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  • , the Big Inch pipeline that went all the way from my own East Texas way up somewhere into Illinois was completed. It was a lot of topic of conversation in our house. G: We really don't have much on the President's attitude toward the Big Inch. I know
  • vividly because I had a terrible cold. I got a telephone call, as I remember, from Alvin Wirtz asking me to come over to a lawyers' meeting in a hotel at Fort Worth. I told him that I was busy taking depositions, so he arranged for me to come over at night
  • Tully--I~-l2 Johnson? T: You answer phones a good deal of the day. the telephone and people know it. F: Because you know how he likes So they telephoned instead of writing. Did you work with Mrs. Johnson at all after she became either the vice
  • what is sometimes referred to as the mezzanine or the second floor is where our operations were set up. We had telephone hookups in Massachusetts with Mr. Kennedy's people from there, and we had some hookups statewide and some nationwide, where we could
  • from time to time, very seldom we'd talk about a specific speech unless he just happened to be thinking about it in the course of the conversation. Jack would get an assignment that was coming up and he would call Will or me and say, "Let's get going
  • been saying that And he walked away and picked up the II phone . . . (Laughter) F: He called somebody. H: . . , and made a call, you know. F: Ri ght. H: He was like a child, by the way, with those telephones -- he could call from the dining
  • at the White House and had, therefore, some very limited participation in conversations with the President. It was only after I was appointed Assistant Secretary of State for Economic Affairs that I developed a more sensitive relationship--direct relationship
  • been associated with him during the earlier days of his administration. It was a very happy occasion. He honored me by stopping at my point in the room and carrying on several minutes of conversation, during which he described the need that he had
  • service during the Johnson years. As I've indicated in some of the earlier conversation we've had, President Johnson had a high personal interest in the career service of government. He had a sense of the importance of the career service in terms of its
  • , and I could feel we organized, as far as the labor group goes, I think one of the very best campaigns on the telephone. first telephone banks. That was one of the That is where we first got women started in doing this, and it paid off. But along
  • a telephone down in his swimming pool in Texas. I think He'd spend most of his time I think on the phone instead of swimming in the pool. But he didn't call me on the carpet or anything of the kind. And he didn't organize any kind of effort by other senators
  • : Harry Hopkins? W: No, that was the WPA. can't think of it. This was--I know his name very well, but I [Roosevelt] called him up to talk to him about it while [Lyndon] was there and he laid out the,project to him over the telephone and he said, "Well
  • -organized opposition. That was part of the process. G: What specifically did Mrs. Johnson do to advance the legislation? O: She had conversations with a number of members of Congress. She spent her time on the telephone, and when members of Congress came
  • that he might not be quite as sharp as he should be. him I better. And I thought, well, if I'm going to see He put me down in a somewhat profane telephone conversation, he said "I don't know you, and I just barely know Lyndon Johnson and I don't want
  • , if it were productive, it was difficult for me to perceive that it was . Yet we were living in a world in that time when there were so many things that we did need to foresee . I get from students these days . It's something like the conversation They want
  • as the Trinity River It has got a long, hoary background. Project. One of my sharp recollections--and you'll understand why it's so sharp--one day when the Vice President of the United States, Lyndon B. Johnson, was· haranguing me on the telephone about
  • words, you know, conversations on it because, when Truman was elected, I remember the Senator said, "Well, we'll have someone in the White House who we can go talk to," and I know that Ed Johnson felt that Truman was the type of person that he would have
  • shouldn't stop and leave me dangling! Well, then, President Kennedy was killed. Do you have any immediate contact with Johnson? C: Immediate. [Pause] M: Of course, he flew back to Washington. Did you have any conversations with him in that short period
  • at the airport, and they came out about--I think they telephoned somebody in Amsterdam, who'd given them the wrong answer, so they thought we were coming in about four in the afternoon, and they were all out there at three-forty-five. And Doug MacArthur and Wawee
  • the impression, that growing out of some of the conversations that President Johnson had, and out of the meetings that we had, and all this seemed to be a natural kind of evolvement. B: ~\Tho were some of the people who met with you at Governor William IS LBJ
  • , including myself, on the telephone. I'm sure he called many others about certain pieces of legislation, pointing out that he felt a deep urgency that we ought to get the Kennedy program on the road. was stalled dead-center. It hadn't been. It He used
  • a letter from him, a telephone call from him, a telegram from him urging me to run" and so forth. And Carl did help him every way that he could with the paper, probably to the extent of hurting him, because the paper was not popular at all. Neither
  • was in the conversation with you but kind of listening [to them] . 0: Yes . They were sort of at the other side of the room . Or sometimes if Mr . Johnson wanted her, he'd say, "Bird, do you know so-and-so's Yet she would sit talking number," and she'd always have
  • 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh How did you communicate with President Johnson--by letter, telephone, in person? Y: By letter, but the only really meaningful communications were in person. What I
  • . We were getting more letters than any other congressman from the state of Texas and probably as much as the senators were getting each day. My job, I had to sit right inside the front door. I had four telephones on my desk, and they were all ringing
  • ball, my little toe. Johnson tells one of these Filipino mess boys to get some ice--forget about what their reaction was, just get some ice; put it on my toe so I can get on the telephone. So I went up to the house; we have to get some pictures of Camp
  • would like to see move ahead and I would appreciate it if you would go ahead and start pulling together some things that might take place." My understanding is that that conversation took place in early December of 1963 or two or three weeks after
  • it gave him the chance to be with President Truman and to engage in the conversation that went on during the game. I never had the feeling that he took too much interest in the game itself. F: He was more interested in being there? C: He was more
  • . It is quite possible--as a matter of fact, a lot of business is done this way--for me to call Emminger of the Bundes Bank just on the telephone. I don't have to explain to him a lot of background; we've been in .. close
  • that is interested in the retention of national features, parks, the creation and enhancement of those features and the conversion into parks and preservation of natural beauty such as we find in the parks--both in the cities and in the rural areas. So
  • on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh -~ I 5 ~~ You're asking something that was so doggone long ago that I don't know. I know that one of the planes belonged to Brown and Root. I frequently heard conversation
  • his own mind. There were some good meetings of the Cabinet on matters of legislation and things of that character. B: In your personal conversations with Mr. Kennedy, did he ask you for advice in areas other than specifically Commerce things? example
  • . Johnson let us all be privy to the conversation of what he thought and what Mr. Truman thought, and LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library
  • knee. Of course, the President was there and the conversation turned to Nixon at that point. Everybody was kind of gathered around, and he was talking about his meeting with Nixon in the Cabinet Room. I can't quite place the time; again, the date still
  • about that conversation and say I was the resident intellectual. It was very flattering, and, of course, it wasn't even true because he was the resident intellectual who did most of the thinking and most of the very clever analysis of what needed
  • prominent everywhere speculation . Yes . You don't recall any conversation that he had with Senator McFarland? B: No, I don't . I'm sure that there were some, and I'm sure that McFarland did anything to help him that he could . tion--I think it's
  • interesting conversations. I was the first Cabinet member to go to the Soviet Union, and one day waiting about ten minutes, I remember for a Cabinet meeting, we got in a conversation. He was asking about my impressions of the Soviet Union and I told him
  • other people present--which was memorable. He indicated that this was the first lengthy conversation he ever had with Senator Johnson, and the substance of it was as follows: Senator Johnson had said that his interests in government were just as liberal
  • nome, and there was some matter that she wanted to talk to Jack about. I don't know whether it was in connection with the divorce or not, but she evidently made a telephone call to him. I think he was living in Los Angeles. G: She was married to his
  • into the suite . [He] walked directly to the television set, I think without greeting anyone, or certainly without any conversation, turned it on and focused on the set . It warmed up ; and then very briefly Senator Kennedy appeared, or a news commentator