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354 results
- Farm Loan Board. Now President, Trust Company~ New Jersey. Member of the flnt Hoover Commission's Task FOl'QeonLend ing Agencies. Member of Commission'sTask Force on u,dfng Agencies. Braln~rd, '9orge C., Cleveland ,Ohio. Execu tive. Cornell
- . But the President said in effect, "These are strange till8s, Lyndon, and I th~ you will find June 28 will not be an unhappy day for you." One does not quote the President unduely, but I think at the moment I have the right to make plain the taot
- BY DEALER TO INTERNAL SECURITY AUTHORITIES WITH FULL DETAILS RE UNCL,\SSIF I ED Department of State TElEGIW UNCLASSIFIED PAGE 02 JIDDA 04421 1714182 TYPE WEAPONAND IDENTITY PURCHASER• ARMS IN HANDS OF DEALERS MAYBE ~OVED FROM CITY TO CITY WITHIN
- of ideas. In fact, I think most or the Judges are more concerned in legal debates than in establishing a system of Jurisprudence under which citizens may be secure. They do not sound like New Dealers or Old Dealers any more, but like first year law students
- and Wirtz convinced FDR that the tax case was inspired by anti-New Dealers in Texas, that they were-(Interruption) C: He would hug up an enemy that didn't speak to him, shake hands, walk across the street. And a lot of them he won back were very much
- . My chief activity was with Marvin Jones, and then the Agriculture Committee, on both sides of the Capitol. But I knew him as a young New Dealer, a fellow, congenial New Dealer. And then of course I became better acquainted with him during our
- Corpora tion, his source of supply in his fertilizer business and the source of credit for his grain warehouse start and expansion. He was doing business as United Elevators with five elevators (grain warehouses) and as the South Plains Grain Co., Inc
- of the Northerners that if they would only let this modest bill go through, they would get a better bill later.So he was playing it out of both sides. B: Did that kind of thing ever get him in trouble? M: Oh, it contributed to the "wheeler-dealer" part of his
Oral history transcript, Hubert H. Humphrey, interview 3 (III), 6/21/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , however. G: How did you get it through? H: Just by plain hard work and lobbying the living daylights out of people and getting the cooperation of some of my colleagues, like George Aiken on the Republican side, on it. G: Did Johnson help you
Oral history transcript, Carl B. Albert, interview 1 (I), 4/28/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- , as well as of the South--more probably western than southern. I've heard him talk about the ties that they had with the West--The Spanish background, the large Spanish-American population, the Great Plains regions. A lot of Texas, of course, is completely
- still owns stock in two of my companies but has been demoted from president to just plain stockholder, and most of my business is without his valuable ser,rees. It sure is a relief. I am sure that you remember E.G. Kinsbery of Austin , who used to own
- the Taylor's beautiful ante helium home, bearing its precious cargo. Underneath the pic ture he wrote: ' n December 22, such and such a year, the store in Karack, the T. J. Taylor Store, Dealer-in-Everything closed. In every fireplace in the Taylor home
- been covering presi dents from George the First to George the Worst.' Drawing on the barbed hu mor of H. L. Mencken, Liz recalled his writing "On some great and glorious day, the plain folks of the land will reach their heart ' desire at last
- HAMPSHIRE Coming to a General Store is no new experience for me. Sorne of my fondest childhood memories resulted from the general store of Karnack, Texas which my father owned. The sign "T. J. Taylor, Dealer in Everything" was almost literally true
- STATES' THERE ARE• TWO, LAWS, ONE COVERING PISTOLS AND THE OTHER RIFLES AND SHOTGUNS. P ! STOL S • ANY O NE I N VOL VE D I N I S A LE OF"• P -I STOL S MUS T 1o BE IN POSSESS I ON PI STOL DEALER•$. LICENSE I SSUEO· E ·I THE R BY POL I CE C H I E F 1 0 R LO
- /26 Visits Dr. Travell’s this morning before leaving for Cleveland with Senator Young, Congressmen Feighan and Vanik, Ivan Sinclair. Addresses Urban League that afternoon and Democratic Leaders of Cleveland reception before returning to DC to attend
- -a-year men and on the so-called •radicals.• Believes must have some way of •getting together.• Believes the New Dealers do not defend themselves. Says it is difficult for a Democrat to get a job in many places, not because of Republicans
Oral history transcript, William S. Livingston, interview 2 (II), 7/19/1971, by David G. McComb
(Item)
- duties; Willard Wirtz; Harlan Cleveland; David Truman; Brewster Denny; Gardner Ackley and Livingston’s intended trip to Italy to see him; the candidates’ abilities to work with/under LBJ; riding in Air Force One from Austin to D.C. with LBJ; LBJ playing
- was a great New Dealer in my own thinking, not with any government association although I did do a little WPA project at one time. But Johnson, when he got involved with the youth-F: ._C: National Youth Administration . National Youth Administration
- leaders. 2/7 WH breakfast with JFK, Salinger, others, for pre-press conference briefing. Attends signing of Plans for Progress at WH. Flies to Atlantic City to address Automobile Dealers Convention and attends reception with Texas automobile dealers
- at about 2000 Ft elevation and they appeared to be _just plain B47 S ,but upon close obse1·vation they did not have any exterior stabilizers ,and·we1e about 50 o~- more ft long. • I pulled off the earphones and gT'abbed the cameTa which was equipped
- . y· J. ,t...k_ ,,{-ORN L . FENWICK J:~~, according to Tenney, is a weal thy gun dealer deall.ng in all kinds of weapons, tremendous q1:1antity, vast volume sales all over the country and to Canada. '!hat he is believed to be supplying the Minutemen
- SYMINGTON, Stuart, Senator VAIL, Thomas V. H., Plain Dealer WOODRUFF, Robert W., Coca-Cola Co. BISHOP, W. B. . .-.... :""':~~-- ~l 'PV~~ l. ' ·~ jl/jf . .._';, ~·· ...... '.," . ., I . OENEJtAL >~ !}$~~· "°"¥1
- was heavy-handed; he was high-handed, he was a dealer. You could go to him in private and say, "I'd like to get this done. Now how am I going to do it?" And he'd say, "Well, you do this for me and I'll do that for you." He was a great back scratcher. I don't
Oral history transcript, Margaret Mayer Ward, interview 1 (I), 3/10/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- . I walked in and I thought, well, he's been out mowing the yard, these must be shorts for mowing the lawn. They were just plain old boxer shorts. in. He was dressed I was the only woman there. The heck they were! He was unfazed by my walking
- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Provence -- I -- 15 P: Oh, yes. Yes, we went down, Harlon Fentress and a man named Kultgen here, a Ford dealer-M: How do you spell that? P: K-U-L-T-G-E-N, Jack Kultgen, J. H. Kultgen. and just a real leader among men
Oral history transcript, Frank McCulloch, interview 2 (II), 8/15/1985, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- -52 assault I saw, and they went down a ridge line. This was at the Ia Drang. There was an enormous massif to the west of Ia Drang Valley, and I can't remember the name of it. It loomed up four or five thousand feet off the plain there. The B-52s went
- maybe they were--1 don't know what motivated. them--jealousy, fear that this could make him Presid~nt, that they didn't want him to be, or whatever it was. They simply would not cooperate. B: Was there any just plain snobbishness in there, too? s
- represented kind of the wheeler-dealer image and not the liberal image. I remember particularly John Silber had been antagonistic toward me on it, wanting to know why I couldn't have gotten someone with more intellectual content. M: This is when Silber
- , an article from the 2/65 .Shepherd · GPO 10-7126H ?vf.a.gazine, he says e plains why a By_4~ec#~n of, the President: state of ~o~usiQn still exists after 10 years· o( hardship on the victims and waste of money. Douglass Cater · Special Assistant
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 3 (III), 6/7/1975, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- : Did he ever express that thought? R: No, but it was plain. He never said it in those words, plain just fron listening to him talk. grasped that. that point. Even [c. bu~ it was so Van] Woodward~_ the historian,. He wrote an article
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 4 (IV), 5/21/1982, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- --see, this is before I worked for Johnson. G: ~las it R: No. that Elk Hill [investigation]? It involved some New Dealer that was very unpopular with the oil interests. G: Oh, Leland Olds. R: Leland Olds! That is exactly it. Now, Leland Olds
- rsonally, think tha state 1B very atroogly tor How is your ooogres S?!'~ c om:ing e.long'r Fs Gosset 11 not a Hn Dealer. Ma I should like to get the results ot a newspaper poll out there. He ,ha• n~ oppoaitlon thia term. l .think. George Brown
- intormation regarding son 1mport1n~, it an individual. Location and address 1r a dealer or distributor. (3) I would also appreciate (1) The precise compilation. tion. (2) The definition race, the per or the importer, your advice regarding: meaning ot
- that. They were part of whatever little machine there was. In Cleveland, Philadelphia, New York, Chicago, you really had machines, fairly active machines. In Pittsburgh, there was a Republican machine. Not Pittsburgh, Harrisburg. Pittsburgh, we had--all right