Discover Our Collections


  • Series > Transcripts of LBJ Library Oral Histories (remove)
  • Type > Text (remove)

551 results

  • no jurisdiction to issue the-F: You thought you had a real legal point here? P: Oh, indeed, right. Then Al Wirtz went to the Fifth Circuit and Judge [Joseph C. Jr.] Hutcheson was the chief judge then, and he said that a single judge--and I think erroneously
  • -of-a-bitch, because I was a Catholic for Johnson, as I told you, the issue of Look came out that day. Did I tell you about this? F: No. C: The issue of Look came on the convention, and there were four places across an open page: Clark Clifford
  • of Illinois, the late Senator [Herbert] Lehman of New York, and [Jacob] Javits when he came in in the fifties, and former Senator Joe Clark, who was from Philadelphia. That's how he put them together. G: Yes, but he convinced the Democrats to vote against
  • was the staff liaison man? C: Well, I had-- M: Doug Cater, for awhile? C: Cater was staff man under Johnson, too, then there was Ramsey Clark, and before that, was Mike Feldman, and Mr. White, and of course Sorenson, and then, Bill Moyers. M: Did
  • Celebrezze, Anthony J. (Anthony Joseph), 1910-
  • believe Senator [Joseph] Clark of Pennsylvania was still in the Senate. And the Senator from Massachusetts, [Edward] Brooke, was not there, the black senator. He was in Africa at the time on LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL
  • in Austin, Clark Thomason Winters, wasn't it? G: Is that Sam Winters? W: Sam Winters. 29 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral
  • LBJ's feelings about Senator Joseph McCarthy in 1954; LBJ as a medical patient; a 1955 highway construction bill; LBJ's cousin, Margaret, and her family; LBJ's smoking habits after his 1955 heart attack; going on walks with LBJ; the LBJ Ranch
  • would logically come out of the White House at that particular time. And you may have read that this system came "a cropper" because on one day at the ranch, Joseph Laitin then an assistant press LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org
  • Biographical information; first association with LBJ; Estes Kefauver; Douglas Dillon; Pierce Salinger; Joseph Laitin; Horace Busby; George Reedy; Henry Fowler; Bill Moyers; Bob McCloskey; Frederick Deming; George Christian; relations with the White
  • an assistant to the Governor of New York State, who at that time was Averell Harriman. From 1957 until 1962 you were an assistant to Senator Joseph Clark of Pennsylvania, and from 1963 until 1965 you \'/ere the
  • was Joseph W . Bailey, who, by the way, President Johnson was very interested in and President Johnson's father was very interested in, if I have heard it related correctly . I remember in 1'920 when Joseph W . Bailey ran for governor after having left
  • --it was in 1955-Tape 1 of 2, Side 2 F: In 1955 at the height of the [Joseph] McCarthy period when it was boring the hell out of me--I just saw national radio and television sliding into the slough of despond--a very bright friend of mine who knew Lyndon very
  • , Senator [Hugh] Scott of Pennsylvania and Senator [Joseph] Clark of Pennsylvania both came to testify, since I am a Pennsylvanian. And members of the Foreign Relations Committee such as--F: They made it bipartisan then? M: Gene McCarthy and [George
  • TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Krim -- II -- 24 spent a weekend actually at Fort Clark. But I hadn't seen George in the interim and I never
  • , depending on the subject matter, or-- W: Usually, the special counsel has overall charge of the executive order picture, in this case, Harry McPherson. There were a good many orders, however, which went through [Joseph] Califano's shop. Larry Levinson
  • between MACV and CIA, I guess would be the way to characterize it? K: No. Since I got depositioned by everybody and his brother--I arrived on May 27. The famous alleged statement by Westy, and the question between he and [General Joseph] McChristian
  • for a little committee called the Legislative Review Committee or the Calendar Committee. That was a group of three junior senators, I can't recall who the first three were. As I remember, by 1957 or 1958, it was Senator Joe Clark [D.-Pa.] and Senator Herman [E
  • Clark Baldwin, who was a general in the Department of Army Operations, and he said, "Would you be interested in going back into the Far East again?" And I said, "Not as an army officer. back in the army as a colonel. So just forget it." that's
  • [saying], "Things are better than they were. We're making progress, et cetera, et cetera." You say that to gain time instead of deciding how the hell you're going to win or at least end the war. G: Some people say that [Clark] Clifford, when he became
  • of a southwestern or western state--"is the loss of our best young people. Our best ones graduate and go East and they don't come home." Of course [Wilbur Joseph] Cash or some several southern writers have quantified that, that there were fifteen million southerners
  • . Hill. I had almost nothing to do with the battles on the The President sent me up a couple of times to deal with Edith Green. MG: You met with Senator [Joseph] Clark, too, I think, didn't you, on 1967? JG: I might have. MG: You don't recall? JG
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Cooper -- I -- 15 C: Yes, they were the most liberal Democrats. I don't like to use names but one like Senator [Joseph S.] Clark of Pennsylvania was usually protesting. I think that one time he made a speech on the floor
  • in Austin; Mr. John Cofer, a prominent attorney; Bob Phinney; Ed Clark; Everett Looney; Eddie Joseph. Of course John Connally was here; I was here; Joe Kilgore was here, had just finished or was in the process of finishing law school. of those we called
  • , especially regarding congressional relationships and personnel; advice from Bryce Harlow, Clark Clifford, and Dick Neustadt; JFK's early White House staff; efforts to gain enough votes to expand the House Rules Committee; building a relationship between JFK
  • to Congress I was under the spell of Joseph Weldon Bailey. Bailey was very reactionary, but he was my hero. my boyhood hero and I idolized Joe Bailey. brained man I ever knew. He was He was about the biggest- And about the vainest man I ever knew. took
  • 24617781] Reedy -- XVI Hinkley? -~ 16 [John Joseph Hickey?]--he didn't know that I was part of the LBJ group because I got in an automobile with the journalists, and he was driving. I think he thought I was just another newspaperman. Somebody asked
  • of thing that he and I would talk about. He never asked my advice on policy. Hell, he had four- star generals, and had [Robert] McNamara and later--what's his name?-Clark Clifford came in as secretary of defense. that he asked for advice about policy
  • in this whole area of firing people and whatnot. And Ramsey Clark, as always the case in his greatness - and I really consider him a great man--he stood up behind me every inch of the way and ticked off what he considered to be the pertinent constitutional
  • : Did you see General [Joseph] Stillwell? Did he come down? L: Oh, yes, old Crazy Joe. He used to come down all the time. Joe liked it, because you'd get an operation and he liked to fly around in his helicopters and sit there with a gun and shoot
  • me of Little Lord Fauntleroy walking up a back alley down in North Clark Street where I lived when I was a kid. But he didn't belong on that committee. G: Grace Tully joined the staff. R: I think that that was Johnson strengthening his position