Discover Our Collections


  • Type > Text (remove)
  • Series > Transcripts of LBJ Library Oral Histories (remove)
  • Subject > Civil disorders (remove)

7 results

  • ." That was a tangible kind of a thing. It was jus t like saying, ""We have a 10-s tory building to build; ,ve I ve already buil t t,vo stories, "_;vI: It cos ts so much dollars to build additional s tories-- R: Right! ~!at wasn't a difficult budget at all. I
  • . And what in effect happened was that we used those original guidelines, those original applications rather, as a means of learning little laboratory experiments in ''lhich we would study and decide what our policies ''lere going to be. G: Was this vis
  • by the polls, personally and vis-a-vis the President, was going steadily down through the first four or five months of 1967. And that may have had something to do with it too; that he began to feel that as right as his position might be, it was increasingly
  • '., __ n tavn, anu the PreSident, liking Governor Rockefeller, wanted him to b=, and h2.'.'c dinner with him. '\vi th C(~:::~ Roc~efeller. GO\' dinner. and out, and thir.'" ~2 ~3S He had lw.d the conversntion The Governor said he'd be delighted
  • ? C: That's right. B: Had you not served prior to this on the McCone [John A. McCone, former head of CIA] Commission investiga the Hatts riots? C: Yes. B: I know Mr. Clark also made a trip out to Watts after the riots. become associated \vi th
  • Valley Authority vis-à-vis its relationship with and its performance towards Negroes, and I spent three or four weeks down there doing this. F: You have been credited with having obtained high appointments for several Negroes, most particularly