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  • , "Yes we would be glad to visit -- receive a.ny of theni, including the Senator, on any plan he had or any -suggestion. 11 I just spent two hours today with Dean Acheson who for a week had been over at the Defense Department/being briefed and over
  • Urban affairs
  • Government Official b. Philadelphia, Pa., April 22, 1923. B.S., St. Josaph's College. Philadelphi ~ 1950; M.S·. in Pub. Affairs, ·Princeton, 1952; With iriternat. cliv. U.S. Bureau Budget, 1951-56; legislative asst. to Senator John F. Kennedy, 1956-57; staff
  • ; State Department under Dean Rusk; LBJ as a manipulative speaker; Vatican II Council; M. Feldman and the Jewish community; Dungan appointed ambassador to Chile
  • ~ G: He did feel that McCarthy was dangerous though? J: Yes. He was very distressed about the inroads that McCarthy had made in the country, [by the charges] that the federal government, the State Department, Defense Department, the CIA, had been
  • : We had to go to San Antonio to see it. F: That was an all day and night affair, wasn't it? L: Yes, and I don't know, I guess sometime later the next spring--! don't know when it was--she met Lyndon. And boy,_Lyndon, like· everything else, he
  • /show/loh/oh 4 F: How did you try to counter this nationa l support? M: The only way I tried to cotmter it was by speaking against the Nationa l Adminis tration interfer ing with local affairs. F: Did your speech seem to get across? M: Yes
  • Lady Bird writes that it has been several days since she has received a letter from LBJ. She describes a visit with an elderly neighbor; asks LBJ to recommend books on economics, government, or current affairs; mentions she is getting pictures
  • ·on November 29. A few days later, all were on their way to Washington. Lyndon did a fine job with Dick, both in handling congressional work and in assisting him with his business affairs. He stayed with Dick until 1935, when he was appointed state
  • was a controversial post. You could be asked t o do so much in directing the affairs of the Senate that you'd have to neglect your af fairs at h6me. I think he felt at t hat ti me tha t he was in a good, strong enou gh position back home that he could risk it. I
  • her away. It was just strictly a little family affair. G: Right. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http
  • Dress fitting; Lady Bird works with Hester Provenson on speeches for trip; lunch with Lynda Johnson; Lady Bird has doctor visit; Lady Bird has tea for Texas friends; reminiscences about "Fandango" held at LBJ Ranch; LBJ School for Public Affairs