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  • Alvin and Sam Rayburn. They both sort of treated him like a son. Lyndon always said "Yes, sir" and "No, sir" to Alvin. MLG: Did he call him Senator Wirtz? VFD: Yes, Senator Wirtz. He had been a state senator. extremely attractive man. He
  • involvement wives will be a four-day the South which Mrs. Johnson will from home• had whistle stop take on her own. Washington October 6 for a four-day departs Cities Charlotte, Pensacola, on the tentative Columbia, ~bile, chug Biloxi
  • to catch up. M: Were you surprised when Lyndon Johnson accepted the vice presidential nomination? P: At that time, yes, sir, very much. It's sometimes difficult to look far back with all the things that've happened since then and really appreciate how
  • doing some research work . Then Tom [Thomas C .] Hennings [Jr .], who was running for the Senate in Missouri, asked me to come back--Missouri happens to be my home state-­ asked me to come back and work in his campaign . I, in a sense, went back
  • of Senate Democrats; John Sparkman; Paul Douglas; Paul Butler; Matt McCloskey; Americans for Democratic; Charlie Murphy; Albert and Mark Lasker Foundation; 750 Club; Ed Foley; Liz Carpenter; Ralph Hewitt; Bob Berry; Dave Lloyd; Jack Kennedy; Ted Sorenson
  • INTERVIEWEE: CARL SANDERS INTERVIEWER: THOMAS H. BAKER PLACE: Governor Sanders' office in Atlanta, Georgia Tape 1 of 1 B: Sir, do you recall if you met Mr. Johnson any time before the 1960s while he was still a senator? S: Oh, yes, I had met Mr
  • at Stonewall. You have My two sisters, Rebekah I was conceived on the Ranch and born January 31 right after we moved to Johnson City in November 1913. So I used to kid Lyndon all the time that more people came by to see my home than they did his. G: Your
  • , didn't you? H: Yes, sir. I had gone to the House in 1928 as representative of Gonzales County and had gone to the Senate in 1930, representing the Nineteenth Senatorial District. Going back just momentarily, my two years in the Department of Justice
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh November 8, 1968, in his part-time home in New Orleans, Louisiana B: I have the machine on now, so if we can go ahead and start. I'd think a logical starting place, sir, would be with when you first met Mr. Johnson. C
  • I called to see if I could see him when I was home and discovered he was in NewYork City I reached him there and he came down for the Gala. First we went to a Department Party which was a very gay one with some 600 people from this Department who
  • General S. E., 1948 Andress, Ted, 1948-54 Andrews, Jesse, 1952 (de) Antillon, Ambassador of the Republic of Guatemala, ca. Appleby, Paul, 1938-39 Arant, Douglas, 1955 Arnold, Hon. Thurman, 1948-57 Arvey, Jake, ca. Ashford, Harvey, 1952 Assistant
  • PAUL DOUGLAS
  • LBJ IS MEETING WITH DOUGLAS AT TIME OF CALL; LBJ ON HOLD 0:34; CONTINUES ON NEXT RECORDING
  • WH CONGRESSIONAL RECEPTION LAST NIGHT; LBJ'S LETTER TO CHARLES BUCKLEY; O'BRIEN DISCUSSES INDIANA DUNES BILL, TRUTH-IN-LENDING BILL WITH DOUGLAS; EDMUND MUSKIE
  • Douglas, Paul H. (Paul Howard), 1892-1976
  • PAUL DOUGLAS
  • LBJ IS MEETING WITH DOUGLAS AT TIME OF CALL; CONTINUES FROM PREVIOUS RECORDING
  • O'BRIEN DISCUSSES TRUTH-IN-LENDING BILL WITH DOUGLAS; EDMUND MUSKIE; INDIANA DUNES BILL; LEE WHITE
  • Douglas, Paul H. (Paul Howard), 1892-1976
  • Wynn, Douglas
  • Telephone conversation # 5209, sound recording, LBJ and DOUGLAS WYNN, 8/25/1964, 9:33PM?
  • DOUGLAS WYNN
  • DOUGLAS DILLON
  • "LBJ RANCH"; WEINBERG ON HOLD 0:35; DOUGLAS DILLON IS MEETING WITH LBJ AT TIME OF CALL
  • Dillon, C. Douglas (Clarence Douglas), 1909-2003
  • Macarthur, Douglas, 1909-1997
  • Telephone conversation # 10841, sound recording, LBJ and DOUGLAS MACARTHUR II, 9/26/1966, 6:11PM
  • DOUGLAS MACARTHUR II
  • to it. B= All right sir. Have you had at any time during your career any direct contact with Mr. Johnson, either as a Congressman or Vice President or President? W: Yes, I have had some, they've been rather infrequent. While Lyndon Johnson
  • INTERVIEWEE: HER~lAN TAUIADGE I NTERV I El4ER: THO~1AS H. BAKER Mr. Talmadge's office, New Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C. PLACE: Tape 1 of 1 B: Sir, to begin at the beginning, do you recall when you first either met or had any knowl edge
  • called me, about ten o'clock at night; I had just gotten home from the White House. See, LBJ would never let me use the cars and chauffeurs there except under extraordinary circumstances when I could rig it. You can do a lot of things through personal
  • oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Whiteside ~- I -~ 3 But I also had access to the records of some rental property that they had. Dr. Evans had a garage apartment behind his home that had a room and a half
  • ; selling Real Silk hosiery; LBJ’s parents; visiting in the Johnson home; entertainment; Dr. Evans and LBJ; Professor Greene; 1941 and 1948 campaigns; Deacon Wright; origin and activities of the White Stars; the Black Stars; social cleavage between local
  • ] Dictabelt transferred to the White House Tapes Collection. Q [1966] Quotations [ca. 1967] Undated Theodore Roosevelt quotation and summary of lecture given by Senator Paul Douglas on March 27, 1967, including a quotation by Leo Tolstoy. R [January 1966-July
  • DINNER AT MY HOME L AST NIGHT ATTENDED BY ". ·-·~:· ..../':~:~'.~ ...... ,....:
  • on involvement in the war. But at least it began, 1940, with a happy note, with the official appointment of Senator [Alvin] Wirtz, and that meant he and Kittie Mae were coming to Washington and taking up residence, and we would have more of the close ones at home
  • , Senator Douglas, and some others in the Senate who really sought the position, and, as I say, they used the stratagem, I think partly because they didn't want them on the Policy Committee at that time. There was a little power struggle between one group
  • : -, with Mrs. Johnson Lynda and Capt Charles Robb Capt Wm. Douglas Davidson Luci and Pat _ _ _^__—— Miss Warrie Lynn Smith Ramsey Clark Barefoot Sanders Dean Griswold mf, gt, Jim Jones -—^...^^^^ ^""III"*""* Stephen Pollak 1To —- ^ —] S:?,Qp 1
  • Return office Pierre Salinger in / out 12:12 pm /12:15 Paul Douglas) Larry O'Brien Myer Feldman /12:50 - Paul Douglas out McGeorge Bundy Walter Jenkins Mr. Collier Mr. Collier out - Secretary Rusk, Secretary Mann, McGeorge Bundy in f t t f f f t f t t
  • . Valenti to second Lynda in Wisconsin at Mike Phenner's home LUNCH--W/ Mrs. Johnson, Me Mr. & Mrs. Valenti Dr. Turchin--no answer, so hold up Douglas Cater Marvin Watson Joe Califano George Christian Dam September 4, 1966 White House ^^ SUNDAY Activity
  • on in two different parts of west Texas. Estes' business headquarters and his home were at Pecos, in the trans-Pecos area, a region which extends from the Pecos River about 200 miles west to the Rio Grande. Pecos, a town of about 13,000, is county seat
  • ./^ ay ~ 1 (include visited by) ture ^ PREMIER / 6:00 p 6:45p H. E. Eeti. Lynden Pindling Premier of Bahamas President saw the Prime Minister • 6:45p Sir Patrick Dean, Ambassador of Great Britain at the suggestion of Sen. Smathers. ^ 6:45p Senator
  • to you, you have any changes or corrections or additions--anything like that. Has that ever occurred? A: No, I think that won't be a problem with us here. M: Sir, you came to Congress just two years after Mr. Johnson ran and was elected
  • as Paul Douglas used to be, absolutely uncompromising and never gain a damn thing. Or they can come as Kerr and Johnson did and as Kerr once said, "I'd rather take home a sack half full to my people than a full sack with the bottom shelled out
  • challenge and. great .. experience I 've ever had. . B: · I can imagine .... How were you .·notified of your appointment, sir? J: :I had a call at· home about five o'clock in "the afternoon .from Ramsey . . Clark, and Ramsey said, ''The President's
  • to me he can com e in and talk t o me there." m f replied , "Yes , sir . . Mr. Bund y i s here. " Reply : "Well, tel l him i f h e wants t o tal k t o me . h e ca n talk t o m e there , too." G Reedy General Clifton To Cabinet Room to to Admiral Harry
  • industry, disregard human life? Suppose I say no, what else would you recommend? General Wheeler: Mining Haiphong. The President: Do you think this will involve the Chinese Communists and the Soviets? General Wheeler: No, Sir. The President: Are you
  • to LBJ Ranch via helicopter w/ Mrs. Johnson, Judge Moursund, J.C. Kellam January LBJ Ranch 16, 1965 Saturday Returned to Ranch & to office Discussed guests on AF-1 - wanted all of his friends that have been w/ him at home (Texas) for so long
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh April 21, 1969 B: This is the interview with Sterling Tucker. with just a brief bit of background. Sir, let me begin here You were born in 1923 in Akron and have a B.A. and an M.A. from the University of Akron. You joined
  • INTERVIEWEE: CHARLES S. MURPHY INTERVIEWER: THOMAS H. BAKER PLACE: Mr. Murphy's office in Washington, D.C., Tape 1 of 1 B: Sir, last time you were talking about briefing former President Truman on the behalf of President Johnson, and after the tape
  • -Fulbright natural gas bill through the Senate immediately, but he is going to encounter opposition from Senator Paul Douglas of Chicago. Chicago’s Negro population “has been seething” since the recent murder of Emmett Till, from Chicago, in Mississippi
  • for an increase for House Members after the War, I met considerable criticism, and always in my talks at home took time to defend my action. It was my practice to call for questions after my speeches. One day in Perry County I called for questions and one little
  • a relatively small staff in those days. In those days Congress stayed in session only about five months out of the year, six at the most. They'd be home by June. Most of them had left their families at home, they didn't establish residences in Washington
  • home town. In the airport, I found myself in a long queue at Customs. I [was?] longing to get to the top of it, not to keep that distinguished gentleman waiting. I was behind fifteen hippies, every one with assorted baggage. Every straw bag and every