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Oral history transcript, Eilene M. Galloway, interview 1 (I), 5/18/1982, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- Biographical information; LBJ; Sputnik; committee work; NASA; space legislation; U.N. and space; conferences; visiting the Ranch; space law; reports; foreign travel
Oral history transcript, Edmund Gerald (Pat) Brown, interview 2 (II), 8/19/1970, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- at the wonderful reception he got in Sacramento when I was Governor . F: He had a tremendous crowd and great reception . He came out here in the last week of the campaign, and you and Salinger in a sense-- B: Traveled with him . And he had tremendous crowds
- . Then, there were delays in getting that information through. Some of it had to find its way by way of a traveler coming out. going to Mexico and There wasn't a great deal of instant communication because of the restraints of travel and communication and so
Oral history transcript, Harold Brown, interview 1 (I), 1/17/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- in September of 1962 in which I travelled on Mr . Johnson's plane for at least part of the way, and I remember getting into a long discussion with Jim Webb and Jerry Wiesner about what was the right way to do the moon landing . Wiesner and I both felt
- the river. We traveled by rail going from Columbia, South Carolina to Fort Sill. There was a salesman on the train and he was talking to me, he said, "You know, you're going into a new area now, a new country. You've been down in Columbia, South
Oral history transcript, Bourke B. Hickenlooper, interview 1 (I), 9/19/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- to the East. Do you feel he has pushed strongly for the various parts of that program, such as the Consular Treaty and air travel to Russia and things of this nature? H: I think he has been groping for some kind of what we might call an Eastern abutment
- who filed for that party and had his name on the ballot in November. It freed me to campaign, which I did. I was asked to travel on the Eisenhower train and plane and traveled with him through some thirty-four or thirty-five states of the Union
- pictures. Mean~tilitary I was in the public I spent almost five years there, traveling around the Pacific, doing all sorts of photographic jobs, all news and journalistically oriented. While there, I took advantage of another short course that they had
- there was a press secretary. I was probably the staff officer that traveled with them more than any other staff officer. We had hours and hours LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories
- . Four Senator Eastland and I both met her and she was traveling east-west and we met her at Biloxi. He made the difference in that 1960 campaign. He carried enough of the South anyway to make the difference. F: Do you think it was just a matter
Oral history transcript, William Reynolds, interview 1 (I), 6/16/1975, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- wished he had more time to sit and talk with them. But of course Texas is a big area. There are a lot of people and there are a number of wealthy people. there~ By that I mean they were able to travel to Washington, see Washington, and so
- . F: Well, what did you do? Travel the state with him? B: He did not make an extensive campaign that year. As I recall, the year before [in] 1953, he went over the state making speeches and building up his organizations, and I covered him
- . The rest of rail safety staff, who were travelling inspectors, were assigned a conference room, only they didn't have a key to it, and it was kept locked. I got back to Washington and launched a program to look at every rail office and see what we had
- than printing. Existing staffs were used; I think we got for our six or eight months in Washington full-time and many months thereafter part-time, traveling back and forth--I think we got the grand total of $3,000 in expenses for the three of us. F
- of stuck with . . . basically going south, you have two routes--you can go through the Piedmont area where the people are, where the rednecks are, or you can go down through the swamp land to Florida, and you don't see anybody. traveled, and so forth, I