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- Anderson, Eugenie M. (Eugenie Moore), 1909-1997 (2)
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12 results
- over their head; in a few years they would be able to travel to the moon, and then some more years they would be able to travel to Mars and Venus. It was going to be a great wonderful Communistworld indeed, with travel to outer space. Whenshe fini.shed
- : Very restricted. K: Exactly. A Vice President, as the number two man in the entire country, carries the weight, the prestige and the imagery second only to the President and he is much more available to travel. So in effect a President uses a Vice
- DISCUSSION OF GUY'S REQUEST TO HAVE NORTH DAKOTA HIGHWAY COMMISSIONER ACCOMPANY HIM ON TRIP TO OBSERVE SOUTH VIETNAMESE ELECTIONS; LBJ'S CONCERN ABOUT SIZE OF TRAVELING PARTY, FEAR THAT OTHER MEMBERS OF DELEGATION WILL WANT TO BRING ADDITIONAL
- That s perfectly all right. 1 Rusk says, 11 There are times when Secretary of State Look, I don 1 t know. 11 Did you ever travel with him when he was vice president? A: No, I did not. I went with him as president on the trip to Manila
Oral history transcript, William J. Jorden, interview 1 (I), 3/22/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- it usually was in your time. J: I generally traveled with him and helped him in every way I could. M: You saw ~im acting as a personal diplomat. How would you estimate him as a personal diplomat? J: I would estimate him as absolutely superb. I've
- . and taking a trip by boat on the inland passage up to Juneau, Skagway. and all those small ports along the inland passage. and then coming back to Kansas. I can't quite rememberthe details; could have traveled at the time was by train. of course. the only
- was in the Territory--the Vietnam War had heated up, and I think that I would have liked to go on to Vietnam. I wanted to at that time, but this would have meant probably another week or so of travel and, also, I was aware that there were so many people going
- would have great difficulty to reply to them in Bulgarian. became what you would call fluent in the language. I never I did gain enough proficiency so that when my husband and I traveled around the country, I could order things from menus and, you
Oral history transcript, Lucius D. Battle, interview 2 (II), 12/5/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- : It may well be soon. M: When you left office this fall [1968], did you not travel to that area immediately on leaving office? B: Yes, I went out to Cairo to the official opening of Abu Simbel. They had invited Dean Rusk, and the Secretary obviously
- mayget a little trade and a little travel's nowtaking place, but in general I think it fair to say that the Chinese can take a great deal of satisfaction they have not movedfrom any of their positions. in that They have been absolutely firm about