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- Anderson, Eugenie M. (Eugenie Moore), 1909-1997 (3)
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- : http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 2 M: Did Mr. Johnson ever get involved in that at all? L: Not to my knowledge. I worked there with Dick Goodwin and others in the White House and of course, with the Secretary of the Treasury, Douglas
- went to the hills, hey, so the Turks are undemonstrative." "Christ," he said, "did you see them out there?" I said, "Oh, yes sir, I saw them out there. I was right behind you all the time." I lied because I didn't want him to know I had an even
- , 1985 INTERVIEWEE: GEORGE INTERVIEWER: Ted PLACE: JACOBSON Gittinger Colonel Jacobson's residence, Reston, Virginia Tape 1 of 2, Side 1 G: All right, sir. Why don't we begin with 1954? How did you get selected for that duty in Vietnam? J: Well
Oral history transcript, Lucius D. Battle, interview 2 (II), 12/5/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 14 I would say--the next day was Thanksgiving, as I remember it. Perhaps I'm wrong, maybe the next day wasn't Thanksgiving, but it was that weekend. And I remember getting home in the middle of the afternoon
Oral history transcript, William J. Jorden, interview 1 (I), 3/22/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- INTERVIEWEE: WILLIAM J. JORDEN INTERVIEWER: PAIGE E. MULHOLLAN PLACE: Mr. Jorden's office in the Federal Building, Austin, Texas Tape 1 of 1 M: Let's begin by identifying you, sir. You are William J. Jorden, and your last public service
- man, You know, he did tend, 1 think, toa kind of hyperbole when he got away from home. I thought his early reference to President Di em as the Churchil 1 of Southe·ast Asia reflected less careful thought perhaps than might have gone into that kind
- became President. This was in December of 1963, soon after he had assumed office following the death of President Kennedy, tions, I believe, from I had been home for a few weeks on consulta- Sofia. I was anxious to see President Johnson LBJ
- that the woman's place is in the home and [that] this is sort of a masculine arena, A: I suppose in some countries that this would be true. In some parts of the world might be true, for instance, in Arab countries or Moslem countries. [It] might be true
- home. So We watched the returns in the Driskill Hotel that night, in the Jim Hogg Room. There were about ten or twenty people I suppose there, not many. The President watched the returns come in, rather impassively, I thought. F: Were you around
Oral history transcript, Lucius D. Battle, interview 1 (I), 11/14/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- the nevIS claim at least, that Mr. Johnson was not very much at home among the New Frontiersmen of the Kennedy years, particularly socially. Do you think that has been exaggerated? B: Well, it depends on what you consider the New Frontiersmen. M: I
- home and I thought it was better to do what I thought was right and, particularly, where the rights of an American citizen and the life of an American citizen was involved. Department liked it or not. very obvious. I didn't worry about, you know
- to resolve. M: But it's a basic one, it's a central one, What you're saying is not that the outcome of this was that the nature of the American connnitment changed any, but that the proper understanding of it by the Europeans was brought home. F