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  • Subject > Humor and mimicry (remove)
  • Type > Text (remove)
  • Time Period > Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-) (remove)

5 results

  • Department thinking in those days, as a stump we've got to p10w around or something. C: No, he really wasn't. He didn't impose as much of his personality into the State Department affairs as a Rooney did. I guess, in a sense, you would call him more
  • Contacts with LBJ as Senator in 1958 while a budget officer for the State Department; LBJ's reactions to State Department's "guidance" for his foreign country visits as VP; LBJ's concern for good impressions by his party in foreign countries; LBJ's
  • , and there wasn't one that would say, "No, here, this." organized. But Johnson knew. It wasn't, I felt, as He had everybody, he had twenty-three people but each one knew exactly in whose department what was. F: For instance, in that last night in Austin, you
  • an answer, and you know he had one of the biggest constituencies there was. G: Did you also contact the various departments? H: Oh, yes, yes. At this time part of my job was the appointment of the [military] academy people, the young men
  • the war through the time of his death. M: r~r. Bartl ett, your newspaper career has certai nly been concerned for a large part with Washington, heads of government and politics, and foreign affairs and domestic problems, so I would like to emphasize
  • microfilm cameras; then we need something to look at our film on; and then we need readers. I understand that the Kodak Company is involved in this and has a big research department doing nothing but this." This interested him a lot, and he said, "Would