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  • Specific Item Type > Oral history (remove)
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  • teaching post, which was at Williams College, early in 1963. In the late fall of 1962, the directorship of the Agency for International Development became vacant. President Kennedy, after surveying the problems, decided that the right man to put
  • the Second World War. I was in Korea and at various posts and stations around the world with the Marine Corps. I stayed in the Marine Corps until 31 July of this year, 1968, when I retired and then was retained here as a civilian. Go: Could you tell me
  • thinks important with respect to the Post Office, he ought to let people know up here. patronage. not. I don't mean by that you withhold And I don't know whether that's ever been done or I suppose it has been, but it certainly hasn't been any frequent
  • of the support posts on the porch roof and he walked up and he said, "you're just the man I want to see." It was Bill Petri; he's a good friend of mine and we often laugh about that occasion. PB: I couldn't pay him. We didn't have the money
  • a fairly successful job in its first attempt to put some reputable candidates in office in the county and cit~ became concerned over the forthcoming race for the Congressional post in the 14th Congressional District. San Antonio at that time was part
  • His opinion of the post-Johnson foreign policy; the poor and breakdown of law and order; early years in Johnson City; infrequent visits in adulthood; LBJ as master of the political art; analysis of presidential power and LBJ'’ influence; growth
  • . probably no man a~ive There is today who knows our beloved President better than Otto Lindig of Stonewall. This is Norm Dietel, the publisher of the Radio-Post of Fredericksburg, Texas. I have known Mr. Lindig personally most of my life and I can well