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- LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] INTERVIEWEE: Oren Harris INTERVIEWER: Paige Mulhollan M: Let's begin, sir, by identifying you. More on LBJ
- at 30th Place, N.W. In fact, Mr. Johnson's home was right across the street from Mr. Hoover's, maybe about ten yards to the left, otherwise they would have been facing each other. The Johnson girls, Lynda Bird and Luci, would occasionally go over and pick
Oral history transcript, Tom and Betty Weinheimer, interview 1 (I), 4/23/1987, by Ted Gittinger
(Item)
- , somewhere along in there when he bought some of the properties that adjoined us. G: Did you know LBJ when you were a young man before you left home? TW: No, I did not. I mean I'd seen him, but as to knowing him personally, I did not. I knew him when I
- 7 DIARY Orville L. Freeman Secretary of Agriculture Volurre #8 ' . t D·I ARY Orville L. Freeman Secretal'f .of ;Agriculture VOLUME 18 (June ·6, 1967 - March 29, 1968) . ; . ., ~) June 6, 1967 -- 10:30 pm at home. here. Things
- National Archives and Records Administration http://archives.gov http://www.lbjlibrary.org COLLECTION DETAILS and FOLDER TITLE LIST National Archives Catalog https://catalog.archives.gov Collection: Papers of Douglas D. Richards, 1/23/1973 - 2/1
- Richards, Douglas D.
- Folder title list, Personal Papers, Papers of Douglas D. Richards
- that I didn't the advantage of. When I was about in the fifth grade then the era of consolidation hit the one-teacher schools. The three one-teacher schools were put together at the crossroads a little farther away from home, and called the Crossroads
- the country and the push for "open housing?" :?) Why were the hands of the police and National Guard tied? 3) What is the REAL reason behind the drive to register all firearms? 4) What wilJ the NEXT RIOT be like; and what can YOU do to defend your own home
- : Hello! CULBERT: Hello, George Christian? CHRISTIAN: CULBERT: Yes, sir. This is David Culbert calling from Baton Rouge. couple of questions? Now, is this a convenient time? May I ask you a I know that you are leaving the country tomorrow
- . COHEN INTERVIEWER: DAVID G. McCOMB DATE: December 8, 1968 PLACE: Mr. Cohen's home, Silver Spring, Maryland Tape 1 of 2 M: First of all, to identify this tape. It's with Wilbur J. Cohen, secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare
- well Now, if you were down there in the Delta and you were going to get this piece of land you had lived right next door to for a long, long time, why, that's home. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B
- he performed odd jobs. A year later he returned home where he worked on a road construction gang. In 1927, he enrolled in Southwest Texas State Teachers College at San Marcos, Texas. He earned money as a janitor and as an office helper. He dropped out
- had your shots." I said, ''t-lell, no, sir." He said, ''Well, if you're leaving in the morning with me to go to Australia, you'd better go get your shots; and you'd better get your bag packed." F: Did you have a passport? T: No, I didn't have
- Westmoreland; Kaiser estate; joint statement from meeting of country leaders; story about LBJ and President Park of South Korea; LBJ gift-giving; trip to El Salvador; taking Central American leaders home on Air Force One and related security problems
- . Military Assistance Command, Vietnam], is that right? K: That's what very few people realize. I went over there to be his chief of staff. G: And when was this, sir? K: This was in May of 1967. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL
- thing. G: All right, sir. 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 DePuy
- /loh/oh Stavast -- I -- 3 and using up fuel like crazy, and a lot of times picking up a tanker on the way out so we'd have enough fuel to get back to get back to home base. But at night, you always could see them when they were shooting at you. Daytime
- to run for the Senate. you want my real honest opinion based on r~ If observations and all, I think if Mrs. Stevenson had still been alive that she may have wanted Governor Stevenson to run for the Senate, but I think he would have gone home
- iri six ·national publications ilri~ .plores readers to "meet the · Mississippi you haven't heard about." The ad pictures such scenes as l;>athing .beauties .on Gulf Coast beaches, ante-bellum homes and Jackson's ·.,- · · modern downtown business
Oral history transcript, Russell M. Brown, interview 1 (I), 1/10/1978, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , 1978 INTERVIEWEE : RUSSELL MORTON- BROWN INTERVIEWER : MICHAEL L . GILLETTE PLACE : Mr .-Brown's home in Palm Beach, Florida Tape 1 of 3 G: Let's start with the circumstances under which you met Lyndon Johnson in 1934 . B: The date
Oral history transcript, Adrian S. Fisher, interview 1 (I), 10/31/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- at me for ten days in the joint hearings that followed the relief of General [Douglas] MacArthur. When President Truman relieved General MacArthur and MacArthur made that magnificently demagogic speech-- M: It was piped in, as I recall, to every high
Oral history transcript, Lady Bird Johnson, interview 38 (XXXVIII), 8/1994, by Harry Middleton
(Item)
- , and Lyndon had thrust upon him, in July of 1955, more work than he should have done. He should have been home mending fences, tending to his own re-election. And he had been trying to fill two roles, as majority whip and substituting for Lyndon, so we bore
- Ma t t o mjdr's offic e wit h Ji m Jone s t o read paper s o n desk e Christia n pl Templ e pl t t o South Grounds and t o the Sout h Portico - t o greet th e Prime Ministe r o f Mauritius Sir Seewoosagu r Ramgoola m Then to th e Flowe r Garde
- DIARY Resident began his da y at(Place) Time Telephone 11 In Out Lo the White H 1, 1968 °USe Day Activity LD Monda (include visited by) 11:37p Remarks by Secy of State Dean Rusk 11:40a Remarks by The Ambassador of Great Britain, Sir Patrick
- over this particular issue? T: No. Are we still talking about the time in 1957? G: Yes, sir. T:· t>{o. G; Of course that brings us to a very big year, in 1961. T: Which I recorded very thoroughly in Swords and Plowshares. G: Yes, sir
Oral history transcript, William Hunter McLean, interview 1 (I), 5/11/1971, by David G. McComb
(Item)
- the miliary service. OM: Then you went into the Army for awhile? HM: I went into the Marine Corps in May of 144 and stayed there until the conclusion of the war in the Pacific. DM~ Did you go into the Pacific--? HM: Yes sir, I was at Okinawa in radar
Oral history transcript, Willard Deason, interview 8 (VIII), 4/15/1988, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- wanted it that way, Jim,” which I didn't of course. Nobody else in Texas did. I was told second hand after I moved to Washington--but coming from very responsible sources--that the night after Jack Kennedy was buried there was a meeting at a big home
- have b een able to work out. He had his first talk •. vitl: ~he UN );iediator yes terciay and reports an at:r.'lospnere of pes sir.1ism. Ho\ve \·e= , we hope h:.s iurther discussions beiore talks wit:i the Greeks and Tu:ks begi:: early the week of 13
- Mr an d Mrs Ji m Jone s mf Jan 1, 1969 The President departed the Main Ranch - driving to take Rev and Mrs N) r man Truesdell home and to take Mr. Breasted and son to his car which was on Ranch Road One Back in the Main House To bedroom for NAP
- of the State Department Moyers Hon Kenneth Galbraith Mrs Johnson NYC ch Baltimore Secy Douglas Dillon out at on in JV's room talking signed mail To mansion w Jake Jacobsen OFF 8.03 to JV with President RECORD staying December 4 , 1964 White Hous e
- Feb White Awake Marvin AG Wednesday House breakfast Watson 3 1965 calls carded in JV bed Katzenbach Secretary Dean Rusk at home George Reedy Bill Moyers To Ova To Ova ll Offic Office ew w// Jac Jac k Valent i and an d Marvin Marvin
- New York ushers calls ofc checked President w/ 4 Italian artists Fenoaltea List tto o DT Presented the Italian artists of portraits done by outstanding Feb White To Oval Hon Senator Paul Adlai D Douglas Martin Ala John Macy
- , 1974 INTERVIEWEE: MARIE FEHMER CHIARODO INTERVIEWER: MICHAEL L. GILLETTE PLACE: Ms. Chiarodo's home, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 G: I think when you left off, you had finished the first day of the presidency. Yo u had not moved into the White
- INTERV I a'IEE: FREDERICK G. DUTTON HnERVIE~JER: T. H. BAKER PLACE: Washington, D. C. Tape 1 of 1 B: Sir, let me mention some things here because I think they ought to be in the transcript. 0: Right. B: You were the Organizing Director
- -to strike home da . • . matically the anger and frusriots. . : , • • .' , frustration. I ~ sas.s~nation. Clark's answer· drew . :ap- 'A, Chicago police order. •.to : With. trouble 1~ ~OO -~ities tration of Negro ghetto dwellplause from his audience •at ~se
- INTERVIEWEE: BUFORD ELLINGTON INTERVIEWER: T.H. BAKER PLACE: Governor Ellington's office in the State Capitol, Nashville, Tennessee Tape 1 of 2 B: Sir, if I may read just a little background material. You were born in Mississippi and attended
- a home and a livable place, a comfortable place. F: Did the girls ever volunteer any ideas to you? W: No, I don't believe so. F: It was primarily Mrs. Johnson all the way through? W: Only a fe\v connections [with the girls]. I think I was called
- , that they used cavalry in that battle . In the late evening a few times a week that the Congress man could get home, if he would agree not to do it on Saturday or Sunday, because he played polo on Saturday and Sunday, [why not let him] exercise those ponies
- , when it opened? G: Yes. A lot M: They were all NYA people .. There was Connally and Syers--do you know Ed Syers? o~ them were NYA people. And the one who bought the funeral home, the Cook funeral home. G: That was Sherman Birdwell I think
- said, "O. J., when I hired you I thought you told me that you could type." I said, "Mr. Johnson, what I told you was I had taken typing." He said, "Do you know what an old Oliver typewriter is?" I said, "Yes, sir." He said, "Well, your typing looks like
- -second. Some have been colorful; some have been listless; some have been innovators like Mr. Saxon and then some have been controversial like Mr. Saxon. M: But you have been the first career professional. c: Yes sir, that is correct, as far as I know