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  • Specific Item Type > Oral history (remove)
  • Time Period > Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-) (remove)
  • Subject > Assassinations (remove)

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  • , 1990 INTERVIEWEE: HAROLD C. PACHIOS INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. Pachios' office, Portland, Maine Tape 1 of 2, Side 1 G: I think we ought to begin with you telling me how you went to work for the Peace Corps. P: I went
  • See all online interviews with Harold Pachios
  • Pachios, Harold
  • Oral history transcript, Harold Pachios, interview 1 (I), 10/15/1990, by Michael L. Gillette
  • Harold Pachios
  • of the Commonwealth Prime Ministers, we decided that we would make an attempt to negotiate; that we would appoint a delegation from the Commonwealth to get to work with Hanoi. Wilson. This was done on the initiation of Mr. Harold He was Prime Minister then. House
  • the Vice President in Uvalde . As that ceremony was breaking up, classmate of mine named Tom King . I was with a He presently is an attorney in San Antonio, and he was from Stockdale in Wilson County, the county seat of which is Floresville . Tom
  • the candidate himself, Governor Stevenson, was over-confident? H: It was not so much over-confidence, I think--although he was confident. . It was more a personality trait. He just did not get excited. He was as unflappable as Harold Hacmillan, at least
  • Jenkins, Walter (Walter Wilson), 1918-1985
  • . And it had been the subject of discussions in late 1966 with Horsky and Philip S. Hughes, deputy director of the Bureau of the Budget, Harold Seidman and Bob Prestoman (?) of the Bureau of the Budget, Califano, and [Walter] Tobriner and Schuyler Lowe
  • in the House perhaps except in the days of the caucus, in the Wilson days of Clark and Underwood . And we've only been precise on the number once, and that involved four switches, two each way . That was on that Rules fight in 1961, and that was probably
  • involving a similar situation--an opinion written by Will Wilson who, prior to that time, was a Justice of the Texas Supreme Court (Williams v . Huntress, 272 SW(2)84) . At the time that we brought the suit he was Attorney General of the State of Texas
  • Presidential Library http://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 Flott -- II -- 6 G: Was it Jasper Wilson? Does
  • , and there are all kinds of stories as to whether we knew that one was coming or not. J: We did. I wish I had a chronology with me. I'm trying--oh, Jap [Jasper] Wilson was Khanh's friend and confidante, and Jap Wilson, in the best tradition of what an army officer
  • nations have some edge on us, because they can ignore public opinion of the moment and act in long terms, and we find it more difficult . However, there is much we can do to cast our actions in longer-range terms . Woodrow Wilson has been ridiculed
  • rapidly what all you did up to the time that you came to Washington and the Interstate Commerce Commission. D: I was born in Stockdale, Texas, in Wilson County just east of San Antonio; lived on a farm until I was eighteen or twenty years old. I became
  • inspector was involved. F: This was under a Republican administration? W: Well, I was appointed originally at the tail end of the Wilson Administration and then reappointed in the Republican administration. F: I don't want to pry in your personal life