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Oral history transcript, Bourke B. Hickenlooper, interview 1 (I), 9/19/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- association with him as a member from the House on the Joint Committee. M: I see. When Mr. Johnson became a Senate Leader, as Minority Leader and later as Majority Leader, how would you characterize his relationship with the Republican leadership, of which
- Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 9 at Arnold and Porter named Jim Fitzpatrick, and in New York by a man named Anfuso (sp), whose father was a Congressman; and I ran a smaller group called the Associates Division
- of the Democratic Party; Young Citizens for LBJ in 1964; Birch Bayh; ran Associates Division of President’s Club; McSurley case; 5th Amendment; Bill Moyers; importance of Jack Valenti; reason Katzenbach moved to State; comparison of Katzenbach and Clark; Task Force
- road right in front of your house, with delivery service for newspapers and everything else. In addition to that, of course, one living there would have the benefit of the Waldorf-Astoria tenants because they would have a place to park and free air
- you have the idea you were W: Not at the time, I didn't give it much thought--in that area, an~~ay. F: How long did this association continue? W: It continued to the present time. F: So that any time he was in New York he was likely
- consisted of getting people who shared our views to contribute some money for a series of newspaper ads. B: In the California area? P: In the Santa Barbara area. B: Then you didn't actually meet Mr. Johnson until your appointment was being considered
- a delightful time with her and the women newspaper reporters from the White House that she was entertaining on a trip in her final days in the White House. B: Did you or anyone else in your office brief Mr. Johnson before the various missions last fall? P
- INTERVI EWEE: CLIFFORD P. CASE INTERVIEWER: MICHAEL L. GILLETTE PLACE: The Cosmos Club, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 G: Perhaps we can just proceed chronologically. C: All right. G: Do you recall your first association with Lyndon Johnson? C
- Association with LBJ; Senate; McCarthyism; impressions of LBJ; Johnson leadership; relationship with William Knowland; techniques; timing; LBJ temper; space program; relations with Eisenhower; Nixon and Dirksen; Lewis Strauss nomination; 1957 civil
- made that first trip through space as first astronaut. of Broadcasters was meeting in And the National Association ~Jashington. could I please try to get [Shepard]. They called me and said Kennedy was going to come to LBJ Presidential Library
Oral history transcript, Edmund Gerald (Pat) Brown, interview 2 (II), 8/19/1970, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- nomination . Was this sort of a real peace gesture on his part, or was this newspaper talk? B: I have no recollection of his offering to support me for Vice President, I was always rather hopeful secretly that the President would select me as his Vice
- think they have it, and when you find somebody who is highly competent, you like to be associated with them, to work with them, or to have them work for you. I think the work that the Senator did in connection with this committee undoubtedly must have
- , 1971 INTERVIEWEE: JAMES C. HAGERTY INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: Dr. Frantz' office in Austin, Texas F: Mr. Hagerty, I think we might just start this off by asking whether you knew or had at any time in your newspaper career run into Lyndon
- my father. Johnson got to know.him--used to come up frequently and stay at our house or our apartment in New York, and we involved ourselves in many ways throughout his career with helping him in his campaigns; helping him get newspaper support
- of the Democratic Party; Young Citizens for LBJ in 1964; Birch Bayh; ran Associates Division of President’s Club; McSurley case; 5th Amendment; Bill Moyers; importance of Jack Valenti; reason Katzenbach moved to State; comparison of Katzenbach and Clark; Task Force
- INTERVIEWEE: GEORGE P. MILLER INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: The Millers' 22~ 1974 home~ Washington~ D.C. Tape 1 of 1 M: My association with Lyndon Johnson was a very pleasant one. F: You overlapped in Congress, didn't you? M: Overlapped
- ] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 24 if you want to call it that, of CIA support of National Students Association and some publications. I presume this goes back to the period in which you were
- ; CIA role exaggerated by press; National Students Association; Watts and racial problems; Kerner Report; CIA relationship with other organizations in Vietnam; raw information provided for by the CIA
- don't think it was a controlling one. His obstacle, political obstacle in becoming President, that he was a conservative and had a conservative voting record, largely conservative leadership record--largely--and then they always associated him
- , and the maritime side, that were against the department, but by and large most of the industry was either openly supportive--this including outfits like the Transportation Association of America--or they didn't oppose it. If they did oppose it, they usually did
- happened to come to Washington. I'd been associated with a nonprofit manage- ment consulting firm in Chicago for about a year and planned to go back. In the meantime, "the head of the company became assistant director of the Budget Bureau, which
Oral history transcript, Harold Brown, interview 1 (I), 1/17/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- to the Defense Department in April of 1961 serving until '65 as Director of Defense Research and Engineering . Prior to that,, you were associated with Lawrence Radiation Lab in California . Do I have the correct background information? B: That is quite
- : And then shortly after that, you were associated with Mr. Johnson in the development of the space program, with the Space Act passed after the Sputnik of '57? A: Well, that was, again, almost an accident. I had been appointed to the Joint Committee on Atomic
- Biographical information; first meeting with LBJ; 1960, 1964 Democratic conventions; association with LBJ during the vice presidency; NBC’s handling of the news after the JFK assassination; meetings with LBJ; credibility gap; Georgetown Press
- by the President's attitude. Mu: So even those that might have been conservative otherwise turned out under his influence to be maybe more sympathetic than it had appeared? :(,1e: Yes. I would say that personally this association lasted right from the minute he
- it was? W: There wasn't much to talk about, because you had to plow new furrows because there hadn't been any cultivation to speak of to that point. Mr. Johnson's primary conversation had to do with the fact that if I were going to be so closely associated