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  • Motor Company. So in the 1930s, when Couzens was still in the Senate, it is thought by many--and I am one of those--that Senator Couzens was instrumental [in] blocking federal aid from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to the First National Bank
  • handled it from a police standpoint, et cetera. Governor Romney didn't march in that march and was severely criticized for it. So when the Selma thing took place, it was sort of a spon- taneous march here in Detroit. I went up a few blocks from City
  • , but it was not a transplant of a heart. was a bypass of the main artery in my chest. This It was completely blocking me off, and I only had ten per cent of the necessary oxygen going into my heart at the time I went into the hospital. F: It's a wonder you made it at all
  • which would be below the minimum rate, that there would be a lot of criticism or blocking of the program. So that wasn't done, and as a result it took a long time to get the programs going. So I think the immediate impact which Shriver had hoped
  • : http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Blundell-- 2 8 Tape 2 of 2 G: All right . B: Only in reference to what he said . G: Policy . We were talking about West Virginia . Well, how about a strategy of blocking Kennedy in West Virginia
  • lived about two blocks from the school in a big, rambling, old house with a sister and two brothers and an absolutely pixie, delightful family. The house was full of books and old family possessions, and it was just the sort of family you could write
  • and dishes and silver, of a sort, plate I'm sure, in two houses so that moving wasn't quite the chore that it had been for so many years. The backyard at Dillman was one of the experiences of my life, great big, half a city block, with lots of trees
  • having that tremendous fight. Remember that? Well, they really had a fight. Well, I was about three blocks from there, so I had to go past that, eventually. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson
  • near the hotel conven­ tion headquarters which was the Biltmore. So they gave us the New International Clark, which was two and a half to three blocks from the Biltmore. But it was an old, dilapidated, horrible hotel~ · dark, dingy; the beds swayed
  • there, they had two of them standing by. Of course, those things are a block long. So as we pulled up there, Rayburn saw those two gigantic planes there. Because Eisen- hower had commandeered General LeMay's plane to take it to India, LBJ Presidential
  • got to the downtown section. At each occasion he would get out with his bullhorn and tell the people how much he loved them, how much he was for them and they were for him, and so forth. And then he got into Congress Square, which is two blocks up
  • in the Post Office Department, which is just down from the White House a block or two. G: Were these paratroops, or do you recall? C: They were some paratroops, I believe, and some other infantry troops. We had quite a contingent of people. G: But never
  • all over the world. But in Rio it was a most dramatic thing. We opened a book at the chancery and another one at our residence, and over that weekend we had a line of people stretching for three or four blocks. It was continuous, day and night
  • , and the story of how he was prevented from getting off of the plane with the Kennedy casket is known. I was not witness to it because I was in the forward part of the plane at the time, but I do know the aisle was blocked. And, again, this was the Kennedy
  • was when I was out at Aspen on vacation. M: Naturally not when you were not two blocks away. R: I don't think he knew where I was. I was in from skiing and was taking a bath, and my wife tells me that the White House is on the line, so I wrapped
  • , and l intend to put it just the way it i s . This is just cheap pol i t i cs . If you want to •1ork foi· t~'? labor peopl e, you go work for the labor people, but I'm going to work for the Un i ted States Senate ." you could hear it for ten blocks