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  • and admitting to how much ordnance we'd put in there, which was an extrordinary amount of bomb-power . The other was a thing when policy came by reverse . There was a speech to be given in Baltimore to the Jay Cee's about a year ago, and it was determined
  • too much misted an outlook. Gene Roberts was very, very solid. had a good string of correspondents: Ralph Kennan. Ward Just. The Baltimore Sun Peter Trumpal, Pat Ferguson, And the Post had fairly good ones: John Maffrey, To toss some out. It's
  • remember Pat Furguson with the Baltimore Sun and I always joke We left his main campaign plane; got into two or three old DC-3s and flew up to Mankato, Minnesota where he made a speech. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • eve r beli.e ved it. him, I told him t o his face, and r I told told Phil Potter l'lho wrote H in t he Baltimore Sun at the time , that this just ~1asn t 1 true. T 1·1as the one that objected to Lyndon Johnson. After I 'd made my object i ons
  • anniversary. It was a terribly hot day. hundred and twenty degrees. We spent about two and a half to three hours visiting several villages. to protect [us]. any kind. It must have been a None of us even had any headgear I almost had a sun stroke. I
  • think this recent act on energy passed by the House as a substitute for the Krueger amendment is typical of tnat--just a wild, wild piece of legislation, couldn't be effective in any way under the sun. I hope that the Senate will knock it down. F
  • [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh in hotel rooms, on airplanes and cars to talk about everything under the sun. F: Would he open up pretty well? H: Oh yes, oh sure. You know he treated
  • Street to invite the Prime Minister. He never mentioned it to me. He talked about everything else under the sun but not that. M: When did you come back to the United States? A: I came back just before Christmas in 1967. M: How much dissent
  • things to do, but I've got to get away. couple of days in the sun to shake this damn thing. II I need a He said, "Well, if you don't knock off anybody. If there's an empty seat in the plane, it's all right with me. II Kenny O'Donnell was still
  • that the climate was unsavory. up. There was rumbling of revolutions. Sun Yat-sen was coming My father and mother were quite close to Sun Yat-sen and many other important people of the revolution through the diplomatic corps and also through a press gentleman
  • if they wanted to march on the side of the road in the hot sun. It was all right. But I still worried about their safety. told the President that we could handle the matter, but I had visualized at that time that it would take about five hundred national
  • /exhibits/show/loh/oh 15 him since the wartime days. I met him first in 1942 when I went to Teheran with Prime Minister Churchill and went up to Moscow at that time. I have seen him intimately. He's stayed in my house in Sun Valley and he's come
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 21 And we were doing some good things in science, we had a number of--the Year of the Quiet Sun--we had earlier wound up the International Geophysical year, and I remember during that period I went down to the Antarctic
  • . Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Phillips -- II -- 20 P: No, no. Rising Sun was the first resettlement-pacification thing that was started before Harkins
  • can still shut my eyes and see it, [is of] him paddling up and down that pool out there at 4040 on a raft and Juanita walking back and forth taking dictation . While he got his recreation Juanita got a walk in the sun . G: Well-­ LBJ Presidential