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  • I'd eat dinner downtown with Mr. and Mrs. Gray. We were friendly, and Mr. Johnson didn't dislike him, and goodness knows, he wished the president of Humble Oil and Refining and the Pews with Sun Oil and everybody else would vote for him, but he
  • of security in the hamlets and villages was the change-over as the sun set from control of the area by the Saigon government to control by the Vietnamese communists. Exit one, enter the other. And the night and the day made the difference, so our idea was, why
  • world, is the basic Peace is all becoming a dead and riven orbit is permission requirement that rock, saves our dear green earth rolling in lonely around the sun. bet~een life and death, and war seems simple enough
  • painting and Island of Rhodes - is the capital of the Dodecanese, which lie between Asia Minor and Crete, in the Aegean Sea. Legend says that Rhodes was the gift of Zeus to his son Apollo who endowed it with sun rays, thus known as the "Bride of Sun, 11
  • IV l 8 9 10 Pay lost Amount In Balance Column ART DISPLAYCO., INC. -0- This 1 to be press later mittee de on Sat. , Oct. 3, 1964 used on Sun. , Oct.. 4, 1964 to entertain the on the whistle stop t ain prior to its take off 1n the week. I
  • c h o p p e r , p i c k up A . W. , a n d go t o t h e H ayw oo d.' T h e r e w e got in the b oat. T h e day w as w aning la te , but the sun w a s s t i l l b r i g h t an d R o b in and I c l i m b e d up on the top d e c k , w ith a b la n k e
  • o m ic MEMORANDUM THE W H I T E H OU SE W e d n e sd a y , A p r il 8, 1964 WASHINO T O N Page 6 The sun c a m e out and lit up the Y e llo w O val R oom w ith fu ll g lo r y , I had the f e e lin g that i t w a s the r ig h t thing, the a p p
  • in Houston, Texas, May 1968. WELCH, Honorable HARTMAN, Texas. Fred, Louis, Mayor, Houston, ,Texaa EdLtor and Publisher, TM Baytown Sun, Baytown, WILKINS, Chester A., Exec. V. P., Greater Houston Convention Visitors Council, 1006 Main St., Houston
  • under the sun, and they tell me I've got to do something!'" And he said, "I told him, 'no, Lyndon. If you go down there and start campaigning, you'll lose two hundred thousand votes. You're the majority leader"'-- or was it minority? F: He became
  • [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