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- Houston and Josefa and I. The car was sitting out in front of the house, and it was rather new. Mr. Johnson--Sam Houston had asked him if he could have the car, and he said no, that he didn't know how to drive it. So Mr. Johnson went in the bedroom and lay
- in that? M: Of cours e, I thoug ht since Sena tor Johns on was the Majo rity Lead er of the Sena te and there had been a lot in the news paper s abou t the poss ibili ty of his cand idacy , that he poss ibly migh t be a cand idate . I belie ve he told me
- here that ,.,as at that time Powell, Rauhut, Maginnis, Reavlcy, and Lochridge. After having been in that law Eirm practicing law for some two-and-a-half years, when January 1963 carne around Governor Connally was looking for what he referred to as new
- on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 10 grandson and ULcd to sl!()\" hil~l He" off ane! liked to have him around. called Luci and told her to bet Lyn ready, that he uanted to take Lyn over to meet a new friend
- impressions that a new member makes upon not only the leadership but his colleagues. B: Did Mr. Johnson move into any of the groupings in the House? Could you as s ociate him with the Southerner s ? M: Oh, I would say he had friends everywhere. Even
Oral history transcript, John A. Gronouski, interview 2 (II), 2/10/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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Oral history transcript, Walter Jenkins, interview 13 (XIII), 7/12/1984, by Michael L. Gillette
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- ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] Jenkins - XIII - 31 G: Well, apparently a lot of them were old New Deal supporters. That was an awfully close vote, though, one vote. J: It doesn•t say who he got
- : January, I think this would be right. M: Right after the first of the year. C: January, I think this would be right. He was working awfully hard then, and he always has and pushes himself unmercifully. Again this is nothing new; he did this before he
- . paper clippings of things. Dan ~'oody I think I still have some news- I had written in to the newspaper chiding for his actions and what he had been accusing Lyndon of and things like that. Mrs. Moody and I almost had a. . . . And Ed Clark took
Oral history transcript, Elma (Mrs. Sam) Fore, interview 1 (I), 7/12/1971, by David G. McComb
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- on up to New York. Went up to Hyde Park. M: Did you know Mr. Roosevelt? F: Sam had met him. We saw him make his acceptance speech that night out at Franklin Field. He had met him, yes. M: And he knew John Nance Garner, I suppose. F: Oh, he
- goods - -to stimulate the entire economy. have a momentum for development in India, Korea, in Pakistan, in in Taiwan and in a number of other countries that's new and that's real and vigorous and that, these countries where they want to go
Oral history transcript, Paul C. Warnke, interview 2 (II), 1/15/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- almost the entire seaboard, and it would I think represent a real threat to the independence, and the western orientation, of not only Japan but also Indonesia, the Phillippines, and potentially even Australia and New Zealand. But what I've suggested
- the apologies were addressed? G: One would have been Senator [Arthur] Watkins of Utah, and the other--the name slips [from] me--was from New Jersey; it was a long name, I can't remember. He called Watkins a "handmaiden of communism," and the other one was just
- with that library they built particularly. We looked at some of their commercial buildings--one I believe in Lincoln Center in New York; looked at commercial buildings as well. I remember Connecticut General Life--we looked at their building, Mrs. Johnson
Oral history transcript, Joseph L. Rauh, Jr., interview 3 (III), 8/8/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- bodyguard came in and said the President wanted to speak to him on the telephone. Everybody was pretty set up about the fact that the new President wanted advice from Walter and wanted his help. We all thought that was great. About five minutes later
- , in my estimation, and they went public. So when I came back, all the news- papers were after him, onto the story. Then I went back to Okinawa, talked it over with some friends, and we decided that one of the problems was nobody in the Pentagon knew
- system since Bretton Woods, particularly the agreement worked out among all countries that are members of the International Monetary Fund to create a new special reserve asset. M: This is the paper gold, as it is commonly called, idea? s: Right
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 15 (XV), 6/23/1984, by Michael L. Gillette
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- Johnson at 1east wanted the Senate to have a good record on it. G: Now, in that conference report Kennedy evidently did get some conces sions in the final bill, some exemptions for garment workers and con struction unions for certain new Taft-Hartley
Oral history transcript, Lewis Blaine Hershey, interview 1 (I), 11/22/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- people are going to get hurt or killed. G: Did you have an opinion on the way that Hanoi was apparently able to convince some Americans that we were, in fact, bombing the civilians? Harrison Salisbury, I think, of the New York Times, was perhaps the best
- . Then S c o t l a n d . Caffery There was a n o t h e r ti m e o f v i s i t i n g London when t h e American ambassador and I had a very good r a p p o r t . t h e former g o v er no r of New Hampshire. He was I d o n ' t know why t h a t man comes t