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  • Lady Bird travels to the Truman Library in Independence, Missouri, and the Eisenhower Library in Abilene, Kansas, to help plan the LBJ Library; Lady Bird received tour of Truman Library from President Truman and Phillip Brooks, Director; lunch
  • Brooks Bldg. Austin. Texas 78701 Dear Mr. Hornaday: I do indeed appreciate the additional recollections which you sent in. Also. I Imow Dick Horehead ru:ld Jinmy DanIcs quite well and will be getting a.round to seeing them. Have fun in Virginia. I
  • it's captured by black separatists~ and I think in those communities anything that was proposed would have been. What is needed is a means of keeping the pressure on the process to make it broaden out. Jim Sundquist of Brookings is writing a book
  • was the defender of Emma Tenayuca [Brooks], a communist leader in San Antonio, I think in the pecan-shelling wage argument, organizing the workers in the pecan-shelling business. highly publicized trial. Antonio. There was a very He also defended Maury Maverick
  • from more recent history that rural problems were neglected. I just finished writing a book about migrant farm workers, and in the course of writing my book I talked to Sundquist, then at Brookings, and asked him about how come we didn't do anything
  • , 1969 INTERVIEHEE: KERMIT GORDON INTERVIEHER: DAVID McCOMB PLACE: Mr. Gordon's office, Brookings Institution, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 M: We can start at the top of the list here and take up where we left off the last time. I'd like to know
  • by peopb at Brookings Institution. There had been a designation of a Transition Officer for the incoming Kennedy Administration. That was Clark Clifford. So there was a good deal of preparation in each and every department and agency. But, again
  • to navy things and naval prob 1ems. He didn't brook anybody on the corrnnittee that wasn't. We have a story that Lyndon tells and I like to tell, that in those days, the first year you were on the committee you could ask one question. And the second
  • : The automobile accident, but she didn't tell him. G: Oh, she didn't tell him? N: No. G: Well, can you recall what happened there? N: She and Marietta Brooks were driving and the automobile turned over, I think, and Bird was all bruised up. bruised up
  • office now in Brookings The date is March 20, 1969 ; the time is 2 :50 in the afternoon ; and my name is David McComb . First of all, I'd like to know something about your background, where were you born, when, where did you get your education . 0: I
  • of Seguin or get Mrs. [Marietta] Brooks of Austin. anybody. Just don't have the controversy." Get He finished tying his tie and as he walked out the door said, "Well, I've got the votes." Vann Kennedy came up to me and said, "You're entirely right." He
  • has reported correctly that Congressman Jack Brooks and Congressman Homer Thornberry went with Mr. Johnson to the airport before the rest of us. The rest of us didn't knm"l what we were to do, and we really just felt like we were just in the way
  • loose. It was an exceedingly warm and pleasant experience. He told me what was happening with his skin down on the Ranch, his somewhat frustrating experience, he said, in trying to convey to "those fellows at Brooke Army [Medical Center] how he'd like
  • go and actually live and learn homemaking and whatever. G: Glen Rose I guess was one of these, wasn't it? Do you remember that? O: Glen Rose, that would be one of them. And Effie Brooks was our expert that dealt with setting up this type
  • , and he's now executive director of the National Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges, a very distinguished political scientist. Number three: Charles Schultze who was then director of the budget, has now resigned and is at the Brookings
  • cetera. But it didn't destroy them at all, one of them is an ambassador now. M: One of them is director of the Arms Control Agency, too, as a matter of fact. S: Yes, that's right, and another one is at Brookings writing pieces for the press. One
  • . to return to Texas . I feel that his plans are We have had the pleasure here at Bethesda of adding to his comfort and assurance medically . I have contacted the Surgeon General of the Army and the Brooke Army Hospital at San Antonio which I had checked
  • rooms, one of the most filled-with-history rooms in that vast Capitol, to my thinking. I just loved it. I was very proud to host anything there. It seems to me--was Marietta Brooks?--she is a natural clubwoman and I feel sure she must have been one
  • , autocratic man who did much to modernize the country but who brooked no opposi­ tion to his policies. He obtained extensive economic assistance from both the USSR and the West and used it to start building the infra­ structure necessary to develop the Afghan
  • and a quarter before, of New Harmony and Brook Farm,'' with similar unsatis­ factory results. Some did yeoman work in promoting civil rights. "Nearly a thousand white students went South during "freedom summer" in 1964 .... Nine civil rights workers were
  • #1) INTERVIEWER: DAVID G. McCOMB April 29, 1969 M: Let me identify the tape first of all. This is an interview with Douglass Cater. I'm in his office in Brookings Institution. The date is April 29, and my name is David McComb. We might start off
  • . Blough, chairman, United States Steel Corp. Arleigh A .. Burke, director, Center for Stra­ tegic Studies, Georgetown University. Benjamin J. Buttenwieser, Kuhn, Loeb & Co. Dr. Robert Calkins, president, Brookings Institution. Erwin D. Canham, editor
  • . Her husband was such a tough, able man, and years later when he was ill, I'll always remember something that Jack Brooks said about him. And that is on his dying day he would be getting up, conducting a fight, which was a pretty good assessment
  • a Brooks Brothers young man at the front desk with a three-piece suit. That three-piece suit, that caught Johnson's eye early on. I know in the late fifties, when he was majority leader, one of the assistants to Senator Joe Clark, who was a main line
  • INTERVIEVJEE: JAMES L. SUNDQUIST INTERVIEHER: STEPHEN GOODELL PLACE: Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 2 G: This is an inte~v~2W with Mr. James L. Sundquist, who is presently at the Brookings institute in Washington, D.C. author of the book entitled
  • Jersey's affiliate called [ESSOSA] and specifically called the Esso Standard Oil Company of Puerto Rico. During 1964 in the month of March or April, I was sent by Jersey to a Brookings Institution seminar in Washington. It was a group of business
  • investigations; Nathan Report from Brookings and its effect on efforts to overcome poverty in the U.S.; impressions of Sargent Shriver and Shriver’s work with OEO; LBJ’s attitude toward OEO; how Vietnam affected all programs; the role of loyalty to LBJ in getting
  • listed in this Appendix are diecueeed in B. M. Rich, The Presidents and Civil Die order (The Brooking• lnetitution, 1941). Other• are described in S, Doc, No. 263, 67th Cong., 2d Seee. (1922). • rl ,,....., the civil authoritiH There&!ter, the had
  • : http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] x Jenkins of it. He had very fixed ideas of what he wanted to do~ 33 I believe he used [inaudible] Brooks and Barr
  • into the women's division and what it did and how it operated. J: Marietta Brooks was chairman. Mrs. Bob Long may have been vice chairman, at least she had an important role. She was always president of some woman's civic club. There was an elderly lady of very
  • or Duval County and Jim Wells and Brooks and Jim Hogg, and all the rest of them. D: Well, what about then, the Duval County thing, the Alice business, I mean, the--? 25 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon
  • and had come and who was around then, J.J. Pickle and Jack Brooks and Sam Rayburn, and the things he had learned. I suppose for me being so young and wondering if at some day in my life I would be turning around and reflecting on those things, I think
  • : http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Bonanno -- III -- 27 G: After the March 31 speech? B: Oh, sure. Jake Pickle, Jack Brooks, Homer Thornberry, the Krims. And again, I think it's fair to point out that everybody was very torn. On the one
  • , he would then go and pick up the phone and call Frank Ikard or Homer Thornberry or Jake Pickle or Jack Brooks or any of his old colleagues to kind of go through what was happening and how things had changed since they had all been young. He had a very
  • . Sam [Rayburn] never had this trouble. Jack Brooks doesn't have it. John Connally never had it. John Connally gets into trouble with people who don't like his particular opinion. What hooks the President is that he is an uncannily canny man, and candor
  • #2) INTERVIEWER: DAVID G. McCOMB May 8, 1969 M: This is the second session with Mr. Douglass Cater. Once again I'm in his office at the Brookings Institution. The date is May 8, 1969, and my name is David McComb. Last time you mentioned that you had