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  • is," and that's when the call went out all over North America, "Find him!" And the FBI officers, for example, in Rapid City, not knowing I was going to be flying to Washington, said: "I would suggest that you and your family LBJ Presidential Library http
  • in a logistics setup with respect to the MAAG [Military Assistance Advisory Group] that we had there then. But I was in Vietnam from 1954 to 1957. Then I came back to the United States. The Army insists that one go to school and so forth, and so I stayed
  • to the United States of America all my rights, title and interest in the tape recording and transcript of the personal interview conducted on August 18, 1969 in Dallas, Texas and prepared for deposit in the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library. This assignment
  • \"as making speec hes on some r ather cruc i al issues that a ffected the United States of America , area r edevelopment a nd depressed ar ea programs, and then to be caught not voting on them , you are pretty vulnerab l e . So our concern then 7
  • many times when I was listening to him pointed out that one does not turn down the candidate for the presidency of the United States; that this is a duty, a larger duty than any of your personal tastes are. My own judgment is, I don't believe
  • tnereunder (41 CFR 101-10), I, Dorothy J. Nichols , hereinafter referred. to as the donor, hereby give, dOIk'1.t ,:!and. convey to the United States of America for eventual dcpo3it in the proposed Lyr.don Baines Johnson Libra:r-.r, and for administrati
  • of Chapter 21 of Title 44, United States de~ and ject to the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth, I~ .u:::~~~p'~r:4-:JI&.¥.S~;--;~ of Austin, Texas do hereby give, donate and co vey t the United States of America all my rights, title and interest
  • to the United States of America all my rights, title, and interest in the tape recording and transcript of the personal interview conducted on May 13, 1969 in Atlanta, Georgia and prepared for deposit in the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library. . This assignment
  • - tant things that the United States could do was to send its young people overseas in programs like the Peace Sorps to get to know people in developing countries and to make friends. I'm not talking about making friends between Washington and Lahore
  • American ambassador was touching base with the Buddhists, and that the United States of America was not having any part of kicking around Buddhists or raiding other people's churches. G: Okay. F: It was a good Kennedyesque statement that Lodge agreed
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh DUTTON -- I -- 30 I thought and I think that in 1964, as to how he conducted his campaign, he had one of the great opportunities in America to turn towards detente. He lost an opportunity to go down as one of the really
  • being considered for the Cabinet post? H: No, not at all. discussed. No, it never had been discussed. Nothing had been We did all we thought we could for the party. When I went to South America with a bunch of governors--twenty-five or thirty
  • people? N: No, I don't. The Department of Agriculture man later came up here, and the last time I talked to him, I think he was going to South America. Sorry I can't remember his name. It's been twenty years or more. B: Was the Stevenson side
  • , donate and convey to the United States of America all my rights, title and interest in the tape recording and transcript of the personal interview of Arthur C. Perry conducted on November 15, 1968 in Washington, D.C., and prepared for deposit
  • , "Saskatchewan. Hhere are you from?" He said, "I'm fr om Texas." "Well," he said, "tell me. What kind of country is Saskatchewan?" The Canadian said, "Well, a whole lot like your state except friendlier to the United States." The old secession psychology
  • and Cliff Carter. I started off the way anyone starts off, handling correspondence. F: Writing warm, friendly letters? S: \~arm and friendly letters to politicians all over the United States, with a lot of guidance from both of those individuals. I
  • think of and read and talk to and interpret some of what black thought is, but it's a disservice to your principal if he's president of the United States. not to let him get firsthand [opinions]. F: But it still filters through you? A: Exactly
  • , 1971 INTERVIHJEE: EL~lER INTERVIHJER: 1. H. BAKER PLACE: Washington, D.C. B. STAATS Tape 1 of 2 B: This is the interview with Elmer B. Staats, who is the comptroller general of the United States. If I may give a little bit of your background
  • the announcement. F: You B: Yes, like everybody else. just got it like every other Mr. and Mrs. America. Allen Duckworth was over at that suite when it happened and he was astounded as anybody. We all \'Iere astounded. F: Duckworth was there when
  • for his country . He was not a petty, vindictive sort of a man, and he was President of the United States, and I think they felt, as I did at the time, that it was our job � � LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT
  • which was when Dean Acheson was brought in as a backstaits mediator. F: Did the fact that you and Ralph Bunche strategically located in the United Nations act as an advantage to us other than Bunche's sort of personal attributes, or did he disassociate
  • and our Foreign Service looked like, and its discriminatory patterns; and the failure of our nation to place ambassadors, specifically in the United Nations. He helped fight those battles, which took some convincing, but not a hell of a lot. F
  • on :to my record, that I was duly trained by them. Little did I know at the. time that the powers that be were starting to make up camera units to be assigned to numbered air forces, and I ended up being assigned to the Thirteenth Air Force in Guadalcanal
  • DATE: INTERVIEWEE: HONER THORNBERRY INTERVIEl.JER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: Judge Thornberry's office at the United States Courthouse, Austin, Texas Tape 1 of 1 F: Judge Thornberry, to begin this, how did you first get to know Lyndon Johnson? T
  • was dead but before Kennedy's body was removed, and nobody made any attempt to follow him, although he was then president of the United States. He left, actually, just minutes--my recollection is--before the death was announced. reasons. And of course