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  • Type > Text (remove)
  • Series > Transcripts of LBJ Library Oral Histories (remove)
  • Contributor > Castro, Nash, 1920- (remove)

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  • if you want to. C: I hope I haven't said anything untoward. M: You have not; now you are about to, that's why I'm warning you. C: I am? (Laughter) M: You are about to presented with a question that you can either refuse to answer, or that you can
  • of Mexican-American descent myself, philosophically, these people just could never get together. You know, there's a difference in religion; there's a difference in philosophy. I made this observation in my own mind, and I communicated it to Bob Owens one
  • to force a confrontation over not applying for a permit; selecting the name "Resurrection City" and why the original name, "City of Hope," was not used; negotiating the terms of the permit and a bond; Solidarity Day June 19, 1968; a demonstration by New
  • to check in with my successor, four or five times [removed]. He used to be director of parks of the nation's capital, as you probably know. And Bob Stanton is, I think my fifth successor, something like that, my successor five times removed. I think I'll
  • hopes for the future of the Center; the Center's financial stability.
  • This meeting included the members of the board of directors of the association 7 and Melville Bell Grosvenor and two of his colleagues, Franc Shor and Bob Breeden. Inciden- tally, I was not then a member of the board of directors. At the time, I
  • it to find Bob Knudsen, Mrs. Johnson's photographer, with two suitcases in hand. I asked, "Bob, what are you doing here?" He said, "Liz sent me over. sa~d, She wants me to chaperone you." "But," I said, "we're already chaperoned." "Well," he said, "she
  • in it. Then too, the President established the wild rivers concept in the National Park System. Additionally, he pushed for a Potomac National River, which one day we hope to achieve, after we acquire some 66,000 acres of land. The Potomac is one of the least
  • throughout the Eastern United States and even as far as the Midwest. Actually, they had hoped to attract people from all over the United States. The way it turned out, most of their participants came from the Northeastern part of the United States, from major