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- , I visited every group--. And Our group, by the way, contained a man who was in the Senate at the time, by the name of Harry S. Truman. We went down together to visit Panama, and, in fact, he and I roomed together on that trip. On our way down
- was saying, "Don't worry about that, we'll I don't know where I'll be." But he was pressing me. And then Lou Harris was a student at Chapel Hill when I was, I had known him-F: You're talking about the pollster? S: Yes. I'd kept in touch with him
- Houston of feuding a great deal. So the Democratic party was divided, and we decided to have a harmony meeting in Dallas and invited Mr. Truman to be the speaker. At the time the two leading hotels in Dallas--one was the Adolphus--the suite
- . And I voted to prevent the fight from coming to New York, because before I had become a member of the commission, they had voted not to let Dempsey fight in New York unless he defended his title against Harry Wells, who was a colored fellow
- Biographical information; 1928 convention; repeal of the 18th Amendment; Henry Wallace; Harry S. Truman; BEHIND THE BALLOTS and THE JIM FARLEY STORY; first meeting with LBJ; 1941 Johnson vs. O’Daniel campaign; Eisenhower; Kennedy-Kefauver fight
Oral history transcript, Edmund Gerald (Pat) Brown, interview 1 (I), 2/20/1969, by Joe B. Frantz
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- that the family homestead was acquired in 1852 in a little place called Venado, in Colusa County, California. F: Was his name Shuckman? B: His name was Shuckman, that is right, S-h-u-c-k-m-a-n, although some people spell is S-c-h-u-c-k-m-a-n, and he came from
- off by mentioning that Mr. Mort Stern is also in the room--that is M-O-R-T S-T-E-R-N, who has written a dissertation about Mr. Hoyt and the Post which gives a great deal of background information about this man. Hoyt and the Denver Post. The title
- with President Roosevelt. B: Still on into the 40's-- M: Oh, yes. B: Presumably his association with Mr. Truman, too. M: Yes, I think so, although he was never as closely identified in the public mind down there with Truman as he was with Roosevelt
- : http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh This is an interview with Milton S. Eisenhower, in his office in Baltimore, Maryland. The interviewer is Joe B. Frantz. Dr. Eisenhower, very briefly, let's run through your career from the time you were
- See all online interviews with Milton S. Eisenhower
- Oral history transcript, Milton S. Eisenhower, interview 1 (I), undated, by Joe B. Frantz
- Milton S. Eisenhower
- , and Judge Ingraham enjoined us." And I said, Senator?" '~ell, I know Judge Ingraham very well Where are you, He gave me hi s telephone number, and I said, "Stay there a few minutes, and I'll call you back." I called him at home. said, ''Yes.'' I asked
- Truman sent General [Harry] Vaughn, if I recall right, as his personal representative. And the Longoria family, with money raised by Mexican-Areerican people and the infant American GI Forum, sent all the family over there. And this is how I got
Oral history transcript, Charles B. Lipsen, interview 1 (I), 6/13/1975, by Michael L. Gillette
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- , Eisenhower had Sherman Adams, Harry Truman had General Vaughan, and Kennedy had Bobby Kennedy. These were their lightning rods. They were the bastards. The President was always the good guy, and when anything would happen, they would say, "Well, it's
Oral history transcript, Jake Jacobsen, interview 1 (I), 5/27/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- : http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh May 27, 1969 S: This interview is with Mr. Jake Jacobsen, former Special Counsel to President Johnson during the years 1965-1967. Today is Tuesday, May 27, 1969, and it's approximately nine in the morning
- Biographical information; working for Price Daniel; Jacobsen’s personal political philosophy; 1940’s and 1950’s political climate in Texas; LBJ’s reputation as a congressman; LBJ’s early advisers and associates; law suit involving the 1948 election
- . In the meantime the story goe s that Wright Mor row personally guaranteed- -he's a man of considerable means--a national television broadcast for President Truman. By reason of that he, in a way, ingratiated himself with the people on the National Committee
- S. STRAUSS INTERVIEWER: DAVID McCOMB DATE: May 22, 1969 PLACE: 2800 Republic National Bank Building, Dallas, Texas Tape 1 of 1 [vl: Let me identify this tape first of all. This is an intervie\>/ with Mr. Robert S. Strauss--S-T-R-A-U-S-S
- See all online interviews with Robert S. Strauss
- Oral history transcript, Robert S. Strauss, interview 1 (I), 5/22/1969, by David G. McComb
- Robert S. Strauss
- with President Truman? LBJ Presidential Library 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 2 M: I'm sure I must
- for Adlai Stevenson. G: What did you do in Hyannis Port, do you remember? M: Well, on the plane we stopped in Kansas City, I believe it was, where Mr. Truman was, and we all went over and went to some state building. Our group went up and sat down, and Mr
- 1948 election and the State Democratic Executive Committee; Byron Skelton; HST and General Marshall collaborate on the Truman Committee; the 1960 convention in Los Angeles; meeting JFK at Hyannis Port after the convention; Ted Dealey insults JFK
Oral history transcript, Robert E. Waldron, interview 1 (I), 1/28/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
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- before I came up here. G: Any first impressions? W: First impressions were kind of an impression of awe, that here was my first U. S. senator, and here was a very large man and a very strongacting man and, of course, was there for business. be my first
- executive officer of Diversa, Inc., 1962---. Interviewer ~~J~o~e;___B_.'---"F~r~a~n=t==z~~~~~~~~~~ Position or relationship to narrator ~~U~·--=T~.'---'O~r~a=l=-'H==i=s~t~o=rvy-=P~r~o~j~e=c=t=-~~~~~~~ Accession Record Number AC74-213 General topic
- is the basic background of this. Then I know that they--this again was before my time--had to work very closely on such things as the Tidelands Bill and the Natural Gas Bill, the Kerr Natural Gas Bill, the Harris Natural Gas Bill, although it would
- LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] INTERVIEWEE: GOVERNOR LUTHER HODGES INTERVIEWER: T. HARRI BAKER More on LBJ Library oral histories: http
- than any other. B: Was that work in the early '60's in any way frustrating--more advisory than action? H: Yes. But again it has prepared me--see, the present commission on which I serve--of course this is a full time responsibility--but I'm trying
- histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 21 Me I believe it was in the early part of the '60's that the SST program or the question of developing it, first began to come up. Did you work on that at all? M: Yes, I worked on it a great deal
- Monroney, A. S. Mike (Almer Stillwell Mike), 1902-1980
- ~ or was it nationally based? Johnson~ I should say? L: David Lloyd was a director of the committee, and he had been an administrative assistant of President Truman's. You may remember him, I don't know. He was a highly intelligent person. He and I both felt
- , with Charlie Murphy and Dave Lloyd, who were Truman's top people. the Hill. He had a lot of good speech writers on It never worked, and I never could find out why it didn't work. My theory--I went traveling with Johnson several times to see what happened
- present at the Amarillo State Convention in 1952? That went for Eisenhower? H: No, I was not involved in that. F: Was Senator Johnson influential in your receiving the appointment as U. S. District Attorney? H: Yes, it was his recommendation
- Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 6 M: This was when it was first to be founded? B: When the investigation committee w~_:!.s determining it, and Lyndon Johnson
Oral history transcript, James H. Rowe, Jr., interview 4 (IV), 11/10/1982, by Michael L. Gillette
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- Humphrey in his acceptance speech on the floor. Nobody ever mentioned his name. You talked about Roosevelt, Truman, but it was blank on Johnson until Humphrey mentioned it. G: Did he show a preference for Humphrey over Nixon during the campaign? R