Discover Our Collections
Limit your search
Tag- Digital item (10)
- Brown, George R., 1898-1983 (1)
- Christian, George E. (George Eastland), 1927-2002 (1)
- Collier, Everett D. (1)
- Fisher, Ovie Clark (1)
- Parten, J. R. (Jubal Richard), 1896-1992 (1)
- Phillips, William G. (1)
- Quie, Albert H. (1)
- Roberts, Charles Wesley, 1916-1992 (1)
- Wood, Robert Coldwell, 1923-2005 (1)
- Young, Whitney Moore, Jr., 1921-1971 (1)
- 1968-01-xx (1)
- 1968-02-xx (1)
- 1968-03-xx (1)
- 1968-10-19 (1)
- 1969-04-30 (1)
- 1969-05-08 (1)
- 1969-06-18 (1)
- 1970-01-14 (1)
- 1975-03-13 (1)
- 1976-02-29 (1)
- 1977-07-11 (1)
- 1980-04-16 (1)
- Great Society (10)
- Vietnam (10)
- 1948 campaign (2)
- Assassinations (2)
- Jenkins, Walter (Walter Wilson), 1918-1985 (2)
- 1960 Campaign (1)
- 1964 Campaign (1)
- College students (1)
- Congressional relations (1)
- Humor and mimicry (1)
- Humphrey, Hubert H. (Hubert Horatio), 1911-1978 (1)
- JFK Assassination (1)
- King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1929-1968 (1)
- Tet Offensive, 1968 (1)
- Tonkin Gulf Incidents, 1964 (1)
- Text (10)
- Oral history (9)
- Folder (1)
- Meeting notes (1)
10 results
Oral history transcript, William G. Phillips, interview 1 (I), 4/16/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- in 1949, I went to work for the legislative department of the UAW--United Auto Workers union--here in Washington. My job was mostly research; I read the [Congressional] Record every day and I came to the Hill to get bills and attend hearings. I also
- saying we ought to all go back and live on the farm, at times. The net effect was that that was a tough (and the report shows it) report on which to get consensus. Wurster had died during the middle of it. Catherine Bauer I had the last letter from
- you were a state senator and in 1958 you were elected to the Eighty-fifth Congress in a special election. Since that time you have been a member of the United States House of Representatives. Your committee memberships--I have you for committees
Oral history transcript, O.C. Fisher, interview 1 (I), 5/8/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- politics and the like, I associated myself with the so~called conservative wing of the delegation. It's not quite fair, I suppose, to call it a wing. We were united on many things, particularly.those relating to the welfare of Texas, but in the broad
- and Administrative Services Act of 1949,, as amended (44 U.S.C. 397) and regulations issued thereunder (41 CFR 101-10), 1, Mrs. Whitney M. Young, hereinafter referred to as the donor, hereby give, donate, and convey to the United States of America for eventual
- , Texas, do hereby give, donate and convey to the United States of America all my rights, title and interest in the tape recordings and transcripts of the personal interviews conducted on February 28 and 29, 1976 in Madisonville, Texas, and prepared
- I'll go from 42 to 47 on HEW; I think I'll get it in the Senate but Ford won 1t like it. I think we have made progress, but I know there is still a lot to do. There isn 1t a city in America that is doing 50% what it should be doing; but not a city
Oral history transcript, George R. Brown, interview 3 (III), 7/11/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- 44, United States Code and subject to the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth, I, George R . Brown of Houston, Texas do hereby give, donate and convey to the United States of America all my rights, title and interest in the tape recordings
Oral history transcript, Everett D. Collier, interview 1 (I), 3/13/1975, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , for any reason, have betrayed Lyndon Johnson or the United States of America. G: I've heard that he was the best of all the Johnson aides at anticipating the President's wishes, that he had just sort of an instinctive quality of knowing what LBJ would do
- was dead but before Kennedy's body was removed, and nobody made any attempt to follow him, although he was then president of the United States. He left, actually, just minutes--my recollection is--before the death was announced. reasons. And of course