clock when I got home. But there were six young men--six nineteen-year-old boys in Washington from Tampa, Florida--that Mother and I had
- INTERVIEWEE: JUANITA ROBERTS INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mrs. Roberts' home, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 G: Okay, Mrs. Roberts, I want you to start with the March 31, [1968J speech. were. R: Yes. Just tell what you remember about
- never brought these things home very much. kind of left them at the office. He There were $ome difficult moments, I think in the campaign, where every candidate tends to impute some horrendous event to the machinations of a rival. There was one
Oral history transcript, Adam Yarmolinsky, interview 2 (II), 10/21/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
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- [Maximum Feasible Misunderstanding] of who was there. Wofford was there. Harris I think Frank Mankiewicz was there. It wasn't a very big meeting. G: Some sources place the meeting at Shriver's home. Y: No. That's wrong. That's wrong. Why do I
- , but a rather good one based on the fact that by then I was already getting a feeling for political life. It was coming home to me. I was in law. Why law? Well, having gotten out of Yale with a B.A~ degree in English, I realized that I wasn't yet prepared
- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh November 11, 1969 F: This is an interview with former Ambassador to India Chester Bowles in his home in Essex, Connecticut, on November 11, 1969 . The interviewer is Joe B . Frantz . Mr . Ambassador--it's kind of hard
- there he went to war and served as a chaplain overseas and came home. r was the second child, the first, my sister, being born before the war. M: You got your college education at Harvard? P: Yes. r lived in Lawrence until r was 4, moved
Oral history transcript, George L.P. Weaver, interview 1 (I), 1/6/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- labor organizations before you entered government service. Did you ever have occasion during those years to be in contact with Mr. Johnson while he was a' Senator, for example'? W: Yes, I first met President Johnson in Stuart Symington's home
Oral history transcript, Patricia Roberts Harris, interview 1 (I), 5/19/1969, by Stephen Goodell
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- . It's a kind of mystical communion of members of the party who need some basis for gearing themselves up to get to the business of going back home and persuading other people that a presidential election is worth getting excited about. I had planned
Oral history transcript, Betty Cason Hickman, interview 1 (I), 4/10/1984, by Michael L. Gillette
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- , "If you intend to ever go home to Texas, do it within two years or you'll never go back." He said, "I planned to come for a couple of years and I've been here"--I think he'd been there forty-something years at the time. He was a very special person
- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Let me follow through on some of this and bring it closer to home, so to speak, in the White House. When you were at the White House, what was the operations in how to deal with the press? Could you give some sort
- , 1972 INTERVIEWEE : ALLEN BARROW INTERVIEWER : JOE B . FRANTZ PLACE : The home of James Jones in Tulsa, Oklahoma . Tape 1 of 1 F: Judge Barrow, first of all, how did you get involved with Senator [Robert S .] Kerr? B: It was in his 1948
Oral history transcript, James H. Rowe, Jr., interview 4 (IV), 11/10/1982, by Michael L. Gillette
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- home, but I'd been hearing that all my life and I just didn't believe him. G: I just ignored it. Now, also that March you and Teddy White met with Johnson in the Oval Office. R: Yes. G: Do you recall the substance of that meeting? R: Yes. Teddy
Oral history transcript, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, interview 1 (I), 1/11/1974, by Joe B. Frantz
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- she was, how she tried to make you feel at home . the house well . room . I can remember I think Lynda Bird was there ; we went up to her There were about maybe twelve Senate wives . food we had . I remember the I know a really nice black lady
- and said, ''You've got to stop Dawkins." I called Dawkins and told him to shut up and come home from his trip-in polite terms--and what he could and couldn't say in the future, and this was it. I know there were other occasions. People in Wasington, D.C
- [For interviews 1 and 2] Family relationship with LBJ; visits of LBJ to Weisl home; Preparedness Subcommittee after Sputnik launch; role as special counsel; Department of Defense bureaucracy; Eisenhower Administration; cabinet secretary; George
- It caused me a little trouble, but not that I went home and told them why--that I'd rather have them have • the wheat and eat it up and have it pass on into infinity than I would have them save the gold and use it to buy machine tools or something. M
- IS Eventually, I went into the department in the Office. I had been in the Solicitor Generalis Office a little less than a year when Ole Miss came. I recall on Sunday night I was at home, and one of my law classmates from Yale Law School--Howard Willens
- INTERVIEWEE: CHARLES L. BARTLETT INTERVIEWER: DOROTHY PIERCE McSWEENY PLACE: Mr. Bartlett's home~ 4615 WStreet~ NW~Hashington~D.C. Tape 1 of 1 M: Mr. Bartlett, I'd like to begin this interview with a very brief outline of your journalistic career
Oral history transcript, W. DeVier Pierson, interview 1 (I), 3/19/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- is you can never say "no" to a He didn't even ask me. He just assumed that if he said "yes," I would. I remember when I came home that night. The meeting had been scheduled for about 1:00 o'clock in the afternoon, and he got to me about 7:00 instead