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- graduated from Harvard in 1961, and free-lanced for a while--traveled for a year and then free-lanced writing a book about the travels- then went into the Marine Corps for a brief period, came out and rewrote the book, worked for the Washington Post
Oral history transcript, W. Sherman Birdwell, Jr., interview 2 (II), 10/21/1970, by Joe B. Frantz
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- . Of course they'd build up for security then, they had the couple of travel trailers or not travel but mobile homes up at the other end for the army, for the helicopter pilots and their crew. And they had security--secret service had their own little house
- of be the traveling assistant. [He said] that the rest of the organization--we had a very limited staff at this point--hadn't been built up so they needed a lot of bodies at the headquarters to keep things going and they could only spare one out. You [Paul Bolton
- into the Senate in 1958. The Senator got him aside and said, "Senator, you don't know it, but you're going to be doing a lot of traveling. What I want you to do--and you might as well be prepared for this--I want you to go everywhere Allen Ellender goes. Anyplace
- they put down and then I came back, and I asked to talk to the drivers of the tankers. Of course, they would travel the roads all by themselves. G: These were Vietnamese drivers? L: Oh, yes, Vietnamese drivers. It was just curious how the hell
Oral history transcript, John A. Gronouski, interview 3 (III), 2/14/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- that was so promising at one point, with the demise of the media guarantee program, with even the sharp cutback in funds to permit my staff to travel, fewer books coming over to the USIA library, all kinds of cutbacks, the attitude that this whole pattern
Oral history transcript, David L. Hackett, interview 1 (I), 4/15/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
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- about six months talking to people all over the country, asking them what they would do if the delinquency legislation passed, and therefore traveled into Harlem and Watts and a lot of the ghettoes of the country. It became evident, at least to me
- . And there was somebody nobody ever heard of ran eighth. G: That's a crowded field, isn't it? J: We spoke together every night, because the only way to ever get a cro\oKJ was to travel around, in the middle of a hot surnner. There were no other races, just us. G
- ? J: I don't remember. That could have been how we heard of him. I think maybe it was through the radio business. G: All of these campaign stops that you mentioned, did you travel with him on any of these stops? J: Some of them. Not as many. You
Oral history transcript, Earle C. Clements, interview 1 (I), 10/24/1974, by Michael L. Gillette
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- ://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Clements -- I -- 5 would travel. Some of us would try to keep him posted, keep him
- -- Interview IV -- 13 F: Did you travel with the President during his campaigning? C: I did not. F: You stayed here? C: I stayed here and was available for conferences with the people who were working here. We had a small group, maybe three or four
- of the Secretary of Defense. I think it doesn't come through too well there. But in any number of instances, we've found in our travels--you see, each member of this intelligence board would have to go abroad each year and so it gave us information on the ground
- , the participation, I think really did it. As you know, I did a lot of travel there, and by 1971 when I left I could go to places that I'd have had my head shot off three years before, no question about that. I rode through the countryside in the night and rode up
- to a funeral, gone to Vietnam, gone to Thailand to a secret air base, gone and seen Ayub Khan in Pakistan, seen the Pope and come back to the United States. All of this in a span of just over four days, traveling 26,959 miles. But the President, now, when you
- : And this is near the town of Tan An. D: Yes. So you really couldn't send your commerce up the traditional routes, and so on. So Highway 4 became your thing. Now I would tell you that in 1965, I sure as hell would not travel from Can Tho anywhere on Highway 4
- to Monahans, Texas, to see a hot prospect one minute ahead of the coach from University of Oklahoma. And you don't not go because you spent your travel allotment for that month or something. They have a free hand, and they work out the justifications later. So
- was exercising a good deal of influence. B: That's right. Exactly. No, that's news to me. I had not known that. G: One question relates to your speechmaking function, and you evidently did travel around the country a good deal. To what extent were
- with. And there was no basis for it. Finally I said, "David, you've got to change this order. Why don't you say what you meant was you wanted to review all of the requests for travel to 17 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT More
- of the King and LBJ together. He had apparently known him a number of years. He'd traveled to Norway when he was vice president. B: Yes, I'm trying to [remember]. I'm sorry, let me just--is that in here? G: Yes. It should be the last page of April
Oral history transcript, Ellsworth Bunker, interview 3 (III), 10/12/1983, by Michael L. Gillette
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Oral history transcript, Elizabeth (Liz) Carpenter, interview 2 (II), 4/4/1969, by Joe B. Frantz
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- Bend; those were the two of the big trips. And on her last trip, "The Last Hurrah," (I hope I'm remembering right), there were eighty reporters. F: For that kind of trip, that was very good. C: And they paid. Of course, the advantage of traveling
- the whole mess I had resolved not to allow it to have any undignified, if that's the proper word, exposure. In other words, I didn't want to make fun of the whole thing or in any way impugn the President or anything of that sort. But it did travel around
- reversed. And I think it has been reversed in the sense that we're traveling more and more miles with more and more vehicles on more and more highways and while the death rate in numbers perhaps is still rising, when you consider the other factors it's my
Oral history transcript, Daniel K. Inouye, interview 2 (II), 5/2/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- on this. I had no This wasn't related to Agriculture. Well, out at a Japanese cocktail party that night I tried to figure out what to do and didn't learn much. traveled all night. I got home real tired, you know-- Well, at 2 o'clock in the morning our own
Oral history transcript, Luther E. Jones, Jr., interview 2 (II), 10/14/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
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- not cer- tain whether he used a helicopter at the time. F: No~ that was not until 1948. J: But he traveled by air quite a lot, he just flew by air. In the end, he was almost certain that he was elected. I think that he'd received congratulatory
- time to work, to travel for a primary campaign. But then he did try for the nomination for president in spite of the New York attitude. After the 1960 election, I did see him at The Elms sometimes, and I enjoyed being with Mrs. Johnson. She invited
- . The rest of rail safety staff, who were travelling inspectors, were assigned a conference room, only they didn't have a key to it, and it was kept locked. I got back to Washington and launched a program to look at every rail office and see what we had
- to make speeches, he had to be in as many tmvns as he could--had radio in those days but no television; he made some radio talks. But he would travel five or six hundred miles a day, as I recall, in a car. F: He was just going to make up in energy what
- they are sensitive to the concept of a social medicine, socialized medicine, to feel that this was a program the federal government was going to run. So I had to do a great deal of cross-country traveling; meeting with groups of the medical profession of various
- was the Leader in the Senate during 6 of my brother's eight years. Not only did I see him in a friendly, informal, wholly non-official way in Washington, but on several occasions we found ourselves traveling together. For example, I remember when I accompanied