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  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh June 17, 1972 F: This is an interview with Senator John C. Stennis in his office in the Senate Office Building in Washington, D. C. on June 17, 1972. The interviewer is Joe B. Frantz. S: You have some good questions here
  • candidate for president? Because as you know he was a lot of Democrats' choice in 1948 over Harry Truman. -7 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org H: ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] Well
  • the Kennedy people, and the man who told you to do that--Harry Truman--Iearned it the hard way." I don't care how loyal they are to their country, when they get in ajob their feelings run that job. And McNamara was to me to most dangerous man we've ever had
  • understanding of foreign affairs; Melasky's efforts to educate the public regarding Vietnam; LBJ's vice-presidency; LBJ's familiarity with military operations; John Tower; Ralph Yarborough; 1964 election and campaign; comparing the economy of 1960's to 1971
  • place of friends and have lunch and things like that. F: On these Board of Education meetings, did they just sort of develop? P: They sort of developed. Say, Truman would some in--that's when Truman was President--he'd come over about 5 o'clock
  • remember when President Roosevelt died; Harry Hopkins called the Cabinet together, and he said, I~e must all resign in..11ediately and insist on President Truman taking our resignation, because no matter what President Truman did, lve would always say
  • with our family relationship with President Johnson that arose over thirty years ago through my father's friendship with Harry Hopkins who was then, of course, President Roosevelt's personal adviser and assistant. Roosevelt, it is well known, took
  • : http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Ca s e - - I - - 18 and di scount all the arguments by proper gra ins of sa 1t and whatnot , you come down to the fact that they just didn't like each other. President Nixon had the kind of personality which
  • will stay out as long as twelve months at sea, because they feed their people this fish--fantastic protein. We'd all live longer i f we ate fish. This i s one of the things that was predicted that would happen that has happened. G: What about
  • : http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Miller -- I -- 18 M: This is Ed Daley; he owns World Air Ways. plaque. That's my picture on the They say, "You look more like Harry Truman." The Goddard Trophy is awarded every year to the man who
  • INTERVID~EE : GLEN P. vJILSON INTERVIEWER: T. HARRI BAKER PLACE: Dr. Wilson's office, Senate Aeronautical and Space Sciences Committee, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 B: Sir, let me introduce you here briefly. You were born in Waco, have a bachelors
  • a reception at the Carlton Hotel for Vice President and Mrs. Truman. F: At the Carlton here? s: Yes. During the reception someone, either Secretary Forrestal who was secretary of the Navy at that time, or Mrs. Forrestal, suggested that my wife and I come
  • years? S: I had been appointed deputy director of the Budget Bureau by President Truman in 1950 and had decided to go to Marshall Field and Company at the invitation of the president of the company, who had been a consultant to the Budget Bureau during
  • do, and how did you happen to get into the photography business. S: Well, I was born and raised in Iowa for twenty years. F: Whereabouts in Iowa? S: Oskaloosa, Iowa. [I was] attendin.g William Penn College and decided that I would see what
  • Stoughton’s background and how he became involved in photography while serving in the Air Force in WWII; Stoughton’s newsreel camera business in the 1950’s; his work in the Army and as a space program photographer at Cape Canaveral; experiences
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh May 20, 1969; U. S. Senate B: This is the interview with Senator Clinton P. Anderson. Sir, do you recall when you first met Mr. Johnson? When you arrived in the House in 1941, he was already there, was he
  • could then pass judgment on the kind of report it desired to make and give to the full committee, and indeed to the various elements of the defense establishment, this being prior to unification, as well as to the President. S: Did you see anything
  • hostilities did break out, the chief objection that I felt and spoke regarding the Truman action is that, number one, they had the Blair House conference. seniority to be included. Now I didn't at that point have sufficient I wasn't holding the chairmanship
  • Knowland’s career before entering the Senate in the 1940’s, his Senate career in relation to that of LBJ, his relationship with Senator Tom Connally, the relationship between Democrats and Republicans, Eisenhower’s election and his view
  • and the Democrats quite well and faithfully--everyone from Truman forward as President. I wonder how you first came into contact with Lyndon Johnson. M: My first contact with Lyndon Johnson was in 1950 or 1951 when I was Under Secretary of the Air Force during