United States -- Politics and government -- 20th century
Found in 33 Collections and/or Records:
Oral history interview with Edith Green
Oral history interview with Edith Green conducted by Cynthia Harrison on December 18, 1978. Green represented Oregon's 3rd District in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1955 to 1974.
Nan Wood Honeyman papers
The collection consists of scrapbooks, personal and political correspondence, clippings, invitations and announcements, pamphlets, and ephemera of Nan Wood Honeyman, the first woman from Oregon to serve in the U.S. House of Representatives (Democrat, 1937-1938).
William Dean Kendall papers
Oral history interview with J. Keith Kennedy
Oral history interview with J. Keith Kennedy conducted by Jim Strassmaier on June 8, 1988, as part of the Senator Mark O. Hatfield Oral History Project. Kennedy was staff director for the Senate Appropriations Committee.
KPTV interview with Jackie Kennedy and John F. Kennedy
Interview with John F. Kennedy and Jackie Kennedy conducted by John A. Salisbury and broadcast on the Portland, Oregon, channel KPTV in 1958.
Oral history interview with Janet L. Lamos
Oral history interview with Janet L. Lamos conducted by Michael O'Rourke from June 3-8, 1988, as part of the Senator Mark O. Hatfield Oral History Project. Lamos was executive assistant to Hatfield beginning in 1980.
Oral history interview with Sam H. Mallicoat
Oral history interview with Sam H. Mallicoat conducted by Clark Hansen from May 23-27, 1988, as part of the Senator Mark O. Hatfield Oral History Project. Mallicoat was Hatfield's chief of staff from 1967 to 1973.
Charles Linza McNary papers
Documents, correspondence, scrapbooks, and ephemera relating to the public service and personal life of U.S. Senator Charles Linza McNary of Oregon.
Interview with Wayne Morse and campaign workers
Interview with Wayne Morse conducted as part of his 1968 re-election campaign. Morse was a U.S. Senator from Oregon.
Oral history interview with Wayne Morse
Oral history interview with U.S. Senator Wayne Morse conducted by William Plymat in 1967. The interview was originally distributed on a disposable plastic 33.3 rpm disc, as a thank-you for a donation to the World Peace Broadcasting Foundation of "a dollar or more."