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  • thought, are U Thant and later on Harold Wilson. R: Well, it's true that he and U Thant were not soulmates, and that they had important differences.This was partly because President Johnson found U Thant to be unreliable. This always offended President
  • that no southerner had since the Civil War, other than Wilson, who wasn't really from the South. He had been born in the South, but-­ F: Did Mr. Sam somewhat buttress that opinion? J: Yes, I think so. F: So that you were just geographically blocked. J: I
  • Jenkins, Walter (Walter Wilson), 1918-1985
  • . charge. type. Larry [O'Brien] was in I was his deputy and sort of a deputy-administrative assistant We had Henry Wilson who worked the southern states [in the House]; while Mike Manatos handled the Senate, David Bunn handled the eastern states and Irv
  • on the plane the President's speech for San Francisco summarizing the Honolulu meeting. He tried me out at that time. He said, "Now, I've got to write to [Harold?] Wilson about this. You do a draft to Wilson." He was trying to see how I operated in the context
  • there as backup for my delegation. And so they eventually agreed that Sid Graybeal would represent ACDA.It was also agreed previously that Harold Brown, Dr. Harold Brown, fonner Secretary of the Air Force, President of Cal Tech, continue to be on the delegation
  • into those kinds of matters again and [was going to] devote myself to my profession until Harold Hughes came along, who was Governor of Iowa, and asked me if I would help direct his campaign for re-election in 1964. Governor Hughes is a magnificent man
  • that many of the bill's supporters were confident of its passage but that you were not, that you thought it was going to run into trouble. Apparently there was a problem with the tobacco area congressmen, [Harold] Cooley and others. Evidently there was some
  • was known much better in Washington than perhaps he was in Texas because of his friendship with Roosevelt and with the leading members of Roosevelt's Administration--Harold Ickes, Tom Corcoran, and so on. F: When did you begin to think that you just might
  • Jenkins, Walter (Walter Wilson), 1918-1985
  • other involvement in the campaign? A: That was my major involvement. In June of '64 I was called by Wilson McCarthy to be an advance man at one of Johnson's many commencement addresses. You look at some of these things now in past history and you
  • issues regarding Vietnam; David Palmer’s Summons of the Trumpet; William Westmoreland’s and General Harold K. Johnson’s frustration over LBJ’s actions in Vietnam and lack of a coherent plan; other Presidents’ dealings with war; how LBJ failed in Vietnam.
  • on a part-time basis, which I eventually did. It took me some time to locate a job in the newly-burgeoning agencies of the Roosevelt Administration, but I managed to find a mail clerk's job and then got an endorsement from my congressman, Harold Cooley
  • was a young, struggling attorney, he didn't take immediate interest in politics, whether Teddy Roosevelt or Woodrow Wilson, and all of that. He remained a Democrat from then on though. But in the 1920s when the Democratic Party in Bee County was taken over
  • or something like that, and off I went. It didn't come out until about 1970 or 1971, I guess, when Prime Minister Harold Wilson of England wrote a book saying that on a specific date a peace proposal for Vietnam was handed to President Johnson, to the United
  • --Meridith Wilson , Howard Johnson of M.I.T., felt that it was good. But the labor voice was unanimous and vehement, and in view of that the general consensus was that it just wouldn't fly as an idea. It wouldn't get through the Congress
  • . 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
  • for the President; Jim Wilson; Lloyd Hand. Jim came back here. So I felt I knew a lot of people that knew him, but that's the only personal contact I had had. The next time I saw him was just a month after the assassi- nation. LBJ Presidential Library http
  • with the administration. Mr. Johnson had me in from time to time when I could do something, or others had me in. On this particular occasion, because I knew some of the people in the British government, I had been sent over to talk with them a little bit before Harold
  • trusted Harold Wilson completely. C: I til i il k I'm 110t the bes t one to CO::i;ilcnt. I knot:: it. buJ I don't know enough substance to be authentic on it. there \'Iere some that he liked very much. You know, I know that He liked fltarcos
  • described him as Dr. [David Wilson] Griffin, "who has served the state these many years as a general practitioner. He has received no specific psychiatric training." Peck said, "That is libelous." From a lawyer's point of view--I didn't see it then but I can
  • He l i ke to write i n on t h e cards things he want e d t o say , and on ly he could read h is h an dwriting in some instance s . F: Th a t t r i p that he went down to Harold Holt's funeral and t h e n just kept on g oi n g. Was tha t
  • Burleson, Lockhart. He knew my father from way back. Woodrow Wilson. He was postmaster general under So Daddy goes and gets Burleson to endorse Lyndon: "Always send a young man to Congress so he can grow and grow and grow." Lyndon never heard of Burleson
  • a contingent. In the recent British election Harold Wilson got a crack off about it. He said that Johnson had asked him to send some help to Vietnam, and was prepared to settle for one bagpiper with the flag. I think ,true; it was cosmetic in that sense
  • the nation and through the Congress the legislation which has laid the groundwork for at least beginning to overcome the discrimination against the blacks. Having said that, I would have to add that, compared to Jefferson or Wilson, I believe that President
  • up on all the materials. Now the ktter--the draft--had in it a generalized description of phase A-phase B. M: It did have at that point? C: Yes. I was told that I could tell Wilson, but only Wilson, that there was a possibility
  • Biographical information; McGeorge Bundy; William Bundy; Robert Komer; Vietnam; Bien Hoa; service on high-level review committee on Vietnam; Pleiku incident; Honolulu Conference; Ky; bombing halt; Harriman; Wilson; J. Blair Seaborn mission, 1964
  • , 1985 INTERVIEWEE: CYNTHIA WILSON INTERVIEWER: Lewis Gould PLACE: By telephone from the LBJ Library to Ms. Wilson's office, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1, Side 1 G: I think when we paused the last time we were just about getting to the point
  • See all online interviews with Cynthia Wilson
  • Wilson's work with the First Lady's Committee for a More Beautiful Capital; difficulties keeping committee projects on track; Mary Lasker; Laurance Rockefeller; Stewart Udall; the White House Conference on Natural Beauty; highway beautification
  • Wilson, Cynthia E., 1940-
  • Oral history transcript, Cynthia Wilson, interview 2 (II), 11/7/1985, by Lewis Gould
  • Cynthia Wilson
  • , 1971 INTERVIEWEE: JAMES W. WILSON INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: His office in Austin, Texas Tape 1 of 1 F: Jim, let's go back very briefly into your career. You're a Texas boy. W: Well, I was born in South Carolina. you a story about
  • See all online interviews with James W. Wilson
  • characterized; Walter Jenkins characterized; JFK as a senator; LBJ-Yarborough relationship; LBJ-Thurmond relationship; LBJ and civil rights; Stennis campaigns in Texas in 1960; reasons for Wilson's resignation; LBJ and Will Wilson; anecdote on the McClellan Bill
  • Wilson, James W.
  • Oral history transcript, James W. Wilson, interview 1 (I), 2/26/1971, by Joe B. Frantz
  • James W. Wilson
  • , 1977 INTERVI EWEES: GLEN and MARIE WILSON INTERVIEWER: MICHAEL L. GILLETTE PLACE: The Wilson's home, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 G: let's start out with his kidney stone operation and the trip to the Mayo Clinic. MW: Well, the main thing I
  • See all online interviews with Marie Wilson
  • Wilson, Glen Parten, Jr., 1922-2005
  • Oral history transcript, Glen P. Wilson and Marie Wilson, interview 2 (II), 2/13/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
  • Glen P. Wilson
  • Go to Interviewee bio page (Glen Wilson)
  • , 1985 INTERVIEWEE: CYNTHIA WILSON INTERVIEWER: Lewis Gould PLACE: Via telephone from LBJ Library to Ms. Wilson's office Tape 1 of 1, side 1 G: Why don't you start out by just telling us something about your own background, education
  • See all online interviews with Cynthia Wilson
  • Biographical information; first impressions of Mrs. Johnson; how Wilson was hired to be on Mrs. Johnson’s staff answering letters; the organization of Mrs. Johnson’s staff; how Mrs. Johnson interacted with her staff; Liz Carpenter; Sharon Francis
  • Wilson, Cynthia E., 1940-
  • Oral history transcript, Cynthia Wilson, interview 1 (I), 10/24/1985, by Lewis Gould
  • Cynthia Wilson
  • , 1976 INTERVIE\~EE: MARIE WILSON I NTERV I E\~ER: MICHAEL L. GILLETTE PLACE: LBJ Library, Austin, Texas Tape 1 of 1 G: Let's start out, Mrs. Wilson, briefly with your background, where you're from and how you ended up in Washington. W: All
  • See all online interviews with Marie Wilson
  • Wilson, Marie
  • Oral history transcript, Marie Wilson, interview 1 (I), 12/7/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
  • Marie Wilson
  • INTERVID~EE : GLEN P. vJILSON INTERVIEWER: T. HARRI BAKER PLACE: Dr. Wilson's office, Senate Aeronautical and Space Sciences Committee, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 B: Sir, let me introduce you here briefly. You were born in Waco, have a bachelors
  • See all online interviews with Glen P. Wilson
  • Wilson, Glen Parten, Jr., 1922-2005
  • Oral history transcript, Glen P. Wilson, interview 1 (I), 5/8/1969, by T.H. Baker
  • Glen P. Wilson