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  • on here. news conference has not materialized yet. Senate Majority Leader. This I haven't even seen the He's around here somewhere, but I haven't really seen him, and I just don't know. said, "What the hell is going on? II He kind of pressed me
  • II of asserting its role in the foreign policy business. But earlier, within the Senate, there had tended to be a deference to the Foreign Relations Committee and very often to the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee. You remember
  • , and we worried lest both the kids and the faculties were becoming lethargic. F: Yes, I remember that complacent generation. It worried me as a history professor. M: After World War II, we always blamed it on World War II because you had a double
  • the Australian But it's because we do in fact have exactly the same outlook broadly on world issues. F: My feeling in Australia during World War II was that these were an LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B
  • . At that time I had an opportunity to talk to him for about forty-five minutes. We exchanged the usual pleasantries, and then he discussed his experiences in World War II in the Navy, and we discussed several mutual friends, such as Governor Connally of Texas
  • . Don't tell me, I know you can't keep coming here with all these people wanting you, but I just want you to know." So he surprised me. He called me up and said, "1'11 be out there. II So he came, and he made a speech--each one of these speeches just
  • . But the first opportunity, Mr. Roosevelt made it apply to all people who had a worthy project that was in the public interest and couldn't get financing locally at reasonable rates. He said go to the RFC and get it. You know when World War II started
  • stamp, in a sense? W: Exactly. F: III'm for the administration. II W: I never heard him, not one single time, ever put a bad word on President Kennedy. Never. That's not to say he didn't do it, but he certainly never did it to me. By then, you
  • War II and the Chinese were determined to hang on to them. I've been there on the island. You can look out and as far as when you get up to the ground and look from there over to where you join the--when you come out of the Lotsford Road and look over
  • has given over thirty years of his life to it would be so easy on inaugural to not be there. and I thought~ Texas~" and And I said, "Everybody's all dressed. II And there was a conflict out at the Coliseum because we were having a cocktail party
  • United States Government-sponsored cargoes. II Vessels under Control of Controlling Party 1. .Annex 1 hereto contains a true, correct and complete list of vessels currently under control of the Controlling Party, together with, in the case of vessels
  • 9j o 'VcD ’C A ■ - . A ..........Z Z HuEPvr^ DE R u EPCR 7 II : C4/1 61 IZ ; '6 i£ ”4 1 .5 I;,'Z f :-: j c s . / S / INFC n u EP W 'JA H ITS HOUSE PUEHCR/ STA TE RUE P I A/Cl A r u e f g r /;^s a R tjECE^VCMC Z 041315Z F:I CT2 72. 1
  • ^^^ —CflA'G ~-F .J jji-ji-n-. 10 W A RSA W 8 15 V IE N T IA N E 8 BANG KO K USUN DOD ii-9 U N N UM BERED C IN C P A C UN N UM bERED C 1N C M E A F S A DATE: ^ 13, A UG UST UN N UM BERED NOON -~M o o v y —R E B D r C IN C P A C FO R PO LA D
  • WARNING TH A T REGIMEOT WOULD, P A R T Ic IP A T Z , -! 2 ) MEI-IEER OF A S P E C IA L SABOTAGE TEAT4 FRCM 13TH REG IM ENT WAS c a p t u r e d FOLLOWING ATTACK ON Da NANG A IR F IE L D 1 JU LY. ■ ,!i : ji i; iI I ; I 3 ) R a L L I E R F R D I IS T H
  • ^ 1 ? - ^ r -v~ffvt - . i '■? ii" - > 7 i . r I; ! i ^ ‘ Ur»A W a-«OUv0 vi . y G j'xs4 ^ c.tf-vwY ■■■' “ " _ ? ^ ... fijdjtuxM »4MyUtM-tS ■........,.............. r r ^ f J /p 7-l-ld. W
  • ii v ; i l l sn e a k ," 031845 P TP s 1 ,2 ,5 ,6 SBO RBT I 7 OON IO 82 OE PTP 2 engine c a su a lty , conDenced r e t u r n to base. D IN A R COPY LBJ LIBRARY t fW- gOP SSOnSQ? DIMAR DATE/Tir-ia S H IP 3 / P T F P 0 3 IT I0 N M/u)DOX 1
  • ..CJCS-2 ( 1 - 2 ) D jS -3 (3 -5 ) SJCS-1C6) J 3 - 6 ( 7 - 1 2 ) J 5 -K 1 3 ) SACSA-5(ii|--18) D I A - 4 ( l 9 - 2 2 ) •'NM C 02(2 3 - 2 4 ) - JR G -2(2&-26) SEC D'EFf5(27-31) I$ A ^ 9 ( 3 2 -4 0 ) C S A -2 (4 i-4 2 ) CSAF*’2C4 3 -4 4 ) C N 0 - 2 (4 > 4 6
  • in the North Carolina Senate from 1936 to 1941. After service in World War II you served in the North Carolina Senate from 1947 to 1952, at which time you were elected to Congress and have served continuously since that time. F: That's right. McS: You
  • Oral history transcript, James C. Gaither, interview 2 (II), 1/15/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
  • ://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 9 to go through what we call the Development Loan Committee. II m the chairman
  • on my wrist here which I bought in Hong Kong in 1953 \'Ihen I was there with then-Vice President Nixon. was a great buy. II It He said, "Theis, why don't you keep your mouth shut?" Well, that triggered something in my mind. He landed at our first
  • Oral history transcript, William W. Heath, interview 2 (II), 5/25/1970, by Joe B. Frantz
  • served through World War II. Where was your duty then? S: My first duty was at sea in the Gulf of Mexico. flight training and became an aviator. Later I went on to During World War II, I served on both the west and east coast in anti-submarine
  • their soil. First the Japanese--when they stood with us' in World War II, in a kind of a underground sense; then the French, they fought for eight years and finally threw the French out. Then what do we do but stumble into the same trap that the French
  • Oral history transcript, Daniel J. Quill, interview 2 (II), 10/15/1968, by Joe B. Frantz
  • and he was going through the pile. There were thirteen of them. He got down to the 1etter to you, and he looked up and he sa i d to me, 'You know, I used to \'lOrk for that guy.' II I was amused duri ng my subsequent weeks as T noticed the extent
  • Oral history transcript, Lucius D. Battle, interview 2 (II), 12/5/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
  • ; and they were sort of pushed into the Foreign 6 H U Y L F H But anyway, this Z D V done, and I don't really think it helped the Foreign 6 H U Y L F H as a whole. M: You Z H U H back in the days toward the H Q G of World W a r II, appointed as liaison
  • t to h o ld the s it u a t io n in the so u th . We a ls o a g re e th a t i t i s im p o rt a n t to m a ke m a ^ m u m e f f o r t s to get t h is m a tte r to a c o nfe re nc e ta b le a s so o n a s p o s s ib le . II. I t u r n now to y o u r m
  • b e c a iis e y o u d o n 't h a v e th e fu e l to co n tin u e g e ttin g th e jo b d o n e w ith o u t th e m o m e n tu m o f s u c c e s s . M o re f ittin g s in th e a fte rn o o n a n d d e s k w o r k . ; ; W e is l to- a skthem opnd . I h
  • :\. :) ~•re l/-~3.. 93 (~D~,~ •I.:_., " :~ ·­' ,:-- '• r ,J..._,' -eor~F IDENTIAL - 2 ­ II. Major Issues A. Czechoslovakia On this subject, we fully intend to use the forum of the General Debate to concentrate the weight of ~he members' opprobrium
  • winning Pulitzer Prizes for their glorious exposes and so on, then it became an epidemic in the press corps, and people began to think, "Well, that's the way to get ahead in this business. salary. II That's the way to win prizes and double your
  • . II I didn't know at the time who had written them, at that exact time, but I found out several months later that the handwriter had been then Lieutenant Colonel Robert Gard, G-A-R-D, who was the military assistant to McNaughton at the time
  • with the President was on the subject of our dependents. dependents. He was terribly worried about the American Even at the time I went over, he gave me a long talk--"I think we ought to get them out just as fast as we can. II I asked him to please let me get
  • there. M: But he said, II I have an appointment with Sall next week. I'll try to pursue that. Tha t' s worth fi ndi ng out about. '). ". Tell him that somebody said it; don't tell him that I did. M: Oh, no. R: I've seen him a lot since
  • that we've prosecuted except for World Wars I and II, have been unpopular at some point or another within the United States and have placed the presidents who prosecuted them in very real political jeopardy . M: I don't ever know that the Council's the place
  • me if I'm wrong--I gather that very serious attention began being given Alaskan statehood in Congress after World War II. President Truman's message. Of course you've indicated This was of course almost simultaneous with Senator Bartlett's election
  • , According to r e ite r a te d statem ents of U, S, lea d ers, American economic aid to Vietnam i s unlim ited and -anconditional. | * Ii-■ i COPY LBJ LIBRARY Pa^e 3 Enclosure 1 k-66, Saigon Proa the Government of Vietnam point o f view t h is aid must