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  • Type > Text (remove)
  • Subject > Humor and mimicry (remove)
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  • born, sir; I was about four years old. W: Well, you don't know how hard it was to make a living. money. Nobody had any The bank closing certainly didn't affect me, I didn't have an account anyway. Most people didn't. Most of them were like Lyndon
  • and 20, 1977 INTERVIEWEE: Mrs. Jane Englehard INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mrs. Engelhard's home, Cragwood, Far Hills, New Jersey Tape 1 of 3 G: Let's start with your parents, first of all. Your father was a Brazil- ian diplomat. E
  • and would have the Johnsons. As I recall, the President first invited me to their home in 1957. I don't have a diary invited to dinner with Mary the first time. SQ I can't pinpoint the r~argaret year~ but I was and was very excited about going
  • ://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 23 home and he repeated the same story to his daughter, a sixteen­ year-old, telling
  • . But we first went to Africa. aide on that trip. I went along. 8ill Moyers was sort of the presidential 1.4e came back through Paris. He vrent to Geneva, and then to Paris, when he had some NATO exercises to do; then we went on home. That vIas our
  • I didn't think he was serious, I didn't think he had a chance. Billy Wilder said, "Not only does he have a chance, it looks like he's going to win." I went home and I thought about it and I thought, "Well, now's the time; if you ever want
  • , [and] had her, and he and Mrs. Johnson arrange that wedding. story white house in Austin. that wedding. He said that Mrs. Johnson would handle the It was in the Johnson home, that old twoAnd they handled every arrangement for They got the preacher
  • , "If you intend to ever go home to Texas, do it within two years or you'll never go back." He said, "I planned to come for a couple of years and I've been here"--I think he'd been there forty-something years at the time. He was a very special person
  • INTERVIEWEE: CHARLES L. BARTLETT INTERVIEWER: DOROTHY PIERCE McSWEENY PLACE: Mr. Bartlett's home~ 4615 WStreet~ NW~Hashington~D.C. Tape 1 of 1 M: Mr. Bartlett, I'd like to begin this interview with a very brief outline of your journalistic career
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 21 probably eased off a little bit. Although I know that shortly after Moyers left, he was still commuting back and fo:cth from Long Island to Washington. He hnd his home here in Washington. He had a little dinner party