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- into those kinds of matters again and [was going to] devote myself to my profession until Harold Hughes came along, who was Governor of Iowa, and asked me if I would help direct his campaign for re-election in 1964. Governor Hughes is a magnificent man
- , 1990 INTERVIEWEE: HAROLD C. PACHIOS INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. Pachios' office, Portland, Maine Tape 1 of 2, Side 1 G: I think we ought to begin with you telling me how you went to work for the Peace Corps. P: I went
- See all online interviews with Harold Pachios
- relationship with the press; Hugh Sidey; LBJ’s fondness for neatness and 'experts'; Peter Lisagor; Bill Moyers as press secretary; James Moyers; Merriman Smith; LBJ’s secrecy; LBJ’s first trip to Vietnam and the 1967 around the world trip; LBJ meeting wounded
- Pachios, Harold
- Oral history transcript, Harold Pachios, interview 1 (I), 10/15/1990, by Michael L. Gillette
- Harold Pachios
- See all online interviews with Hugh Gardner Ackley
- Oral history transcript, Hugh Gardner Ackley, interview 2 (II), 3/7/1974, by Joe B. Frantz
- Hugh Gardner Ackley
- the new President sworn in. What we were waiting for, we realized a minute later, was the arrival of Judge [Sarah] Hughes. Smitty--Merriman Smith--ducked into the booth there and got off a quick flash to the UPI and thereby managed to keep the UP ahead
- to be the judicial review to protect the bill and a recent court decision supports the position I took at that time. It seemed to me it would have been just a more honest way to approach the legislation. But the wheels were greased; Hugh Carey was adamantly opposed
- [and] was in connection with the death of the late Prime Minister [Harold] Holt of Australia. We went to that for the memorial services, and then from there we went to Vietnam, and from Vietnam to Pakistan, just for refueling, principally, although we did meet
Oral history transcript, Claude J. Desautels, interview 1 (I), 4/18/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
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- in the Was.hington area. He's living in Washington now and also doing quite well. M: He must have resigned then? C: He resigned. That's correct. He didn't retire; he was too young. And the other fellow that worked with me was Lieutenant Colonal Hugh Robinson
- up at a dinner party with Pete Lisagor and Hugh Sidey and a couple of other vultures who took him off to the Madison, and he spilled his guts. Literally, the sequence was LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT
Oral history transcript, Richard H. Nelson, interview 1 (I), 7/20/1978, by Michael L. Gillette
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- And hell, talk to someone like Hugh Sidey, you really should, about LBJ and the press. Because Hugh was covering him then. He will name instance after instance of LBJ changing a decision already made because it had leaked. He just wanted to prove
- civil rights vote. precisely the details. I've forgotten But it was, I remember, Hugh Scott [of Pennsyl vania that] brought it up. The idea was to embarrass the new Democratic leadership. Johnson was instrumental in quickly and efficiently moving
- . R: Yes. He was certainly a kind of favorite. I think Hugh Sidey may have' been something of a favorite. M: Until he wrote a book. R: Until he wrote a book. Well, the book was just the stuff that appeared in Life, wasn't it? M: I understand
- in Washington, and I was absolutely incredulous. It was a terrible shock. The other co-chairman of SANE was Stuart Hughes, professor of history at Harvard. With the two executives of SANE and us two co-chairmen, we cooked up a very indignant telegram
- party, but the national party. I believe that when Mr. Daley, if he was involved, and Mr. Hughes and Hubert Humphrey, when this group decided that they would throw out the Maddox delegation in order to let the whole country see that they were totally
- in the sense that obviously, they disagreed sharply on the war and on a num- ber of other things. But I wasn't prepared for the account in Time--which £lame as quite a surprise because I had talked to some Time reporters about it. I don't know where Hugh
- a shiboleth? Is there some real reason behind it, and similarly my impression is that the Bureau of Intelligence Research, Tom Hughes, does some sort of examination . M: So, I think the assumption of these scholars is that the conventional wisdom gets
- to the LBJ Ranch; Hugh Sidey
- Egan, the governor , and Ralph Rivers, the representative in Congress. F: On that trip I was telling you about Ralph Rivers was with us. G: Ralph Rivers was there and Hugh Wade; the Governor's secretary of state. He just made inquiries about
- , it was not a large group? C: No. We organized a kind of marching and chowder society, which we called the Negotiations Group that consisted of Bill Bundy, Ben, Read, Joe Sisco·, and. Tom Hughes, and one or two others*-Gene Rostow, occasionally. But we decided
- a foreign policy person, from about 19--well, really from 1955 on there was a person who dealt with the State Department and who was his foreign policy assistant. G: Who was that? C: Well, the first one, who came aboard the same day I did, was Tom Hughes
- as a lark. At the end of my senior year, when I had received my degree, I was appointed as a youngster to the faculty with the privilege of taking graduate study. I had no sooner started this when I got a telegram from Charles Evans Hughes, the Secretary
- --was there as president of the National Governors' Conference, and Governor [Richard] Hughes of New LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories
Oral history transcript, W. DeVier Pierson, interview 1 (I), 3/19/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- affect other conservation projects of the Johnson years, in which he took immense pride. So we had a meeting in the Cabinet room with Udall and I guess Sam Hughes from the Budget Bureau, and the President asked Clark Clifford to come--and Freeman may have
Oral history transcript, James C. Thomson, Jr., interview 1 (I), 7/22/1971, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- policy speeches and statements. This, I believe, was largely through the intervention of Tom Hughes, though I knew Senator Humphrey somewhat. . . . Mac Bundy was consulted and gave his go-ahead, and felt it would be useful to have a member of his staff
Oral history transcript, Charles L. Schultze, interview 2 (II), 4/10/1969, by David G. McComb
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- to violence as I had seen in any matter involving prices. Iowa I do recall that when Governor Hughes of and Governor Morrison and I jointly spoke at Waterloo, Iowa, in the middle of that crisis, we did so under armed guard. B: That was the period where