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- we can add that as an appendix. L: Yes. President Johnson--I went to see him in Palm Springs in the winter of 1964. thetic. He was vi siti ng there for a day or two. He was very sympa- He really had deep sympathy for people's illnesses
- . Suggestive, I interpolate, of my growing conviction that he had made up 1ess than a vi ctory. II his mind to accept nothing LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID
Oral history transcript, Norbert A. Schlei, interview 1 (I), 5/15/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
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Oral history transcript, Joseph H. Skiles, interview 1 (I), 2/14/1979, by Michael L. Gillette
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- : No, I can't recall any real problem, any failures on any of their staff members, and to this day General Bob Smith remains in my judgment a very fine individual. He was the associate, as I recall, and a very competent i ndi vi dua 1 . ~kNugh was 1ike
Oral history transcript, William Hunter McLean, interview 1 (I), 5/11/1971, by David G. McComb
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- background, I was born in Fort Worth, October 1, 1909. DM: Did ....you go to school here? HM: I went to the public schools here and also the private school here in the elementary and high school years. And I went to Vi-n, Virginia Military Institute
- and the kinds of things that had kept the consumer philosophy so far removed from day "to day concerns of the average family--car repairs, package sizes, credit costs, et cetera. Of course, I ve always worked for my 1i vi ng. I farm. things. I I ve had a very
- in the draft legislation. In the end VISTA, or domestic peace corps, was one section in Title VI of the anti-poverty law. B; Were these men acting on their own in getting you to draw up this title just in the hopes that it could be included or--? P; No. I
- Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Wil son -- I -- 3 vi: No. B: What were your first duties when you came to Washington with the Senator's staff? W: 'rJell, as an interesting
- working in responsible to~ say, Walter Jenkins or someone? 1955-56~ were you Was there a sort of hierarchy on the staff? Who did you report to? VI: One, to Arthur Perry, and then right immediately above him vJOuld be Walter. It was really Walter
- , visit around, politick a little bit, but not always, in the afternoon. G: Make speeches or just vi sit with local s? J: Well, he did make speeches. He didn't like to drive and I used to-- I can remember there in just those first months driving
- was the feeling at your level of how Johnson got so deeply invo 1ved in Vi etnam? Did they feel that thi s was a Americanis~ t~\/O-fi sted coming out, or that he just blundered in, or was he misled or he trusted the wrong people, or do you have as many
- Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh GENERAL SEf.~VI CES ADMINISTRATION NATIONAL
- --and that, in fact, the Paks were interested in aid from us for only one reason: to advance Pak interests vis-a-vis India. M: Which was not in our interest. K: Which was not to our interest, even though many people were quite sympathetic with the Pakistani
Oral history transcript, Christopher Weeks, interview 1 (I), 12/10/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
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Oral history transcript, Sam Houston Johnson, interview 8 (VIII), 10/1/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
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Oral history transcript, John Fritz Koeniger, interview 2 (II), 11/17/1981, by Michael L. Gillette
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- might be interested in going at the. end of the semester after I'd completed my semester's work. So he had a vi sit to Austin schedul ed at about the end of January. He was going to come back to Austin and make a radio speech in favor of the housing
- , "Did you know Peter brought us here last night and took us up to the attic? This morning I hear all this singing by all these German soldiers. What is this?" responded, "Vi ctor-- I am a man of God. pastor of a church here in town. these young
- a vi sa to go to the United States and I promi se you that I'll kill the person that assassinated President Kennedy. that I will do it." It was really something. I promise you For two or three weeks, there was nothing I could do except receive
- title, which we managed to hold. The other was Title VI. And the trouble there was that many of the liberal Democrats were ready to sacrifice that. They were ready to sacrifice it because they felt it was better, or at least they said they felt
- . It was the worst talk I've ever heard given on any president. F: Well, when you think really of the indignation that Harry Vaughan's deepfreeze, ,or Sherman Adams' vi cuna coat caused, you know, that's like your giving me a tip alongside some of this. C
- all doing whatever they can, calling a gr:::u? o= ~on3=ess=:e~ if it happened to be in the House, or fi:;-..i=i::g :::'.:.:: ::::r,,r they could be of assistance, that was more or less my F: vi=~: ~=i=nt:c to a specific problem or assignment
- it clear that, in awarding government contracts, the government agency should be sure that the companies are complying with the civil rights laws, and the Title VI, that requires equal employment opportunity, and so forth. So we got into the act
- Kennedy. The combination of the two states' delegates being thus released were enough to throw the fi rst ba 11 ot vi ctory to Jack Kennedy. The LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral