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Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 23 (XXIII), 8/28/1988, by Michael L. Gillette
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- to the United States and couldn't get a job . . . . EL: Public dole. A: Yes. R: On top of which, the State Department was not very friendly. A: That's what I have heard, yes. They were not very cooperative. HS: Well, they were friendlier to some than
- · And he may very well have thought he wasn't, you l' know, so old that this conceivably could be the only way he could become President, by serving as Vice ·President, shm'ling himself to be.· a very constructive, cooperative member of a liberal ticket
Oral history transcript, Gerald W. Siegel, interview 3 (III), 2/11/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
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- wanted to see some constructive, peacef ;.J~ periods of cooperation. G.: . I get the impression that when Kno~land took overs· it t,:.'...SOk a few · , · · ... · experiences with LBJ before Knowland realized that he i:i-P.uldn't just ... S
Oral history transcript, Albert W. Brisbin, interview 1 (I), 2/6/1979, by Michael L. Gillette
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- , very difficult and restrictive . To go back to some of the problems vie had, [one i,,asl getting the cooperation we needed out of the WPA, because they of course had the basic records . agencies . Now, we worked through the relief The FERA was still
- : You interv iew the outgoing man? C: Yes, we always try to. always try to. Who do you think in That kind qf thing. Sometimes they don't cooperate with us, but we So then we move into our search-and-evaluation phase, which gets almost cookbook
- not witness firsthand. G: What was Moynihan's contribution to the task force, do you recall? A: He philosophically was well versed on the problems of poverty. One of the issues that he and I talked about was whether labor unions would be cooperative. We
- not continue ou. B: Oh, yes, every four years, every time there was an election, one was frightened. This building is a cooperative building, and in 1948 in August my mother and I decided we had better move in, we would like to buy, and this was an election
- ] he was going to make it more than just a title, an office, he was going to work at it if he could, and [he] apparently did . I guess that was with the cooperation of President Kennedy . F: Did you get any sort of insights into the awarding
Oral history transcript, William M. Blackburn, interview 1 (I), 5/21/1969, by David G. McComb
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Oral history transcript, Charles E. Bohlen, interview 1 (I), 11/20/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- was in Prague in the fall of 1929. I left the United 6 W D W H V just about two weeks or three weeks before the crash of 1929. M: That wasn't a bad time to leave, Z D V it. In regard to the Defense Department, does the cooperation you talk about extend pretty
- you have a fundamental conflict there? U: No, there's no problem there. They've got to advise on certain matters and they usually cooperated with us and were pro-Indian. One of the things that I did, however, the last two years, was to give my Indian
- Cooper, Cary Grant, Jimmy Stewart, to the all-American boy, the Henry Fonda type, through the mod type, the Marlon Brandos and Steve McQueens, the unattractive males. And at the moment I personally think we're on the trend of the attractive male. I would
Oral history transcript, William S. White, interview 1 (I), 3/5/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- saved President Eisenhower. There's no doubt about that. Those were his two interests. M: Do you think that Mr. Johnson's cooperation in working with a Republican President, Mr. Eisenhower, affected his relations with other elected Democrats? W: Oh
- Cooperative (PEC); Lady Bird Johnson's interest in preserving trees along the highway between Johnson City and Stonewall; Winters' involvement with the Marshall Ford Dam; LBJ's lack of popularity in Gillespie County; the December 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor
- : Here's a note in February that LBJ hosted a party for Texas Rural Electrification Association officers in Washington for the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association Convention. W: When was that? G: This was 1959, February of 1959. W: I think
- . They are multiple and continuing. He's been very cooperative. C: He called me all hours of the night during that. Fauntroy would be worried. I provided kind of a release valve for him when he couldn't get things at Justice. Not that I overruled Justice
- to the assassination of the late President John F. Kennedy and the subsequent violent death of the man charged with the assassination. The members of the special commiss ion are: Chief Justice Earl Warren, chairman; Senator Richard Russell, Georgia; Senator John Cooper
- , the will. The first two men who came to see me were Fulbright and Harriman. They gave pledges of undying cooperation. I think both wanted to do everything they could to make the nation strong. I'm not bitter against anything. I don't hate anybody. I remember Mr
- and Shivers about who was to control the delegates going to the national convention. Mr. Johnson won, and at that point, through his efforts to cooperate with Governor Daniel, and vice versa. Thus the party machinery was kept in the control
- much in fav or of foreign assistance, but r was wi lli ng to help those countr ies t hat would help us and cooperate with us an d wh o had proven it. But I did not want to go up and give money and vote appropriations to countries that might kick us
- , you can't force a major, or a colonel, or a general to talk to someone. But even the critics, by and large , Mary McCarthy, for instance~ who came out to write a nasty story~ got some awfully cooperative LBJ Presidential Library http
- admiration for Dwight Eisenhower; LBJ's interest in space; Jim Webb; Jacobsen's opinion of Eric Goldman; LBJ's failure to get the appreciation or cooperation of people in the arts; the 1965 White House Festival of the Arts; Vietnam in 1965; LBJ's view
Oral history transcript, Lawrence F. O'Brien, interview 11 (XI), 7/24/1986, by Michael L. Gillette
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Oral history transcript, William P. Bundy, interview 3 (III), 6/2/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- http://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 cooperation of Marcos to have it appear as Marcos' suggestion
- ; the Green amendment; Har-You Act and CAP; OEO-White House cooperation; the Job Corps; SWAFCA; assessment of the agency and office
Oral history transcript, Clifton C. Carter, interview 1 (I), 10/1/1968, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- to get through over the objection of some people who took a very adamant stand against any movement Ln that period. F: Were you privy to the developing cooperation between what became the Senate Minority Leader Dirksen and Senate Majority Leade r
- , controlling the violence of white people. And until then, many blacks had a feeling that whites will cooperate with themselves when there is a problem, but now we've found out that white people act just like anybody else. Do things. Do good. Do bad. No big
- the initiative away from him really. J: That's right. F: And you got, I gather, complete cooperation from people. J: Yes, I think completely. at least. I think as far as Washington was concerned, I don't know anybody that was for Stevenson