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  • Subject > 1964 Campaign (remove)
  • Series > Transcripts of LBJ Library Oral Histories (remove)
  • Subject > Vietnam (remove)

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  • a moment on one thing. Veteran newsmen have seen it all and presumably don't stampede easily. Was there a feeling among the White House press corps, widely expressed, that this may be the beginning of some sort of coup d'état or an attempted nationwide
  • Katzenbach as attorney general; presidents’ interaction with the State Department; May 1966 trip to Chicago; LBJ’s opinions of the U.S. role in Vietnam; LBJ’s assessment of his own staff; Tonkin Gulf resolution; Lindley Rule and press access to LBJ
  • and the ambassador in the public affairs field will be the director of USIS, naming me by name. overall authority had been given. First time that kind of Now that later went through some slight changes, but that combined authority for the press media relations
  • with the State Department over the weekend and then went before Fulbright and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Monday. Then I left and came back to get my own affairs in shape. My schedule was to spend a month, at least, getting my own affairs
  • much interested in civic affairs in Texas. He attempts to organize people to do things that are pro- gressive. He works at it. He is openhanded with contributions. He is not a millionaire as people think--I think he is well-off as people go
  • - national Affairs at Princeton on the expropriation of American property in Cuba in 1959. After the election and the inaugural in 1961, Bill and Sarge were very helpful getting me interviews with certain people I needed in the State Department for my
  • and director of the Institute of International Affairs for my twelve years on the campus. F: Were you active in Wyoming politics? M: Only as a voting Democrat. I was a registered voting Democrat, as I had been for many years, although my family in Nebraska