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  • , but tell me a little bit about the sort of climate in which the Alianza [Alliance for Progress] was projected. B: How was it received in Quito? Oh, very well. work there. Very well indeed. It was really the basis for my It was a basis for traveling
  • pictures. Mean~tilitary I was in the public I spent almost five years there, traveling around the Pacific, doing all sorts of photographic jobs, all news and journalistically oriented. While there, I took advantage of another short course that they had
  • of you? F: Well, we had his two servants in the back seat, but one was Chinese and one was a trusted Vietnamese. to travel with Perruche. They had no advance knowledge of my plan I did not feel in great danger, but I pru- dently would not have driven
  • went because Bobby wanted to be president, and he was trying to angle himself in. G: Now, he traveled quite a bit during that month of April, went to Chicago to address the broadcasters convention, met with Mayor [Richard] Daley. R: No, I didn't go
  • at about eleven 0' clock, and he travels with an arsenal. and pistols. He even carries a machine gun, shotguns. was supposed to arrive at eleven; at eleven thirty he wasn't there. He carries rifles As I said, he the barbecue was to begin at noon
  • --5 T: He made s,uggestions as to people that I might see while I was traveling over the district. Judge Herman Jones was then my law partner, and he gave. him several suggestions about the helpful. campaign~ and they were very I am sure
  • personally? W: Yes. That was the first national campaign I had been in for the New York Times, and I covered it quite extensively. I traveled with Henry Cabot Lodge, the Republican vice presidential candidate, and I made a couple of trips with Mr
  • to the Atlanta field office? Y: Well, I had been on the White House detail for five years; Georgia is my home; I had expressed a desire to transfer back to Georgia--you must realize that there is an awful lot of traveling on the White House detail and people
  • . F: Well, what did you do? Travel the state with him? B: He did not make an extensive campaign that year. As I recall, the year before [in] 1953, he went over the state making speeches and building up his organizations, and I covered him
  • , and my wife was privileged to sit by Truman . I first met Truman, and he always recalled me, traveling from St . Louis to Washington on a railroad train when he had not even been at that time the chairman of the investigating committee that made him
  • reversed. And I think it has been reversed in the sense that we're traveling more and more miles with more and more vehicles on more and more highways and while the death rate in numbers perhaps is still rising, when you consider the other factors it's my
  • on this. I had no This wasn't related to Agriculture. Well, out at a Japanese cocktail party that night I tried to figure out what to do and didn't learn much. traveled all night. I got home real tired, you know-- Well, at 2 o'clock in the morning our own
  • to make speeches, he had to be in as many tmvns as he could--had radio in those days but no television; he made some radio talks. But he would travel five or six hundred miles a day, as I recall, in a car. F: He was just going to make up in energy what
  • became his public affairs officer; handled the press for him individually and for the visiting dignitaries that came to the U.S. while he was Ā¢hief of protocol; did a lot of travel, both domestically and internationally, the international portion that I
  • in any danger in San Jose? T: No, I never did. As a matter of fact, I traveled throughout the country. I went up into the mountains, to the little villages, several times-F: You were known as the grass roots ambassador. LBJ Presidential Library