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- Kampelman. I had closed my mind to it. One night I got home from a National Symphony concert. After the concert we actually went to the Austrian Embassy, I remember that too. So we didn't get home until something like 1:15. When I got home there were
- HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] every night . it quiet . More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh We had had reporters trying to listen in . We tried to hold the line
- about 8 o'clock at night. Met Mr. Califano and spent about an hour with him, and then for the first time discovered that I was being considered to be deputy mayor of the District of Columbia. When Mr. Califano was through with the interview, he made
- for regulation in some areas . came up in odd circumstances. In the early days these things I remember, for instance, one night about 2 o'clock in the morning I was reading some applications for state technical assistance grants and I ran across the name
Oral history transcript, William S. White, interview 1 (I), 3/5/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- a few here. W: I think the first impression I had of him was of furious, almost incredible, energy. I also had an impression--now, this, as you know, [or] will have read about, was in the early New Deal of Franklin Roosevelt. Lyndon Johnson was deeply
- , but which existed prior to OEO. There was interest in things like that and what they were doing about the jobless and their fix on these kinds of problems. G: All this was beginning to came to. the fore. I've read several accaunts; one that comes