Discover Our Collections


  • Tag > Digital item (remove)
  • Subject > Crime and law enforcement (remove)
  • Collection > LBJ Library Oral Histories (remove)

11 results

  • moved to Washington, D.C., arriving, I believe, on about Sunday, the twenty-third of July 1967. So I was involved with them on Sunday and on Sunday night, trying in that personal way that we all have of getting settled and getting reunited with my
  • in for a long night and perhaps a long aftermath . The report of his shooting was confirmed to be the grave wound and then soon thereafter a fatal wound . By one of those accidents of history, a representative of the Co.=unity Relations Service, Jim Laue
  • Kampelman. I had closed my mind to it. One night I got home from a National Symphony concert. After the concert we actually went to the Austrian Embassy, I remember that too. So we didn't get home until something like 1:15. When I got home there were
  • forty, and said, "Look, you folks obviously must have been doing a good job, because it's only the bad ones you read about, and I haven't read anything bad. tenure or job? So why should \'Ie worry about our I expect you to continue to do the work
  • ." G: I was about to ask-- P: And he said, Warfare]. II I'm (Laughter) Well , here's Paul Linebarger's book on it [Psychological Read it and then try to figure out how you might apply something to the Vietnamese situation." So I studied
  • way they liked. point system. There was a They had to go to school and learn reading, writing, and arithmetic. They learned from machines, so it didn't take teachers' time. They could take a teacher-given test anytime they wanted
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 17 S: He sure does! Maybe too much so. That's not for me to say. But it \"ould really bother him, particularly when he would read or hear about, in the Community Action Programs, somebody stealing or somebody getting rich
  • days. So they put Hess in the front row there, with the doctors observing film. He would sit up there and pretend to be reading a book and wouldn't talk to Ribbentrop or Göring or anybody. All the other defendants would talk with one another during
  • campaign coordinator for a variety of reasons. B: One reads so much about the magnificent Kennedy organization in '60. This doesn't seem to square that. V: I think someone probably made a judgment that there were these few states that should not have
  • Service special agents read the newspapers, like anyone else, and if they see something that has the potential of generating unreported income, they may well start an investigation. The investigation as I recall, LBJ Presidential Library http
  • /oh and then the Congress can make an intelligent judgment. B: You know, an outsider reading the newspapers at that time got the opinion that a good deal of Congress' activity was motivated either by emotional reasons or political reasons