Discover Our Collections
Limit your search
Tag- Digital item (5)
- 1994-08-xx (5)
- Text (5)
- Oral history (5)
5 results
Oral history transcript, Lady Bird Johnson, interview 37 (XXXVII), 8/1994, by Harry Middleton
(Item)
- and to stop at a old farmhouse that had been turned into a restaurant and have dinner first. This night, though, it was a great play and a very romantic and splendid actor. So I still have and cherish a picture of me and Sir Lawrence Olivier. M: When you
- -- 8 me I could wait right outside the door. I asked them where could I spend the night. And they showed me to a room close by. And I called home to let Zephyr know, and Luci, and Lynda if she was there--funny, I cannot recall about Lynda at this moment
Oral history transcript, Lady Bird Johnson, interview 38 (XXXVIII), 8/1994, by Harry Middleton
(Item)
- was going to die right there on the Senate floor while we were talking on civil rights, and all those long, long nights, and yet at the same time he was determined to hold them in session until some decision was reached. The Senate did pass a civil rights
- to our right. And a population of bats (laughter) and swallows from some surrounding buildings that flew around at night. It was an interesting possibility; it offered us more room than we had ever had before. Max Brooks was a very able and creative