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  • at this for a year. R: Well, we'll try to do it as objectively as we can. M: Right. You're about my 110th interview. Let's get your identification on here, sir. You're Joseph L. Rauh, Jr., an attorney in Washington, D.C., and you've been associated
  • home. The radio people disagreed with that and they used congressional pressure to get us to change our view. B: Sir, considering the number of large industries that make consumer goods used in the home, the possibilities for that kind of thing would
  • . ' sunshine l McConnel l arrived the Presiden t an d General McConnel l boarded Air Forc e On e 10:00a Genera 10:07a Ai r Forc e On e departe d Ramey Air Forc e Base , e n rout e Andrews Ai r Forc e Bas e The Presiden t wa s i n his stateroo m w / Douglas
  • to support Allen even though his appointee was from his home county and it was determined in their convention. The candidate and the Governor split the vote right practically in the middle. It was the difference between Allen being renominated and the judge
  • . Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Parnis beach and he did, sir." said~ -~ I ~- 9 "Did you read that chapter?" and I said, "Yes, I He said, "Well, what did
  • of clothes; input on The Vantage Point; items made for the President; visits to the White House; the Ranch Acapulco; McGovern visit to the Ranch; state dinners; LBJ and guests for dinner; LBJ’s visit to Parnis home just previous to publication of Pentagon
  • November 18, 1991 MEMO FOR THE FILE From: Re: Claudia Anderson, Archivist Processing Note In his book, Douglas MacArthur: The Far Eastern General, Michael Schaller attributed this report to Robert Sherrod. In a phone conversation, November 18
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh February 1, 1971 B: This is the interview with Senator Lister Hill. here very briefly your background. Sir, let me just read You were born here in Montgomery, Alabama, in 1894, and attended the University of Alabama
  • President Johnson. That, too, was concerning the tactics and strategy with respect to the staging of the march on Washington in 1963. B: These were before the march began? R: That's right. B: Who all was at these conferences, sir? R: We had Mr. Roy
  • de Medina, Rep of Bolivia on the OAS Hon Felipe Herrera, Pres. , Inter-American Development Bank Hon Lawson B Knott. Adm. , GSA Hon Farris Bryant. Dir. , Ofc of Emergency Planning Hon James W Symington, Chief of Protocol Hon Douglas Henderson, U.S
  • Delbert Latta Cong William S. Broomfi Secretary Freeman Cong Graham Purcell Cone Paul Findley Cong E Y Berry Ambas sador to India, Chester Bowles Cong. James Morrison Cone Bob Dole Cong Vernon W. Thomson The V: ce PresidentJ Cong. Alec G. Olson Cone
  • n,t. Oct The White House . AcHvhy (tnc)ude vsshed by) MW - at home Director Charles Schultze - at home Director Charles Schultze - at home Secy McNamara Edwin Weisl, Sr - New York City To Oval Office alone --to the tickers —- 19, 1967 ^ Thursday
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh This is the interview with S. Dillon Ripley, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. Sir, would you like to just go ahead and start on Mr. Johnson and the Smithsonian? R: My connections with President Johnson began
  • , Bennett Cerf, Stuart Chase, 0 Sir Winston Churchill, Bernard De Voto, Lloyd Douglas, Theodore Dreiser, Dr. Will Durant, George Fielding Eliot, John Erskine, Sir Phillip Gibbs, John Gunther, Lady Molly Huggins, Rupert Hughes, H. V. Kaltenborn, Emil Ludwig
  • f 5:45 7:00 7:05 Monday Lo LD Out In Day Secretary Douglas Dillon and Nicholas Katzenbach - out 6:25 Mildred Stegall to take the President's report Senator Hubert Humphrey Abe Fortas To Barber Shop w/ Senator Humphrey To Bill Moyers
  • LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] INTERVIEWEE: HELEN GAHAGAN DOUGLAS INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ More on LBJ Library oral histories: http
  • See all online interviews with Helen Gahagan Douglas
  • Biographical information; first political action; election to Congress; activities/bill introduced in Congress; Richard Nixon; Melvyn Douglas campaign for LBJ at request of FDR; Farm Security Agricultural Department Program; friendship with LBJ
  • Douglas, Helen Gahagan, 1900-1980
  • Oral history transcript, Helen Gahagan Douglas, interview 1 (I), 11/10/1969, by Joe B. Frantz
  • Helen Gahagan Douglas
  • could do so politely. I remember early on that I wished all of those old people would hurry up so that I could get home to my babies to yearning years later to stay on at a good party! There was a great network of Congressional spouses sometimes
  • 8, 1970 INTERVIHJEE: PAUL B. JOHNSON JR. INTERVIEWER: 1. H. BAKER PLACE: Governor Johnson's home, Hattiesburg, Mississippi Tape 1 of 2 B: This is an interview with Paul B. Johnson, Jr., the former governor of fvJississippi. Sir, a brief bit
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Cross -- II -- 5 House about eight o'clock that night. watch the speech on television. I wanted to be home in time to And so I left about eight o'clock, and that time of the evening I could drive home, and of course I drove
  • INTERVIEWEE: GEORGE C. WALLACE INTERVIEWER: T. H. Baker PLACE: Governor Wallace's office, Montgomery, Alabama Tape 1 of 1 B: This is the interview with Governor George Wallace. Sir, do you recall you had any acquaintance with Mr. Johnson before
  • Bustamente, thus providing an opportunity to make the following basic points: 1. Acknowledge Sir Alexander Bustamente's publicly stated desire to establish close and friendly ties with the United States and express our sincere gratitude for these overtures. 2
  • into the crowd to shake hands. The crowd ; cheered and appeared very excited and happy. The President arrived the National War Memorial, and was met at his car by The Chairman of the Committee of Managemen t of the National War MemorialMajor -General Sir William
  • INTERVIEWEE: MELVIN C. WINTERS INTERVIEWER: Ted Gittinger PLACE: Mr. Winters' office, Johnson City, Texas Tape 1 of 1, Side 1 G: Okay, sir. This is 1961, right after the election when he went back to Washington as vice president, and one of the first
  • visit to the Ranch; the Trinity River Project; John Tower; LBJ's glasses and contacts; Ayub Khan's visit to the Ranch; LBJ's opinion of General Douglas MacArthur and Dwight Eisenhower; the Cox family in Johnson City; the Elms, the Johnsons' home
  • . And so he said to me--and I'll never forget this either--he said, "Cross, you boys must be getting tired." "Well , yes, sir. And I said, We need to get home and get some clean clothes." He said, "Well, I'll tell you what: you go on back to Bergstrom
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh June 17, 1969 B: This is the interview with Bayard Rustin. Sir, to start pretty far back in time, did you have any knowledge of Mr. Johnson when he was in the Senate? R: Yes, I did. Of course, I suppose everybody heard
  • INTERVI El~EE: DAVID W. ANGEVINE INTERVIEWER: T. H.l\RRI BAKER PLACE: His office, Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 B: This is the interview with David Angevine, the Administrator of the Farmer Cooperative Service. Sir
  • : You were offered the Secretaryship of the Treasury to replace Douglas Dillon in '65, weren't you? C: That was discussed, yes. B: And you didn't take it. C: That is correct. B: Again, if it's not impertinent, may I ask why, sir? C: Well
  • ( Ii i j j i _- e Ab e Forta s '__ _ i , ____™______™__________ I .i 10:44a £ _ M W t o secon d floor Douglas s Cater ,__ 9:06a t ' 9:36 a f . y yf Jac k Valent i ' [ 9:16a . _ Da D War 8:12a £ 8:50a I 9:01a f e White Hous e Frida
  • . He was the first administrator for Texas of the NYA, which must have been 1935-36. B: I think so, sir. When you were on the Georgia staff, he was Texas administrator. 1 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT
  • and Johnson families; advising LBJ and Senator Paul Douglas on krebiozen; instituting regulations that barred krebiozen from interstate shipment; problems related to the use of thalidomide.
  • , "go fishing" [political jargon for sitting on the sidelines]. And if we had to oppose, he would know well in advance of our intended actions - neither my group nor I would ever "blindside" him. The fact that we were on good terms was driven home to me
  • and the creation of the Guaranteed Student Loan Program; LBJ's frustration with rising bank interest rates; Walker's opinion of William Sherrill; how the instability of the dollar and the 1959 Federal deficit led JFK to choose C. Douglas Dillon as secretary
  • Fowler hopes wil l b e a regular monthly meeting Fowler during which KBLKX Treasury an d economi c problem s can be discussed) Cliff The President was mtg by memo Fowler Carter DNC Hon John Stevens tfj; Sir Patric k Dean --Amb. of Great Britai n Amb
  • LBJ (Lyndon Johnson) is in Washington, goes to the Capitol today to look at the new majority leader’s office (P-38). Later he attends parties at Senator Bible’s home and Walter Hornaday’s. Castro assumes power in Cuba following the collapse of Batista
  • clocked among acceptances those of s Attorney General .Biddle, J. Edgar '· Hoover and Clyde Tolson of FBI, six , major generals, five judge·s headed 1 • by Supreme Court Justice William J 0. Douglas, the entire Federal Trade Commission, Comptroller General
  • INTERVIEHEE: IVAN ALLm, JR. I NTERV IHIER: THO~1AS PLACE: His office, City Hall, Atlanta, Georgia HARRISON BAKER Tape 1 of 1 B: This is the interview with Mayor Ivan Allen of Atlanta. Sir, did you have any acquaintanceship with Mr. Johnson before
  • - Juanit a sai d "thi s i s she , sir " He. picked u p the phon e and sai d spea k of th e devi l an d she' s always there . H e the n invite d he r t o g o t o Ne w York "wit h hi m for th e ordinatio n o f th e ne w ArchBisho p o f New York, Terrenc e
  • , and if the ball calls for me to make the throw to home rather than throw to first I'll throw home, although in my own mind I figured I could catch the man coming down to first and the run was going to score on me anyway, if you follow that baseball analogy . Yes
  • Committee report. Here is my redraft of HUD' s draft of the statement releasing the Kaiser Committee and Douglas Commission reports. Also, enclosed is the official Committee report with Mr. Kaiser's letter to the President. . What is your ·reaction? up
  • to the "Douglas Commission" after Commission Chairperson, former senator Paul H. Douglas), including correspondence regarding appointments to the Commission, material related to administrative matters such as Commission staffing, meeting times, meeting locations
  • purposes. Nor will we forget that balance-of-payments policies should serve the Nation's basic goals abroad and at home-not the reverse. Yet this recognition makes it no less neces.5aryto deal firmly and decisively with our balance-of-payments prob­ lem
  • all over the board. Sit a.tthe end of the table, Doctor. Go a.head, sir. STATEJIDT OF HOB. HAROLDBROWN,SECRETARYOF AIR FORCE . Secretary BROWN.This is in response of your recent requeet for mforma.tion concerning Air Force activities m the area
  • >ENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON Y 27, °IAR* THE ^resident began his day at (Place) Day Time Telephone In Out 7:31p 8:00p Lo WHITE HOUSE MONDAY f or t Activity (include visited by) LD Mr. ~ (OFF 1968 Douglas B. Marshall of Houston into oval office
  • Frida y Activity (include visited by ) turc ExpendiCode . casualty. If you are lost, then I lose a good friend. They'll murder you back home. " MH~"No, sir," replied the Prime Minister, "That's the way it's going to be." "And so it is," said