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  • 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
  • MORNING SENTI N EL MARTI N Sunday Evenino Morning ORLANDO SUN D AY REPORTER -STAR S EN TIN EL-STAR ANDERSEN PUBLI SHER NORBERT CONSONNI SEC RETARY•T RE ASU RER THE SENTINEL-STAR WARREN ROBERTS E D IT O R O RLANDO MORN I N G SEN T INEL
  • in every home and restaurant. Of course, if Congress refuses to allow the Government to continue to aid producers while holding down prices, as sure as the sun shines either the producers or the consumers must suffer. We are hoping to get a program worked
  • , tbe ••••paper ia Clearwater , flori4a. TbeJ bave Just bought a bouae wblcb 11 being r•••delled but tbe1r #reaeat addre11 Isa 305 S~rlag Court or tbe ne•fpaper will always reacb bi ■ -Tbe Cle,rwater Sun. ffl1 son, Joba a. Jr . 11 ■ arried aad baa two
  • about:tb.t~Y!.~~ . • He··a1so, criti.clzeci Vice ~•- wel ,I - ._...,...____ ,,,_ --- CHICAGO SUN TIMES October 13, 1967 ,"Y 1 ., - •CHARLES BARTLETT Fortunarne·· 1I No . I WASHINGTON-One of the most chilli.ng and fortunately one of the least
  • because of the cheap m rtgages. And the highways that would allow you to come back if your job wa in the city-but it deprived us of our tax ba e. And then you ha the infusion of an enormous number of dollars into the Sun Belc by the federal government
  • and Dad spent at the LBJ Ranch that this feeling was genuine-that, in fact, the President and Mrs. Johnson often rode up into the hills to watch the sun set in the distance. I had re­ mained unconvinced. In the end, my strongest feeling was bewilderment. I
  • . because they are our national heritage just as our mountains and streams, our forests, and the sight of the fading sun playing on our des­ erts, giving us the experience of re­ gional identity and pride, saying, "This is New York or Texas or Cali­ fornia
  • of the place captured many as they watched the Texas­ orange sun disappear behind the horizon, its beams shimmering on the river. Johnson's famed Texas barbecues were the talk of the international political set. his favorite musi­ cians playing country, western
  • leaving on August 2 to go to Sun Valley and take a vacation. I had done everything I could and tried to keep my law practice together and put in this time on the side, and I was tired. So I went to Sun Valley on the second. 24 LBJ Presidential Library
  • feels. But at any rate, this liaison job--and, of course, with the entire world converging on Washington for the funeral, with getting material and handling the high-level visitors, De Gaulle, the emperor of Ethiopia, and everybody else under the sun
  • MEMORANDUM THE W HITE HOUSE WASHINOTON Sun d a y , J u n e 2 5 , 1967 Page 1 It w a s o n e o f the s t r a n g e s t d a y s I 'v e s p e n t a s F i r s t L a d y . It b e g a n v e r y e a r l y a t th e R a n c h - - 6 :3 0 - - c o f f e e
  • a y s d e t r a c t e d f r o m h is dignity. A l a r g e w o m a n r u s h e d up a n d p in n e d a w h i te o r c h i d on m e . The p r i e s t 's s i s t e r gave m e a h an d m ad e sun bonnet - - blue and w hite ch eck ed . A l l th e l i t t
  • things to do, but I've got to get away. couple of days in the sun to shake this damn thing. II I need a He said, "Well, if you don't knock off anybody. If there's an empty seat in the plane, it's all right with me. II Kenny O'Donnell was still
  • that Pueblo happened. You know, we thought, "Darn it, he just can't have more than twenty minutes of fun for anything under the sun." DBH: Everybody said how relaxed and happy he was, and he had pictures of the grandchildren he showed everybody. LB: Once
  • , of the church in Honey Creek. However, I wrecked my car, but I wasn't hurt. That's beside the point. But what really happened was, it was in August, the evening setting sun got in my eyes, a car came against me, and with the setting sun. I tried to avoid the car
  • and America, but among all nations under the sun and stars. I have directed the distinguished Secretary of State and the distin­ guished Director of NASAto bear this in mind every day in connection with their labors. requires The hard business of foreign
  • INDIANA NEWSPAPERS INCORPORATED THE HUNTINGTON HERA.LO THE HUNTINGTON PRESS HUNTINGTON. INDIAN,- THE REPORTER BUI LDING TH I:. VINCl!.NNES SUN THE VINCENNES COMMERC(Al. VINCENNES• INOIANA LEBANON, :: INDIANA "l'HE LIN'l'ON CITIZEN LINTON
  • need.s a father and a moth,or, ,s o s po• gga a.re deeided .pon whioh are not to be &at.en, but to be le.id 1uide m.­ t .i l the baby ohiok 11n other hon laya eggs which we have fo:r Wey n ot say, ants t0 oome o,, it and s•e t he sun. If the child