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- it for about a week. Then I telephoned back and said that my first inclination had been to do it and that the more I thought about it, the more I was anxious to do it, and I would welcome an opportunity to talk to Mr. Johnson about it. B: What did you and he
- ! Did you have any political occasions to work with Mr. Johnson in this period? H: No. I recall having, oh I would say, two or three telephone conversa- tions with him. I'd just call up and want some information on legislation and what it was about
Oral history transcript, Bourke B. Hickenlooper, interview 1 (I), 9/19/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- what should be done? H: I don't [think] there's any question but what the decision to send the troops in had been made a little before that, because while we were there in the White House, the telephone was open most of the time to the Dominican
- recall whether he ever talked with you about whether he should or shouldn't get into this? S: Oh yes, yes, the first time was by telephone. F: He was using telephone back then! S: Yes. He called me-- I very frankly told him that if Senator Russell
- to bed until about five or five-thirty, so I had no communication with Mr. Hunt. G: I presumed that you learned by phone at six-thirty in the morning; is that right, that Kennedy was considering . . . ? B: Well, Bill Moyers was a telephone boy. He
- in private meetings, either in bipartisan meetings or by telephone. F: One of the early burdens that both President Eisenhower and Senator Johnson had to face was the problem of Senator Joseph McCarthy. H: Yes. F: Both were criticized for not being
- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 14 M: Did he call you as a commission member sort of as an informal adviser from time to time? H: He was supposed to have been a great telephone user. He may have called my predecessor as chairman, John Hannah, but I
Oral history transcript, William Reynolds, interview 1 (I), 6/16/1975, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- him. G: Would he generally prefer to do these things in person rather than over the telephone? R: My work with him, generally speaking, was on a personal basis rather than over the phone, but I think that was because I made an effort
- , because we had helped in a very substantial way in electing them. was constant. So the contact with President Johnson from that time on I would say that every week there would be two or three telephone calls and visits. I was in the White House
Oral history transcript, Eilene M. Galloway, interview 1 (I), 5/18/1982, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- on the Hill came to a stop at that point. Any- one who had been working on guided missiles at all was automatically launched into outer space. So Senator Russell telephoned me and asked me to write an analysis on the impact on the United States
- : No, I would simply call the White House on the telephone and tell the President what decisions the space agency had made with respect to missions where critical decisions had to be made. But these were not discussions nor were they on my part a request
- "Well, how would you like to pick up the Washington paper tomorrow and read that Lyndon Johnson had died in the home of his best friend?" And his face got sort of white, and he went over to the telephone, a wall phone, and tried to get a doctor
- the CIA. What happened to intelligence in that case? M: We had no advance notice of it. advance notice of it. I don't think that anybody had any I learned about it by a telephone call from Moscow telling me that Khrushchev was going to be removed
- Arms Control Disarmament Agency--had frequent occasions to deal with Mr. Spurgeon Keeney. M: Do any of these sort of stand out in your mind? Were you there, or were these primarily through telephone conversations? D: Mostly, I think it was Mr
- know, everybody was at lunch and everybody left his lunch untouched. What happened to you in the next three or four days following the assassination? touch with the new President? ~'l : He got in touch \vi th me, yes. F: By telephone? l.J: Yes
Oral history transcript, Edmund Gerald (Pat) Brown, interview 2 (II), 8/19/1970, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- uninstructed delegations . him about it at the White House . I talked with I think I talked to him on the telephone . F: But he wasn't going to-- B: He wasn't going to put his name up at all . He wanted a delegation, of course, that was very friendly
- , we were in a recess and Mr. Rayburn was the only one there from the House and Mr. Truman was over there from the Senate--he was Vice President--and the telephone rang and Mr. Rayburn was sitting at the desk like this, answered it, says, "It's for you