Discover Our Collections
Limit your search
Tag- Digital item (10)
- Adams, Edie (1)
- Bartlett, Charles L. (1)
- Benchley, Peter Bradford, 1940-2006 (1)
- Collier, Everett D. (1)
- Crockett, William J. (William James), 1914-1999 (1)
- Engelhard, Jane (1)
- Hickman, Betty Cason (1)
- Waldron, Robert Earl, 1927-1995 (1)
- Wattenberg, Ben J., 1933- (1)
- Worley, Francis Eugene, 1908-1974 (1)
- 1968-10-16 (1)
- 1968-11-20 (1)
- 1968-11-29 (1)
- 1969-05-06 (1)
- 1970-05-13 (1)
- 1974-05-28 (1)
- 1975-03-13 (1)
- 1976-01-28 (1)
- 1977-02-19 (1)
- 1984-04-10 (1)
- Humor and mimicry (10)
- Vietnam (4)
- Humphrey, Hubert H. (Hubert Horatio), 1911-1978 (3)
- 1948 campaign (2)
- Jenkins, Walter (Walter Wilson), 1918-1985 (2)
- Kennedy, Robert F., 1925-1968 (2)
- 1960 campaign (1)
- 1964 Campaign (1)
- Beautification (1)
- Great Society (1)
- LBJ Ranch (1)
- Rayburn, Sam, 1882-1961 (1)
- Religion (1)
- Text (10)
- Oral history (10)
10 results
Oral history transcript, Robert E. Waldron, interview 1 (I), 1/28/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- : Because I think it was the first stop on the railroad outside the metropolitan area. Also, it was close enough to Washington that all the local press and the foreign press could come to be in rural America, is my impression of it. As you know, Culpeper
- called Mr. George Sokolsky, who then became very famous in the United States, where he was the main editorial columnist of the Sun. He also became an LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library
- to the United States and involvement in the microfilm business; New York Governor Alfred Smith; a plane crashing into the Empire State Building; marrying Charles Engelhard; Engelhard’s political career; Engelhard’s involvement in the gold business; race
Oral history transcript, Betty Cason Hickman, interview 1 (I), 4/10/1984, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- and those that got a lot were used again. Very often he deviated, naturally, from his speech and he'd get real folksy with them. This happened to be a group of farm people. Oh, and that afternoon we had gone out to a farm and we were out in a hog pen
- , California do hereby give, 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 conducted on ~1ay 13, 1970 in Dallas, Texas and prepared for deposit in the Lyndon
- that Johnson had interest in, and that was in that irrigation program between the United States and Hexico on the Rio Grande. And by a quirk of it being an international agreement, it was in the State Department budget. So we always knew that Johnson would
Oral history transcript, Everett D. Collier, interview 1 (I), 3/13/1975, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , for any reason, have betrayed Lyndon Johnson or the United States of America. G: I've heard that he was the best of all the Johnson aides at anticipating the President's wishes, that he had just sort of an instinctive quality of knowing what LBJ would do
- Califano tried to get it . There is a feeling that controlling the utterances of the President of the United States is a very great power, and I suppose it is . The President is fond of keeping his staff at odds with one another only so there should
- said, "You won't be doing it to me as a political person, but to me as the president of the United States, who has these probl ems ... I said, "Well, I'll be glad, if in any way I can, to help." And I did write him one memorandum afterwards. I went
- with-- intell(oct-;al.s, scientists--because every day saw another ad, "S c ientis U; frJr McCarthy, II I'Theatre Arts People for Bobby Kennedy," and the; lists 'Here getting very impressive. kind of had the You there 'vasn' t anybody in America who