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  • , because of the distance. I'm based primarily in California and do a lot of traveling both foreign and domestic. But in 1960 we were all 2 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral
  • INTERVIEWEE: JOHN E. HORNE INTERVIEWER: PAIGE E. MULHOLLAN PLACE: Mr. Horne's office, Boston, Massachusetts Tape 1 of 1 M: Let's get your identification on the beginning of the tape here, Mr. Horne. You're John E. Horne, and your last official position
  • Hampshire, and Boston, Massachusetts, all in one day. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org F: ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org
  • --of which we had very few, known as the Boston bomber--they wanted all we had to come and assist them in the relief of the actions going on in Vietnam. You see, that brought it immediately under the military aid program, in spite of the fact
  • discussing I assume must have been the period--I hope I'm correct on this--when I received a call from the President in Boston where I was scheduled to speak at a function. I believe the President was on a trip outside the country. The call came
  • ,il.ide 1 any Southern this city was the symbol Simms, Hugh Swinton and Dubois Heyward. .. way of life . of ~i.1Jl:l1i1:m11s1o1bl)o]wa Boston always used ~ to~(about and a gentleman from looked as if he thought and the latter looked
  • (SCOTTY)STONEof Washington, D. C., an acknowledged leader in the Black Power movement, which he says is world wide, stated that he and the other principles on the program besides those in North Carolina, travel all over the country putting on similar
  • trala •• you entered tb• ■tate, be pr••-t•• tlarouaa...t tbelr ■ tat•. 4) Gay, waUormed Jolaucm "&lrl•" could travel •• p .. •lbl• from Solathera c-ar•••loaal clrcl••· &1001 •- aa many Mlnatrel■, 5) Name e11ter&alameut •- Carol Cuaal•&• The Cb.rlety
  • FMV:mfc 144-72-662 95-100-473 James Earl Ray We have reviewed the article appearing in the November 12, 1968. Look magazine written by William Bradford Huie concerning the above ubject. It contains many objective facts as to Ray's travel and activities
  • . F: Is Lynda as good a traveler as her mother? C: Lynda was a wonderful traveler. She was just delightful, Joe. The press liked her very much. You know, I have some wonderful impressions of Lynda and Luci. They are bright, sweet, sensible
  • to be surprised, because I don't think he would have tried to travel that route if he had anticipated the attitude that would be expressed. Then you go on from there--these are little things, but I think they go into the equation. The majority leader's office
  • and development by DOT Office of High Speed GroundTransportation-----------------------------------------------TurboTrainsdesigned for service between Boston and New York ----------­ Table I-Summary of Coast Guard's search and rescue workload, fiscal year 1967
  • and he~d of a very important and progressive company. Approve ✓ Disapprove --- I 2 Seymour E. Smith, Senior Vice President, The Travelers Insurance Companies, Hartford, Connecticut. This is one of the leading stock companies, and he is considered
  • vehicle, over i1Tegular route.s, transport­ ing: Disabled used motor vehicles, be­ tween points in Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont and Rhode Island. NOTE: I! a hearing is deemed necessary, applicant requests it be held at Boston, Mass. No. MC
  • t under the nose of Bo.ton wbor• Bo1ton newspapers oould u.ot touoh its territory and it •ae 90;~ aol14, onl.7 \.bi.11;y miles ti n , less than with a ■a.rt l7 oovered. tro■ fi.ftJ" Boston. Marshalltown, Ion., tifteen t ho· sand. lid.lea
  • . ABERNATHY, HASSAID TWENTY FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARSIS NEEDEDFOR THE EASTERN ~REA OF THE POORPEOPLE'S CAMPAIGN AROUND BOSTON,MASSACHUSETTS, ANDONLY.FIFTEEN THOUSAND DOLLARS HASBEENRAISED. IN ADDITION,THE POORPEOPLE'S CAMPAIGN NEEDSTHE FOLLOW I NGTECHNICAL HELP
  • WITHDRAWALSHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) - ( Gp 3) ¢z ndt,.~{r...0~3--CJ-oe, (Gp 3) .2, ~ 633 from :BrusselSCan£ -034 f'f.om B~soeJeo -+-,,- 11 /J a {6 3 A H/O9/~3 Vice Presidential Security File, VP Travel VP Johnson's Trip - Benelux Countries
  • Travel
  • I NTERVIEl~EE : KENNETH O' DONNELL INTERV I EHER: PAIGE E. MULHOLLAN PLACE: Mr . O'Donnell' s office , Park Square Building , Boston , Massachusetts Tape of 2 M: let ' s get your i dentification on the beg i nning of the tape here , sir
  • that there are any intelligent people outside of Cambridge and New York, possibly a few in Boston. And they were laying for him. I think the war in Vietnam had more to do with stimulating and exacerbating the situation than anything else. M: Mr. Johnson
  • then with you? Well, it was to get more support, too, from the--Texas being somewhat interior, not as navy-minded as Bremerton or Puget Sound Navy Yard or Norfolk and places like that, or Boston. Lyndon liked it very much. He liked the work. It turned out
  • John Kennedy's background. The lace-curtain Irishman from Boston and so on in the East and he's a Middle Westerner. I lost twenty dollars. I bet twenty dollars that Freeman would be Kennedy's vice presidential nominee because I thought he would bring
  • , Pro­ fe,sor." 0t'par' ment of Political Scil'nCl', Boston llniversit,•. John G. Vl•neman. Counselor to !ht' \ il·•• l'r1·~ident: LislP C. Carter, Jr. Ch.im·t•llor, Atlanta UnivC'r,it) Cl·ntl•r; StC'Vl'n A. Minter, Program Offitl'r, Th Clevt•land
  • but it was Boston and Canada, and that the landline to Moscow was down. I told him I thought he should get out of the car and get to some regular phone somewhere. I set about trying to figure out what to do. The President called Cross, who was his pilot, Jim Cross
  • such as Minneapolis, Cleveland, Detroit, Milwaukee, Boston, and San Diego. George Novack, National Committeeman, and Paul Benjamin Boutelle, the Socialist Workers Party vice­ presidential candidate, were their Party's representatives at the protest. Ludwig Wilhe ]Jn
  • conversation and mainly telling stories, some political and some family. He enjoyed kidding people that he was close to. G: We're going to use 1960 as a watershed here. Can you describe some of your travel s with him before 1960? W: Yes. My first
  • Biographical information; Senator Wirtz; associations with the Johnsons; travels with LBJ; impressions of LBJ; 1960 campaign and convention; vice presidency; NATO trip; LBJ and art; LBJ’s humor; Adenauer visit to the Ranch; Pakistan camel driver
  • was at Rice Institute as the Rice reporter for the Houston Post . So he knew I had some talent in reporting, and I was given that position . So I traveled then with Lyndon Johnson throughout the state, with the retinue of newspaper people who were
  • been with the First National Bank of Boston in Buenos Aires for about five years, or had been . He has a thorough knowledge of Spanish, and of the agriculture and economy of South America, particularly Argentina and Chile and I just don't need
  • didn't get to talk with Senator Jotmson very much because he was out traveling and awfully busy, but I got as much 'Briefing as I could froze Walter Jenkins � LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson
  • friendly letter, I have had ma.ny others confirming your repo rts on Florida and Texas . It is good of you to pass on to me the side-lights which you have obta.ined during your recent travels in the South. You may be sure that all you write me will be held
  • changes his party affiliation from Independent to Democrat. 2/18 Senator Lister Hill, in a Senate speech, charges that Adolphe Wenzell, vice president of the First Boston Corporation, a company scheduled to help arrange financing for the Dixon-Yates West
  • they were traveling in Dallas. And Johnson was ever so grateful and kept talking about Rufus and how heroic he had been. He also was looking at TV, sipping orange juice. He would occasionally look up at a photograph of Sam Rayburn that was on the wall
  • people who had known him in the Senate and knew him as a dashing young patrician from Boston and Harvard. There were some people who actually knew him--I think Rowland Evans was a personal friend of Kennedy's. He covered a lot of the Kennedy events
  • , a whole bunch of hats, and those are what Lady Bird wore for the next month. She never wore black, and the reason she didn't is that he didn't like it. But I happened to think, one, it was chic, and, two, it was good for traveling. I was going
  • Diamond Jubilee Birthday Dinner in Boston, Massachusetts, which honors Truman on his 75th birthday. JFK introduces LBJ at the dinner as “Mr. Democrat.” Texas State Senate passes the amendments to HB 158 requested by Governor Daniel. 5/9 LBJ and CTJ fly
  • . THE PRESIDENT'S DELEGATION Archbishop Iakovos or North and South America - Born and educated in U.S. Close friend or Patriarch Athenagoras. He has been active in church affairs and has travelled widely on church projects. He has worked hard to restore re­
  • Lady Bird Johnson travel
  • and Elspeth Rostow to the UT faculty; the White House suggestion of Gale McGee or Orville Freeman for dean; meeting with Freeman to discuss the deanship; York Willbern; traveling to visit potential candidates and how travel affected Livingston’s teaching