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- was reacting to the broad-brush, general, bird's-eye view picture, whereas the press very often--and with the inherent nature of its business, looking for the negative--would focus on the specific, the individual incident, the individual situation
- know when I was conducting the briefing, we would hand out something like forty press releases, which would just inundate them, including a press release from the National Park Service about some new species of birds that were seen in some National Park
Oral history transcript, Joseph C. Swidler, interview 1 (I), 3/11/1988, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- White House receptions, and somewhat better because my daughter, Ann, and Lynda Bird were classmates at the Cathedral School, became good friends and did a little dating together. When the people in their class at school had parties, the parents were
- /show/loh/oh 2 eX2.,;~?l(;, held ho.nu the speech to Hrs. Johnson there in his bedroom and say; in effec t; F: "Bird, ",hat do you think about this?" Hm.J long in advance did he start that speech? You might say five years in advance, in one sense
- best. Kansas Ci ty. Thanks for reminding me of the telegram I am to send to II That had to· do with a meeting I was runni ng, "Bird joins me in best wishes. Sincerely . . . " Well, he did appoint a woman. I really tried to find the best woman I
- , he called me and authDrized me to notify the Howard community. But the President carne out accompanied by Mrs. Johnson and Lynda Bird, and he made a tremendous impression. The people were so in tune with what he was saying that the whole thing just
- it made it worth doing too l that he did take it seriously . M: How many hours a day would you work? 0: I never really kept a record . I'm not an early bird . I got into the office 9, or 10 after 9, but rarely left before 8 :30 p .m . ; often took
- was godawful. That's what they thought they were going to do, you see, they thought, "We'll kill two birds with one stone. We'll re-establish the strategic reserve, not just for Vietnam but for the whole world, and for more important areas than Vietnam
Oral history transcript, William A. Reynolds, interview 1 (I), 7/26/1978, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- they always disclaimed that. I never heard anybody say he was leaving because of Viet Nam. But it was a part in Moyers and Goodwin and others getting out. And I had stayed. And across the hall from me was John Roche, an extremely intelligent bird, one
- TWA C-47 school which was a big transport back in those days, the old gooney bird. Went from there, made two trips down to South America with TWA, picked up a few flying hours, and we just floated around and for a while they just sent us from there out
- Johns on, and pointed ou t that thes e g uy s might take anoth er look a t these birds down in history; that these Texans weren't all that b a d; th at they were go ing to b e mi ssed in Was hing ton. Th a t is probably a typical reaction to a ma n
