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  • INTERVIEWEE: CARROLL KEACH INTERVIEWER: DAVID McCOMB PLACE: Hr. Keach's home in Robstown, Texas Tape 1 of 1 M: This is an interview with Mr. Carroll Keach--Carro11 spelled C-A-R-R-O-L-L and Keach spelled K-E-A-C-H--at his home in Robstown at 105 East
  • in San Marcos. Remember, you stopped there on your way down to the King Ranch? You said it was a rather modest house, but do you remember [any details]? J: It was a modest frame house, Victorian, as I recall. San Marcos was a center where a lot
  • The Johnson family's home in San Marcos; what Lady Bird Johnson thought of LBJ's early career prospects; LBJ's response to a job offer from Charles Marsh; LBJ's ability to remember names; Mrs. Johnson's reluctance to marry LBJ; the weeks leading up
  • . Gardner President, Carnegie New York City EXECUTIVE Corporation SECRETARY William B. Cannon Bureau of the Budget (Alternate: Emerson J. Elliott) MEMBERS ( James E. Allen, Jr. Commissioner of Education Albany, New York Fr. Paul C. Reinert President
  • .... lo-c)()-6'> J'ttJtt~~·· l6/l4/o I /VW /QA..c 10/7/67 A C, #28a cable Intelligence Informatio~ Cable~ C 4 p E.'tetC,(Pt . wh I ct:F "1t.J 'till 6'•• m~ooJ.-oS [Duplicate of #15 la, NSF, Country File, United Kingdom, gv,,rtl-144U1t~1~ Vol. 12
  • : "The United States of America wants to see the cold war end, we want to see it end once and £or all; •.• The United States wants· sanity and security, and pea~e £or all, and above all," ... _..·.·•· . • ' Dece1nber .' •,'•,:•,•/,•+:•,.-•.-,~:•r,r
  • cousins were my cousins. l~e played together so much of the time, so actually there's not a time that I can remember that I did not know Lyndon Johnson. M: What was he like as a child? L: Oh, like any other child. He played. We played all sorts
  • of the bases on the list was San Marcos, Texas. This particular General officer had been sent over by the Air Force to brief Senator Johnson about the closing of this base and the reasons therefor. Senator Johnson apparently understood the necessity
  • of Texas. Mr . Carter told an audience of 1,000 in the LBJ auditonum that "if we can educate the nation about th myths surrounding menlal health, and reduce the fear of mental illness and t e stigma attached to it," the goal of pro­ viding adequate
  • RESTRICTION DATE to Rostow re Vietnam 2 p. #2a this file] Intelligence memorandum S 3 pp. [dup. #2a this file] A re Vietnam A 34a_1Muru1-t---~1:::;1;un_.u..s.rlie~r to Rost9o~w~r~euaa.r;ms._c:.ruit..:r:.o.L--+--1tTI:-Ti~--l fJ.- Rusk TS #34d cab e
  • memo Rostow to President, 5:30 p.m. PCI 1 p f¥,1;~ cl-/S-'[I. 6-lu/,t t:>.:-... , t,z.,,,.J. #38a cable DATE CORRESPONDENTS OR TIT L E RESTRICTION 8/14/67 Nt.J1Y:- ~t» ,.,vs/1t.,1..'- oc,-Z-7'1 ~ ~ A f ~n Intelligence Information Cable S 4 p ;e
  • ~, A·No· F"ORCE .. AR°E' 8£1 NG HE.ARD? ; ,· 'J THOSE • WHO MAKE ·sucH ,STATEMENTS ARE APPARETLY LITTLE ' CONCERNED . '. . . . ·:-) ABOUT WHAT ALL TH IS. CAN LEAD" TO. · .· . . l .. ' ·~ :. . ~6~·• .HQl>J THE. AMERICAN MILITARY LOOK AT THE PRINCIPLES
  • , as far as I know. F: Were you reasonably optimistic or fearful, or just what was the mood They were very strong for him. of the Texas group? H: When ~e thought of it realistically, we thought we were fighting a losing cause, but we wouldn't allow
  • was to us to have given us Jesse Kellam from 1945 to his death in 1977. [Inaudible] enabled Lyndon to say in public office. M: How did he come into your life? J: Lyndon had known him in Southwest Texas, in San Marcos, Teacher's College. Jesse was a little
  • arguments with LBJ regarding the cost of electricity and the need for parks in Austin; Edgar (E. H.) Perry; Lynda and Luci at Camp Mystic; Lynda and Luci's work as adults in public service; Allan Shivers; Sam Rayburn and his sister, Miss Lou; the 1956
  • p 6/2/67 A Houston for the Record re financial claim against CIA 3 p 6/2/67 A 4/19/67 A 4/4/67 A ? to ? re forthcoming article by Thomas Braden in the Saturday Evening Post c+e:~ ~Pr 8 f'5 ~ 2 p ~pt- l/l~J 11.9 ptf Nt..'J/RAc. 1'3·2!.9'2
  • E.O U.,;.6, 34 NlJ_J_ 'I - "s ;;J._ 8J +467, l rl, ::> ..:e 7- /7-9S- TOP SECRET/PlODJB/PSN~tSYLVANIA ~p ~'.l!!ettE'f /NOBIS /PBNNSYVJ.A.Nl.A (J) tel Memorandum by Mr. Kissinger 7-17-fS- The decisions with respect to next moves in the A-M/K
  • Ben Campbell, Judge of Juvenile and Domestic Court William E. White R. r. Burke Steele Archie !foods l 1/2 minutes Secretary presents Governor Har.rison and Lt. Governor Miles Godwin and Sidney Kellam l/2 minute Secretary 1 minute Mr. Talbott
  • . There was one funny story about the helicopter. We had a little boy named Green, who was the son of Professor Green at San Marcos College, and he was with the loudspeaker truck. And he was trying to keep the crowd because the helicopter was late in some
  • real well. G: They came from different parts of the state. T: Yes, different parts, but they went to school in the same area. She went to Austin and he at San Marcos. G: Did they tend to think alike? T: I think so. G: Did she strike you
  • . . Jam•• W. s,-..-. Hoa. Mercer Cook • fonner Amit. co S-,U Hoa. William lltvlda • aewlJ Jameel Amt.. to s.-.at Mbal-.r Do..._ Tlllam • Mllllaer of S&a&e la Cllara• of • • - . - Affair• Mbalner Jean Ba,tia&e Collla • Mialater ol. Fluae• Mlalatff HaMI
  • ; Frank C a r t e r Adams, the erratic extrovert from Virginia who was chief publicist for the Texas Centennial in 1936; Buck Hood and Homer Olsen who in those Depression days moonlighted from the Austin American-Statesman to supplement their Depression
  • ,!!jF!!"' 23 cable Dakar 406 ~4 i0818 98I~0r eB;t= s 25 cable D~~~1:,~~1,yiij~;RAt'~~~Q;Jq s oe ,ebfUtf1~;,I\\ ptr tJl,j/MC 10-'32.B mttud '\/~0111 pr.rtJ optn ql?>OJ \' ptrtJU,/PAC IO·S2.e ,:2 filliilili Bel,e, 9,,.8 33 cable Dakar
  • • a ~ackgrqldld. •~ma .from Dt:all Rusk abMl.t thfl lunch tomo~row wltti tt;e Japan•• ~· Ve ry ~ rl fiya . 1. Th•~, meetbtgt. watch start@d on Monday moro.lag. b&V1$ boo aotna wdh The te ·nae be«:a aom.f! etralakt talk t.bout eco1Ui1mlc pro'blomo. W'• i1•Y" eom­
  • of that year he was in Cotulla teaching and part of it he was in college. K: San Marcos? G: Yes. K: I visited in San Marcos and I remember that Sam Houston--his younger brother--and some college girls and myself and one other college boy, I've forgotten
  • a■ ex:preBBed in 1950 in the doM ■ tic and policie■ of the 80T1et Union. international !hu■ a •In the camp ot peace are the SoTiet Union, the Popular China ot Mao !■e be, the popular democracies of hope and A■ia, the liberating moTement ot the colonial and 1emi
  • College at San Marcos. But I had no occasion to run into him until I went up to a political gathering somewhere along the line of either Hays and Blanco or Hays and Travis County--a little community called LBJ Presidential Library http
  • AND NUANcis WHICH THIS REPORT MA\' NOT . HAVE CAPTURED. •, \•.}:> • ~ ~ ➔• I • •' ' • - • • • ., • •_ •.• : • •, • • -~ • 2;.. :fRIVAIE ~11EET .l.NG OF PRINCIPALS WAS HELD AT MCCLO'f9S REQUEST • . . f'!E:·_· SA ID . US FELT - t W!E · HAD · C0i1.t
  • in the full sense of the wo.:r d, and any sma.11 contribution of mine was more than "
  • on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh GARZA -- I -- 2 who I understand was a roommate of Lyndon Johnson's at San Marcos. He told me that a friend of his by the name of Lyndon Johnson was running for Congress from
  • 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://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh IrlTERV I E!.J I DATE: May 28
  • side, but primarily on the rural si de. Speaking of the rural side, are you aware that E. Babe Smith is still alive and have you talked with him? G: No, I haven It. B: I"ve got his phone number and his address, not with me. San Marcos now. He lives
  • See all online interviews with John E. Babcock
  • Babcock, John E.
  • Oral history transcript, John E. Babcock, interview 1 (I), 11/22/1983, by Michael L. Gillette
  • John E. Babcock
  • . cop7 _,_,st. r...san I 1IDdantaDd McltnJII" 1a IIIMlhc Ja a oap7 of tlda ..,,..,. ~ SJndioa•bu w .... U taa, m, laD8 DI IIAPC 1IJlq W tM oelan, - .. after- • .,-~ Jw r,, witiboat olMlrp .. obltgaUe. la...U,,, w IICllllld 11b to - JW11 puliab t\e
  • 3.(ff /~ .,.. . ir .. INDICATE:0 C0UtCT O0!AlGE 1 r ! State_:.. ••·· · 6 Ya§uQ.vE. . e()~! :•... LIMITED OFFICIAL _.USE, ·: •• :t, TO '' ' Oriai• ..rr AmEmbassyPARIS ACTION: Woo STATE LIMDIS. . •lliMEDIATE. (::::;::W:;nec;ro e
  • : http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Hopkins -- III -- 4 between him and Lyndon. I did. I don't know that Wirtz knew Lyndon before Wirtz knew Lyndon's father, Sam Johnson, before I did. But Lyndon, you see, was still in school in San Marcos
  • to California; LBJ’s Uncle George; LBJ’s election to Congress; Bob Jackson; Charlie Marsh; occupational alternatives to NYA appointment; E. H. Perry, Sr,; Joe Bailey; Ferguson family; 1941 senatorial campaign; WWII experience; third-term issue.
  • to me all the way through college and I thought the world of him. But he was kind of set back how any kid 1H
  • saying about him, or [they] just brought up his name, or what? C: Well, there's a 1ittl e part of it . . . . M: The tape can be restricted. C: All right. This gets back into legislative politics. The speaker of the House in 1933 was Coke
  • think it was, River Authority. I remember we went once more-through the years this was a constant thread--to his old alma mater, San Marcos. This time it was to homecoming festivities, a very picturesque campus. I've always approached it with a lot
  • fondness for his alma mater in San Marcos; the House Un-American Activities Committee; Christmas 1947; a portrait of Mrs. Johnson, Lynda, and Luci given to LBJ for Christmas; Luci's christening; the creation of a 70-group air force; LBJ's relationship
  • of Alaska (Ernest Gruening and E. L. Bob Bartlett). LBJ is re-elected majority leader; Everett Dirksen defeats John Sherman Cooper for the position of minority leader left vacant by the retirement of William Knowland. When the Senate opens, LBJ, exercising