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  • assignment. So there was this animosity. But this goes on in every administration. I can't believe that any White House would operate without this interplay of egos and clashings of ambitions, all sort of like satellites circling the sun. F: Did
  • if they wanted to march on the side of the road in the hot sun. It was all right. But I still worried about their safety. told the President that we could handle the matter, but I had visualized at that time that it would take about five hundred national
  • --no, Stephen F. here about sun-down. Austin. F: - Did you come because you . • . ? W: Oh, we were interested in the campaign, of course. F: Did you know it was going to be a close election, or did you just come? W: Oh, we came because we wanted him
  • think that there is some truth to the story that they did resent certain aspects of it. On the other hand, Jack called me up, and in fact, I was out with my children skiing. They were skiing in Sun Valley, and I got a call from Rusk out there saying
  • /exhibits/show/loh/oh 15 him since the wartime days. I met him first in 1942 when I went to Teheran with Prime Minister Churchill and went up to Moscow at that time. I have seen him intimately. He's stayed in my house in Sun Valley and he's come
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 21 And we were doing some good things in science, we had a number of--the Year of the Quiet Sun--we had earlier wound up the International Geophysical year, and I remember during that period I went down to the Antarctic
  • , and in fact I had a room downtown but I was out there to get away from it. He was sitting out there with the sun beating down on him and he had his old preacher's suit on and was sweating. I don't know." He said, "You don't have any choice. for, you've got
  • about bluebonnets and wildflowers, and we loved to go on long walks in the woods and still loved the picnics and the cookouts, you know, all of that. there. And loved Barton Springs, sunning and swimming We'd double-date and triple-date very often
  • Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Saturday, October 19,1968,7:30 p.m. at his residence, 140 Sun Way, San JI.ntonio, Texas L: ~ly first contact with Lyndon Johnson was in the year 1941. There was a strike of pecan
  • dying in the heat of the day, and found out that we were eating pork and after being served pork, the men were allowed to go down to the PX and eat ice cream afterwards and then march. They got out in the hot sun and we had a few deaths, so right quick
  • about coming in when the sun goes down and telling their experiences of the day. Everybody went in a different direction or took a different stand or something, then they'd come in and tell their tale of what they saw and what happened and all, around
  • . Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Phillips -- II -- 20 P: No, no. Rising Sun was the first resettlement-pacification thing that was started before Harkins
  • , obviously. If there ever was, and I assume there was, any enemy troops there, three days before the first landing craft left, the LSTs, they were gone. So it turned into, as so many things did, a massive, totally fruitless, frustrating walk in the sun
  • into that sun; it was about four or five o'clock in the afternoon. I got just plain glasses and I bought a pair for Randy and a pair for me. I asked him, "Is Lyndon in town?" He said, "No, he just left, but Sam Houston is." "Yeah? Where's Sam Houston?" Well, he
  • on the outskirts of Munich. Munich is located on the outskirts of the Alps. You are standing in Dachau military--they are, not the other things--and the sun rises, and it's red--things you don't forget--and cold. You had no clothes, no nothing, just a jacket
  • , there isn't any subject under the sun that doesn't fall upon the President's desk to be solved. There's no question that deals with the people--and it's the kind of increase in activity that just can't be helped. had to encompass more and more. It's like
  • can still shut my eyes and see it, [is of] him paddling up and down that pool out there at 4040 on a raft and Juanita walking back and forth taking dictation . While he got his recreation Juanita got a walk in the sun . G: Well-­ LBJ Presidential
  • time there's a tragedy, the cranks and those people who just want a day in the sun? W: Not as much as we expected. Very little. Very, very little. Some depositions were taken that I'm sure were of crank type, you know, but in the first place we had
  • , that room was left open--unoccupied. fearful that The sun Everybody was woulc--because of the symbolism that it had been i~ occu?ied ~y Sheroa.~ Adams--somehow or another take one member of the sta== or a~d stick then on top of the others. =o=~:-£i7e
  • minute was utilized. was keeping him in shirts. Now, one of the logistics, of course, You can imagine how you would wilt down a shirt. M: You can do that in an hour or so. W: Oh, absolutely, in the hot sun. So we had quite a logistics problem
  • under bluin1 sun Jan. 23 we could hear uplosians as EDPtian bomber1 struck Ketaf a1ain-this time with. U m,h-explo­ sive bomb■. The craters, most of them misses, were fresh when we arri~. With alight variations of detail, m,en-and women of Ketaf
  • &tion 1• onr. 1 •••hiac fNt after &11 ot P. SUN ~at )"OU are in•n ■1;e and pur Olm. .,. r.br,a17 18, 1941 ~Ulll to Ha.%'0141 Proa a who weigh• 204 pounda todq'. Leanne on .. ten.pound. N~uoing trip, 1. •YI l&yl I t hank you tor your Clcmena
  • the breaks in "blurbing. 11 'When a competitive space contract is current, we find the Herald Tribuae and the Times, the Sun, and the World Telegram printing "crap" for profit. But of course, the real profit is a clean quality daily printed product. 4
  • of Monday last, headed, "World Food Survey Shows Where Aid sun Is Needed. War's Hunger Aftermath Hit­ ting Hardest at China, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Poland, Yugoslavia-End of UNRRAaBlow." Thestoryisaround-up from New York Times correspondents all over
  • leaving the scene, a storm broke. neath the pelting rain, the spectators scattered. Be­ When an officer went back to check the area he found no one on the streets. A fe minutes after 7:00 _P.M., the Selective Enforcement Unit, tired and sun-parched
  • went back to check the area he found no one on the streets. A few .minutes after 7:00 P.M., the Selective Enforcement Unit, · tired and sun-parched, reported in from the races. A half hour later a report was received that -500 persons were gathering
  • in tho r-a~~lrc-6 tr.~ or througb other political !e~si~illty a~.~ con•C(iuences of sun·• illa:nce CQVcra;zc tltroust1
  • a group of men, and all over the city they pulled down billboards so that when the sun came up the next morning every Lyndon's boy, Jake . si gn in Austin ha d disappeared. F: They were good at t hat. In my nei ghb orhood inl964, mine was about th e