Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

162 results

  • Newspapers Publishers Assoc -- Albany Times-Unio Albany, NY Jack Tarver, Atlanta Constitution, Journal, and Journal Constitution, Atlanta, Ga William Davis Taylor, Boston Globe, Boston, Mass. W. D. Maxwell, Chicago Tribune, Chicago, Ill Palmer Hoyt, Denver
  • an evening of music and reminiscences of days in the Johnson White House and travels around the globe in Air Force One. 6 Historian Michael Beschloss, who listened to and transcribed all of President Johnson's taped tele­ phone conversations released thus
  • the--what is that newspaper--? It's to the President from Tom Johnson, and it said it was from the President's middle desk drawer, "Gardner disappointed--" L: Yes. I couldn't find what paper that was in. C: I think that appeared in the Boston Globe
  • the resignation of Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, John Gardner. The President received it with regret. In view of the premature stories in the Boston Globe and the NY Times, I am releasing to you shortly the exchange of correspondence, although we
  • " by Amerigo Vei;pucci, dated October 19, 1476. This Mter to his father is the only recorded Mter by Vespucci in an American collection. (Below right) The Bailly Globe, made of copper in 1530 by Robert de Bailly, based on maps drawn by explorer Giovanni da
  • Boston, it is rather obvi­ ous that you've got a very large Irish vote just to start with. But in Kansas City, Pendergast took over in a city that by a survey only had about 7 to 8 percent Irish names. We don't even know if they were all Irish
  • ..·- IN;.ERCONTINENTAL U. F. 0. RESEARCH INSTITUTE ORIGINATOR OF PROJECT-G COOPIERATION OF ALL ANO DIAIICTO .. COLMAN 0" THE ANALYTIC NETWORK - /GLOBE/, NATIONS, FOR THIE U.F.O. ONLY GLOBAL SURVEILLANCE INFORMATION. 315-150
  • Reserve Bank of Boston, Boston, Mass. ER.PF, Armand G., New York City FAm, Marvin, American University, Wash., D.C. FALK, Adrian, Bay Area Rapid Transit, SFran., Calif. FELDMAN., Myer, Wash., D.C. FITCH, Lyle c., Institute of Public Administration, New
  • - - unmistakably simultaneously the - - reduce the in the face of Soviet threats. with limited in annual without as we can reasonably build-up open to the Free concessions is aimed as far ahead they one and not the of the globe where that the non
  • it, but I have been in a lot of situations and I need to show you this--all right, tie this Holmes Alexander article. It was in the Boston Globe, with "A new life just beginning." So I went over to the House and had a conference with [John] McCormack and I
  • for the Boston Globe ever since he was a young Congressman, when he first came down here. from the start. And I had a lot of admiration for him right He was a very diffident and attractive young man. From the very first time I saw him I found that Mr. Kennedy
  • and attending funeral); Moyers and Ralph Dungan (re: Pope’s funeral); Bobby Baker; Gussie Busch in Tampa; Les Carpenter (re: Boston Globe article); Liz Carpenter (re: John Mashek article on her salary and duties). Meets with Mr. Lofton and Eugenia Adams (winner
  • winner David Shribman is Washington bureau chief of The Boston Globe. He writes a column that appears in more than fifty newspapers, and another for Fortune magazine. He appears frequent! y on television's "Face the Nation" and ·•Washington Week in Review
  • collar and sleeves of white silk. 37. Weinberg Silk suit••• white ribbed••• sleeveless••• and underneath a beige silk bMuse. Rembrandt White linen coat. o. o no sleeves•• o fastened with black globes. o o over a straight black linen dress, falling
  • campaign against foreign spies. He was an official U. S. War Correspondent in the Korea, Inda-China War, with assimilated rank of Colonel, U. S. Army. His syndicated column, "After Hours" circles the globe ... other writings appear in Saturday Evening Post
  • in trans­ portation and a new policy for our merchant marine. I will ask for funds to study high-speed rail transportation between urban centers. We will begin with test projects between Washington and Boston. On high-speed trains, passengers could travel
  • 13, 1966 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: ACTION Heart Operation for Dominican Boy You will be interested in a moving story in which our Embassy and militaryfurces in the DR and the Boston Children's Hospital Medical Center worked together
  • ratings for three successive years. According to the April 15, 1958, issue of the "Boston Globe," John P. Gardiner, a retired State Department Foreign Service employee, had appealed a ten-dollar fine imposed on him after his con­ viction on a charge
  • ooun­ independence of America, 1a an event that all Ohtiatendom. It baa, to a vast extent, those civil and religious libertiea, engages the of oontinent, whioh are unknown in any other of the globe! ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •o my
  • have also appeared in The Atlantic, American Heritage. the Washington Post. the Los Angeles Times. and the Boston Globe. From 1998 to 2003 he was a research fellow at the University of Virginia's Miller Center of Public Affairs. "And that was the story
  • was plagued by indifference and actual discontent through­ out the war .•. Pennsylvania was so full of disaffection that it was the despair of the patriotic party ... upstate New York had long been indifferent and Tories abounded." 2 Even in Boston James
  • Globe &: Mail editorial on Pears on' s troubles of last week, and the other is a report from Ralph Bunche about the troubles J:hat U Thant is having in delivering his Vietnamese message to Hanoi, Peking, and the Viet Cong. ~Jf) ~ McG. B. Copy
  • parts of the globe, no matter how close or far apart their political views may be. In a way, the light touch of Yuki may have been a genius bit of Presidential diplomacy. If Yuki didn't make it into the President's office, he was usually invited out
  • parts of the globe, no matter how close or far apart their political views may be. In a way, the light touch of Yuki may have been a genius bit of Presidential diplomacy. If Yuki didn't make it into the President's office, he was usually invited out
  • . They reversed it. Well, father was a civil contracting engineer. from Boston Tech. He graduated He built railroads--many of the eastern railroads. When he was but thirty years old, he built the foundations for the Williamsburg Bridge. That was, I think
  • , 1964) .. .. ··.'· ;,,_::'}":·~ school distric~ a public accomodations .,.,, •I. 'J • I endorsed bill. So. I've done something about it. 11 (Goldwater to the Republican' .:1 '. .., Convention's Platform Committee, July 10, . ' .. ;J •' a. I 1964; Boston
  • that will be powered by a linear induction motor. And next Monday, we will accept delivery of two jet-powered trains capable of speeds up to 170 miles an hour. We will use them in a two-year test between Boston and New York to discover whether-people who say they love
  • Committee. June 16, 1942 El1.ot1 Knox and the President. Mrs. Reid - Ingersoll-then the columDiste perhaps. Telephone talk with Ingersoll. June 16, 1942 This man sees only high class people in New York City, Boston, Phila­ delphia, Pittsburgh
  • , INt. CORD MEYER, JR.-Boaton, Maas. formerly U.S.M.C. PAUL MOORE, JR.-New York. N. Y. formerly A.U.S. RICHARD L. NEUBERGER-Portland, Ore. formerly A.U.S. PAUL C. SMITH-5an Franclaco, Calif. formerly U.S.M.C. DIGGORY VENN-Boston, Mass. formerly U.S.M.C
  • , when he said that Kennedy couldn't have gotten the Ten Commandments through Congress., But on the other hand there was a real, I don't know, I hate tee word charisma. M: Hero, somebody from the Boston Globe called him. R: He was gallant
  • to weapons that ~~ show up in northern lati­ t We need a globe-girdling 1y1tcm, KaRning all directions and sufficiently. accurate to pinpoint a satellite 10 that we could 1CDdup a defensive vehicle to intercept iL 1J • Pioneer ;,.,;e,tor aatcllitc1, poised
  • WlllfflTTT 7 'fiamber of fommerce "'- ~ ~ ./ • BARWICK. BOSTON• COOLIDGE• MEIGS• OCHLOCKNEE • PAVO• THOMASVILLE EISENHOVffRPLAZA,THOMASVILLE,GEORGIA• THOMASVILLE - THOMAS COUNTY Popul at i on: Approxi mat el y 21, 000 - Cit y Approximately 37,000
  • and development by DOT Office of High Speed GroundTransportation-----------------------------------------------TurboTrainsdesigned for service between Boston and New York ----------­ Table I-Summary of Coast Guard's search and rescue workload, fiscal year 1967