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  • Series > Transcripts of LBJ Library Oral Histories (remove)
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  • Subject > Vietnam (remove)

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  • , stopping first in Honolulu where he dedicated the East-West School at the University of Hawaii, which is a new enterprise, he literally berated Spencer Davis in public at every news conference, chided him for having this erroneous story on it. Of course
  • ://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 BELEN -- I -- 26 attend the Postmasters' Convention in Honolulu, and I'm going
  • interest in the station at that time? W: Well, Mrs. Johnson purchased the radio station, and it was having quite a difficult time to survive; in other words, he had to get companies to advertise on his station. And to do that, he had to get acquainted
  • more interested in trying to bring activity down by the department stores that advertised so heavily than in the merits of the case. F: I remember somewhere in there Robert Kennedy was rumored as having some reservations on this Potomac River site. S
  • calamities, in that, and it's natural enough, if you ask a man who is, say, a journalist or an advertising person to do a speech with no knowledge of the President's style or demands, it isn't going to work our particularly well . John Steinbeck has done some
  • abolished billboards on highways. That's one of the things I sponsored, and of course there was no reason why the beautiful scenery in Alaska should be defaced by billboards advertising Old Granddad and Old Taylor. So Alaska is free from that, billboards
  • subscriptions and advertisements. What in heavens name ever happened to the original cable I don't know. Because as soon as I got back to this country, I immediately called up Sydney Gruson, the publisher of the paper, and said, "For God's sake, Sydney, I
  • tranh contribution was mostly providing a security screen; capturing weapons; advertising the cause; creating turmoil and social pathology in the countryside; just tearing things up. That doesn't deliver victory militarily, but it destroys stability
  • , from essentially either window-dressing for the campaign--"See how many intellectuals I got to sign my advertisement?"--which Kennedy had developed, I think, initially with the response to the effort of the popularity of Stevenson on the campus. It had
  • Histories [NAID 24617781] O'Donne ll -­ I -­ 2 H: Do you thi nk i t's possible that the later well - advertised antipathy between hi m and Senator Robert Kennedy da ted from that early? 0: No , I don ' t th i nk. that I ' ve ever . . . l thi nk it's t