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  • [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh in hotel rooms, on airplanes and cars to talk about everything under the sun. F: Would he open up pretty well? H: Oh yes, oh sure. You know he treated
  • employed to keep order at the races. At 5:30 P.M., a block from the waterfront, a photo supply warehouse was broken into. Forty-five minutes later, as gather­ ing clouds were shadowing the sun, two police officers spotted . three Negro youths
  • ~ .. / ; . • .. : . .•.· . .. . . . ·: ... . • ·•·. -- ...... . .. .. DE t.1Bl'l& llOUSJ• .......... -·· . .. . • • . . . . .:• -----.~-···...··-·--· .. . :_ . . .... . . . ·. ff.• • :' . . • ~··-- . ·-:, - ··- • • ' • • • TuH Wed Thura Fri Sat Sun Mon 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
  • .\ Ll.\S -r.; .:-,/1sJ1,·ti DALLAS t· 6aytown, TX Sun ,Cir. 0. 15.994) ~" 4 1990 Laniers to be at hellll of 6 I t·fi b eau 1 ca t·10n prograin Former Baytonian Roben Lanier and his wife, Elyse, of Houston will take over a Texas highway beautification
  • .\ Ll.\S -r.; .:-,/1sJ1,·ti DALLAS t· 6aytown, TX Sun ,Cir. 0. 15.994) ~" 4 1990 Laniers to be at hellll of 6 I t·fi b eau 1 ca t·10n prograin Former Baytonian Roben Lanier and his wife, Elyse, of Houston will take over a Texas highway beautification
  • { YEAR MESSAGE j i . I I! . January l> 1966 I My f6llow oountrymeni Today, the New Year's Day of 1966, m~rks 't he 'oonunenoement of 't ho 55th· year of the Republio of China as reckoned from the time when our Nounding Father, Dr. Sun Yat-sen
  • . t 1. Unhr l:atzenbach plana vl,f.t Secretary through March 11, 1967, accordance - followina - Sunday, Peb 26 MDaday,l'eb 27 Tue•d.ay, Feb 28 " " Lat• JIM Sarly AH AK n " 'lhurad.ay, March 2 It Priday, " lat-Sun, . ,I f ft Ma;rch
  • to stop at sun-down, and he said, "How about working another hour, boys? I'll turn the lights on." And cheered on by his ambition, 3 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories
  • ExpendiActivity LD n MONDAY Raul Castro, San Salvador, El Salvador (include visited by) ture Bright day, pleasantly cool; sun shining. President awakened by Paul Glynn He asked to sleep for ten more minutes Go ' up-dressed, had breakfast and Mrs. Fidel
  • was in the The captain announced that we had a very dangerous situation and for people to be calm~ i I I told the people around me to watch for the sun so we could tell where we were going. He turned southeast--the plan._,e turned southeast, and I knew
  • , were really almost threadbare. The upholstery in that end of the house takes very rough wear because the west sun streams in there and it doesn't last very long, but Mrs. Johnson just wouldn't do anything to the furniture until after the campaign. She
  • a great belief that labor unions are the only way that blacks are going to find their place in the sun. I'm not sure he is right, but that's what he believes. G: Can you provide any more details about Moynihan's appearance at the conference? A: Oh, he
  • Rusk and he asks McNamara; and he asks everybody under the sun, including Ted Sorensen, "What do I do about this?" And all of you, uniformly, are saying, "Neutrality means surrender of Vietnam to North Vietnam, to communism." B: Yes. D: And Sorensen
  • the war what they called Operation Dixie; they were going to unionize the South, what is now the Sun Belt. During the war and before, there had built up in the state a great deal of antagonism toward the militancy of the unions after the Wagner Act
  • f o od^ . . A n d th e n to d a n c e . -tt ;■ > -'■f V-- - 'M W ,' ' I t. w- .1 ■ ■< . I— ■ !. I. M EM ORANDUM ; .'■-'"v;;':'-. T H E W H IT E H O U S E .WASHINGTON Sun d a y , D e c e m b e r 4 , 1966 Page 4 / V So i t h a d b e e n
  • ; and the E d S in g ers o f C orpus C h r isti, who’s ^ w o rk in g on an a r t g a lle r y for C orp u s, to be b u ilt • by P h ilip Johnson. And from the p r e s s , the P r ic e D ays of the B a ltim o re Sun; and the Hugh P a tte r so n s o f L ittle R
  • sa id , " I 'd go on, and I 'd sta y . MEMORANDUM TH E W H IT E HOUSE f v WASHINGTON W ednesday, M a rch 27, 1968 get som e sun, have a good tim e , " . Page 2 So L iz and I w o rk ed p u t a p o ss ib le trip i/\it looks lik e we m ig h t go
  • of the sun breaking through. I went in Lyndon's room early, and there sat Jesse Kellum and Don Thomas, both in conversation with Lyndon, SANmZED 1 ■ Marvin and Jan came and went. — Y es, it begins to sound more like its sure that Lyndon w ill be leaving
  • h a r d and t h e o t h e r 140 o r so g u e s t s t h a t he w ould s h o r t l y send to Europe a Commission t o d i s c u s s j o i n t e x p l o r a t i o n s i n s p a c e , f.-It le a d in g to p rob es o f the sun and J u p ite r
  • - y - ' - . THE WHITE HOUSE S u n d ay, M a r c h 6, 1966 WASHINGTON i ' A nd n ow , L yndon h ad gone out to g e t the la s t sun w ith A . K r im s , and D ia n a . h o u se. ■ ’ Page 4 W . a n d the A nd I, h u ngry fo r e x e r c i s e , w
  • 6 '^ ~T 1963 N o v e m b e r 2 2n d (jO V A O It a ll b e g a n so b e a u tifu lly . sun c a m e out b rig h t and b e au tifu l. A f t e r a d r i z z l e in th e m o r n i n g , th e W e w e r e g o in g in to D a l l a s . In th e le a d
  • and then the sun came LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Johnson -- I -- 2 out
  • . But once out from under his watchful eye I lost my senses and we strolled the Boardwalk all afternoon in the July sun. I had to get a doctor for a second degree burn from top to bottom and it goes without saying that although the marriage was legal
  • . that. That's the same thing as saying the sun Can you shut people up? He never said If he had said that, I don't know what it would have gotten to because I don't know how you'd shut them up. But if he had said that then he would at least have made
  • go down and kind of lean back in the sun and think. He liked to have people around him, not particularly talking to him and bothering him, but just around enjoying themselves. And then he would use them as LBJ Presidential Library http
  • and all he could handle, but Johnson wanted a place in the political sun. That was obvious all along but he wasn't obnoxious about LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID
  • W: Yes. G: Did he have a specialty or a particular era that he focused on? W: Well~ he was real good on current events. He would come to eight o'clock class in the summertime when the sun was high in the sky at eight o'clock. He thought
  • ] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh NYA -- I -- 27 sun was coming down and his hands were blistered, and he just decided this wasn I t very smart. to school. Hi s mother had been tryi ng to get him to go
  • discoloration, and then the evidence of some damage is noted by a roughening or the appearance of warty, scaly growths. These occur almost exclusively on sun-exposed areas, face, neck, ears, backs of hands, in people who are susceptible. The fair-skinned, blue
  • it finished before the lights went out, so they said, "Come back in the morning," and we were playing with the gaslights that were on the wall that hadn't been used for years and all I could see was the place going up in smoke. I was very glad when the sun
  • in 1940 at a resort where you were recovering from ulcers . Tell us something about that episode . GB : Well, I was up there . I'd had hemorrhages and was pretty weak and thought I ought to go somewhere and just get in the sun and walk and take
  • , and such was the fervor that the New York Sun ran a note, "Positively tomorrow at three o'clock Theodore will walk on the waters." It was something of that tre- mendous populist movement. As we thought of it at the time, President Theodore Roosevelt, whom the President
  • Street to invite the Prime Minister. He never mentioned it to me. He talked about everything else under the sun but not that. M: When did you come back to the United States? A: I came back just before Christmas in 1967. M: How much dissent
  • , pretty weather . about 75° , and the sun was out . 17 It was a good San Antonio day ; it was Cantinflas would get up and say, "Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year," and he would sit down . But this wowed the crowd and they loved to see him
  • ? I'm paying you not to go out and socialize but to be right here when I need you." As President he certainly had an enormous belief that he was the sun and everything else revolved about him. I'm sure somewhere along the line, probably from me
  • magnitude, whose word rang round the All we would do, therefore, would be to make a gesture if we followed your counsel. The cause is already irrevocably lost." earth, and upon whose flag the sun in its heaven never set. One of those empires, Mr. President