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8277 results
Folder, "Olympic Medals Luncheon, 12/1/64," Bess Abell Files, White House Social Files, Box 7
(Item)
- . Collier Silver-swimming; Phoenix, Arizom . Mr. Douglas B. Cornell associated Press Mr. William N. Craig Gold-swimming; Glendale, California Mr. Stanley F. Cwiklinski Gold ..rowing; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Mr. Arthur Daley New York Times Mr. Sidney Davis
- 1/12 LBJ arrives Bremerton Navy Yard. 1/13 LBJ travels from Seattle to Chicago via Pacific Railroad. 1/16 LBJ arrives Great Lakes Training Station. 1/18 LBJ leaves Chicago for Washington via Pennsylvania Railroad. 1/19 LBJ arrives Washington
- INTERVIEWEE: JOHN CONNALLY INTERVIEWER: Joe B. Frantz PLACE: Governor Connally's office in Houston, Texas Tape 1 of 1, Side 1 F: Governor, you and I, I think, share experiences in this. We must have both been undergraduates at the time that Lyndon
- , 1971 INTERVIEWEE: DUDLEY T. DOUGHERTY INTERVIEWER: JOE B. PLACE: Mr. Dougherty's office in Beeville, Texas FR.~NTZ Tape 1 of 1, Side 1 . F: Mr. Dougherty, I suppose what we will do ,is start back at the time when you came in from the war
- for LUNCH (people already there) Phil Potter , Baltimore Sun Walter Trohan , Chicago Tribune Tom Collins - Newsday John Cauley - Kansas City Ed O'Brien - St. Louis Globe-Democrat Tom Johnson Bill Moyers Leonard Bill Marks Moyers Director, USIA natr
- of the neighborhood offices that community action was to set up. Based on that [experience]--well, at that point during the summer of 1963 after I graduated, we took time before we moved to Washington--I had an offer from the Justice Department, and accepted the offer
- in vermeil with Presidential seal and inscription (2) Photograph - autographed - in sterling silver frame with seal - "To Prime Minister George Papandreou, with sincere best wishes, LBJ" (3) Copy of "A Time for Action" - autographedlll. . . ."To Prime
- . ............. ·- .. -..... ___.. ·····-- . . . . .... ..... ~ ~ ... --··-·- ..-.... ... __ ., _..... _ .,_ ,_._. ___ ......,.._____, ,,,,_ - . . .. ····-·-..-·· _.. _........--·--- ·-~ -.. ( Wli!Z 025 PP DE ~ TE17 t.~T£ 2 7S7 FROM FRED PANZER TO GEORGE CHRIST IAN CITE VH79596 U~-J CLAS SUBJECT: PRESS LOG DECEMBER 2 1, 196 7 AM •s LD,J IN AUSTRAl..lA COVERAGE I S FRONT PAGED WI TH P I X WASH . N.Y. TIMES, BALT . SUN . BUT IT I S
- . JOHNSON DIARY 24, President bega n hi s day at (Place) the Time Telephone 1; . In Out Lo White House Day f or t . Activity LD Wednesday . . 5:40p Arrived . (include visite d by) OHare Airport, Chicago, Illinois into car with : Mrs. Johnso n Colonel
Oral history transcript, R. Sargent Shriver, interview 1 (I), 8/20/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , at least part-time, to trying to improve education in the city of Chicago. And we did a considerable amount. I also was interested in the interracial movement. I was president of the Catholic Interracial Council in Chicago for five or six years during
- The origin of Shriver’s interest in poverty-related issues; Shriver’s involvement with trade unionism, the St. Vincent de Paul Society and the board of education in Chicago; Shriver’s work in the 1940s with Eunice Kennedy on the Continuing Committee
- Entry Time j^o 1 : 1 In Out Lo 12:58p t White House _ Expendi• Activity LD ' C^ Joe 4, 1967 _ Day ' Thursday (include visited by) ture 6 Califano (pl) . /, . ___ ^-^__ 1:12p 1:16 George Koshy--young man from India who recently underwent
- a polemic. It was about all the gangster side of unionism in Chicago and elsewhere, bombings and killings and scare stuff. There wasn't anything in it that was inaccurate, but I remember the Congressman--and I did not write for him at this time--he sat
- A,.._ has madedilipnt me of its Fifth AvenueCoach in September 1966. At that time the City of NewYork wasrefusing to funds far operatingpurposesand ia search ing far and makincacquisitimls." make any payments against an awa~ the Company had received for its
- was a problem of course and I was looking for a job all the time. Ultimately, I made contact here with the Chicago Defender and Mr. Robert S. Abbott, who was then the publisher and owner of the paper. And February 18, 1936, I came on as a reporter
- :lis at ook i c hita people not er 0.1. f e r of' t his kind v.l i eh t hey ut I be lieve we c n sho ld be the mi ni um . t 100 with t en ya rs t;o ill or will not refus e , et 110 by t nki ng t he time ro ute in- stead of t he o sh r oute . 2
- to take is this: Do every thing we can to speed our drive for victory, because unless Hitler and his Italian and J apanese partners are de feated there will be only the cold, bleak hopelessness of a new Dark Age. At the same time, think hard and often
- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Abram -- Interview I -- 2 did my father, he never shot an animal in his life. And I met Russell then and I thought I had met the modern redeemer. I continued to have a relationship with Russell until the time when I
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 6 (VI), 5/23/1983, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- to be understood and dealt with in its own terms. Time after time, he thought for instance that you could have the situation in which the White House would not put out anything except when he wanted to put it out. He tried to abolish the press briefings a couple
- this service may be done out here in Chicago with a transcriber impersonal and only knowing of P and A. You remember our first meeting with Johnson and others present. I was busy at i 2 the time and to me you were just another boy in a group. lieve, M L
Oral history transcript, Lawrence F. O'Brien, interview 29 (XXIX), 11/3/1987, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- president, available time had elapsed. G: What about the New York haggling, the New York delegations; did you make any effort there to--? O: This convention, incidentally, turned out to be far less rancorous than Chicago. We had wondered about what might
- Committee's recommendation to allocate California delegates entirely on the basis of popular vote; Chicago Mayor Richard Daley's offer to split the Illinois delegation; parliamentary decision-making regarding what constituted a majority of delegates
Oral history transcript, William J. Jorden, interview 1 (I), 3/22/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- . Prior to that you had Prior to that you had been a New York Times State Department reporter. Does that pretty well get tbe last ten or fifteen years? J: It does except my last public service was as a member of the American delegation to the peace
- Forum National meetings in Chicago, in August of 1959, we set up the National Viva Clubs using as nucelus the statewide GI Forum groups in 24 states. M: Did it upset you any that Johnson was thinking about running for the presidency at the same time? G
- of running for political office when I was in high school, and so one step led to another and it turned out that I did manage to win a couple of offices. A great many other people, especially when I was in college, had ambitions. lone time thought
- ; Federal Aid for School Construction is on the agenda. The meeting continues past the noon opening of the Senate. LBJ flies to Chicago at 4:45. That evening he attends a dinner at the South Shore Country Club where he is met by John Connally. 1960
- VHITE HOUS E dat DENT LYNDO N B . JOHNSO N DIARY President bega n his day at (Place ) THE !1 Time Telephon ! 1 In Ou tL 12:11a t e APRI WHIT E HOUSE Da e fort Activit oL D Jo 9:00a Presiden t awak e 9;31a f Harr 10:12a. t Ji 10:15a t
- - - and still have spare time during the working day t_odo something else. Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote 'The Scarlet Letter" while working in the Custom House in Salem, Massachusetts. Herman Melville wrote ''Moby Of.ck" while holding down a government job in New
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 21 (XXI), 1/7/1987, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- at that time. And picking up the Baltimore Sun, I found this long interview with Reynolds in which he was talking all over the place about Johnson. I got hold of the White House operator and she found Reynolds. I said, "Well, Mr. Reynolds, aren't you going
Oral history transcript, Robert H. Finch, interview 2 (II), 6/19/1990, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- of it. He also had, if you'll recall, even before the Chicago convention, his knee that became infected and he was hospitalized for a period of time. And that weakened him and in part accounted for his rather drawn appearance in the first debate and so
- education. P: I was born in Taylor, Texas, which is only thirty miles from Austin, but my parents were living here at the time and I grew up here until we moved to West Texas. We moved a lot of places in the next few years, and I came back here in 1933
- of surplus wheat as a stop- have begun to run short of gap measure to me 't Jndinn wht•t1t hy th ('nd of 0
- with the minjnn1m of repression; that the second is to ex, press and act proportionate values in the use of time and emphasis;: that such approach, of course, will encourage intellectual honesty, intellectual curios ity, kindness, clarity, and above all
- Estate Corporation, Chicago, Illinois. John DeGrove, Professor, University, Boca Raton, by Robert Wood. Florida Florida. Coleman Woodbury, Professor University of Wisconsin. Age 35. Atlantic Recommended of Urban Affairs, STATEMENT ON AJA1'0Al~L
- to the "Douglas Commission" after Commission Chairperson, former senator Paul H. Douglas), including correspondence regarding appointments to the Commission, material related to administrative matters such as Commission staffing, meeting times, meeting locations
- . From 1936 through 1963 you were associated with the Chattanooga Times as a reporter, then Washington correspondent, and finally editor of the News Focus service. This last period was from 1958 to 1963. In 1963 you became a columnist for the Chicago
- to be linked to possible "outside influence" in the above captioned racial disturbance which took place from June 27-30, 1967 ~ . · WILL BROWN- .believed to have been in Buffalo_ only a few monthso He is from Chicago, but has been all over the .country. LEON
- , since I am a Catholic priest now. However, my people having so many children--and this was the time of the First World War, the currency and the money all went down, there was inflation and my people were poor--they couldn't send me to the seminary. So I
- . 2) Salutation: my nickname, "Ep". You have always addressed me by 3) This Thomas Ross 1 column re the CIA and Rostow is a syndicated column distributed by the Chicago Sun-Times to several hundred newspapers. It seems to me it would be a good idea
- Intelligence Agency personnel. Some materials in this file unit relate to substantive foreign affairs and national security concerns of the time, including developments in Vietnam, a memorandum regarding the presence of Communist flag vessels on the Mekong
Oral history transcript, Lady Bird Johnson, interview 1 (I), 8/12/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- used to ask me to tell him over and over, "How many husbands did you say she had?" And he knew darned well, because he had heard it several times. And, "How many children did you say she had?" G: Did she ever talk about your father's youth? J
- of a high school. I did some work at the University of Cincinnati during that time. M: You were teacher of history in 1940 to 1941 at Darrow School in New York. H: In New Lebanon, New York. M: And then shortly after that you must have gone
- ; Doug Cater; Califano; enforcement of Title VI of Civil Rights Act; first set of guidelines; trouble in Chicago with Mayor Daley; Keppel’s resignation; Dave Seeley; Pete Libassi; de facto segregation; racial isolation; teacher militancy; Education
- by staff members in an effort to train local agency director s in the carrying out of the equal employment opportunity policy. This report also indicated that the time required for complaint processing was reduced from an average of 130 to 85 working days
- 11-8-1/Califano, Joseph LA 6/Copper FG 400/MC LG/Chicago · FG FG 11-1 FG 816 · HU 2/ST 5 LG Box No~ #1750 sent to Central Files from Mr. Joseph Califano's Office on the above date containing folders and miscellaneous material; 1.·· Copper