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- , spent my time just preparing all those files. 11 unquote. I We took the charges one by one and I went back in the records and looked them all up, prepared replies. I remember that first speech down at the--well, just a few blocks from here. G
- . During the time after we moved out and got a little apartment. It was only about four or five blocks from where we had lived with the Brights. B: So usually, then, all of you would eat breakfast together and dinner together. RB: Oh, yes. Yes, we ate
- or even acknowledge his existence. So he motioned me to follow him down the back stairs, and the back stairs of this apartment led out onto a garbage place, little rock patio, and theres' a great big bush that blocked it from the view of the patio. So he
- the Eastern Intellectual Block, and their growing dislike or disagreement with Mr. Johnson. You are of this element. K: No, I'm not. M: Only in that you come from the east and you have been at what is considered the Ivy League institutions. how this began
- an effort by the Stevenson people to bring about a change of the results or a blocking of the certification of Johnson. B: r understand that you were asked to advise with the then-Senator Johnson concerning at least one of his subsequent campaigns
- : Yes, it is, if the word gets back. Shannon also I think tried to block Dr. De8akey's artificial heart project as I recall. ML: Oh, yes. Someone had made one. CL: What did you think of Cohen? Was he very much involved in what you were trying to do
- of Delaware in the last year or two--and Rhode Island. Or it might be a county, it might be a large city, it might be a township, it might be just a few blocks that are being annexed to a city--a lot of different sizes. B: And they pay you simply your costs
- . But it quickly illus- trates the things that are so apparent to us are stumbling blocks to the deaf. Puns! Play on words! They don't get them, you see. So it's a problem. M: And you would agree then with Helen Keller that blindness is the less of the-- E
Oral history transcript, Sanford L. Fox, interview 1 (I), 11/27/1968, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- one of our carpenters make it from a block of walnut, and then I made the holder part with two small pieces of the deerskin. It was the suede part and the pipe fits in it fine. When I went back to Mrs. Dunaway who happens to be the person who does
Oral history transcript, Donald Gilpatric, interview 1 (I), 11/25/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- a year I, and some of my associates, went over the ground of what was the problem. We were up again then for more funds - -as happened subsequently and had before. We got nowhere, particularly with Mr. Rooney's committee, so we were blocked on money
- before. And that people in the neighborhood felt, "well now, for the first time we are being listened to." And it worked where there evolved a sense that there was some real power in the neighborhood, power in the sense of the ability to block. One
- importance--the Non-Proliferation Treaty ,vas he fore the Senate. There were other legislative programs that had to go through that this was blocking. F: If you had to sacrifice anything, in a was T: ~he sense~ sacrificing Abe Fortas easiest thing
- their prices? G: Well, one of the companies that didn't move at that time was Inland Steel, as I remember. Inland Steel 'was headed then, and I think still is, by Joseph Block who is a very thoughtful statesmanlike person deeply concerned about the health
- of the ideas that carne out of HEW, or from the Office of Education, were blocked by the staff rather than reaching the President. H: Is this true? I would say that it was more likely that many of the pieces of legislation that we went to the Hill with were
- because Dallas is, the early part of next year, going to have ceremonies for '\ Kennedy Memorial, which will be some block and a half from the actual site. design. It's to be a rather simple It's to carry the passage of scripture from Ecclesiastes about
- this straight. You were in favor of the court packing, or you were against it? R: I was not favorable to that particular method of resolving the issue, but I did feel that some kind of reform needed to be made to prevent the Supreme Court from blocking
- from The Elms with the cars and the Secret Service following along behind. office. He'd walk a few blocks and then come on to the He gave no evidence at all, and I'm sure he felt no impa- tience or inconvenience for not moving in. Mrs. Kennedy wrote
- in the rearrangement of finances between the federal and state governments~ about where it stands; though and I still think today that that's I think the first step which was the blocking up of a great many of the categorical grants is being accomplished. I
Oral history transcript, Emily Crow Selden, interview 2 (II), 1/16/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- me up at Titche's to go to our house, I think. I'm pretty sure we went to our house first and then went together. came to pick me up. came in. But anyway, Lyndon Bird was driving around the block, and Lyndon Well, I must have met him before
- Smith -- I -- 27 S: Right downtown. They later made a sort of a business office out of it, and it was right down there not more than two blocks from the Rice Hotel, east I would say from the Rice Hotel. ES: Across the street from the post office
- then in the neighborhood that that voting precinct encompasses you build alliances of people who are willing to have coffee visitations with ladies in their block and hold meetings in their neighborhood to build up interest and concern, usually in people's homes. You do
Oral history transcript, Leonard H. Marks, interview 2 (II), 1/26/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- be a meeting between Kennedy and Johnson at the Biltmore Hotel which was campaign headquarters. We would go from there directly to the television program, but it would give us an hour to talk things over and to get ready. I arranged for a block of rooms
Oral history transcript, Richard S. (Cactus) Pryor, interview 1 (I), 9/10/1968, by Paul Bolton
(Item)
- back." She called back and said, "Mrs. Johnson likes the idea, so we'll get hold of Cliburn." And they did. Then they got to thinking that perhaps the weather might prove to be a stumbling block, and the forecast was not favorable, so they decided
Oral history transcript, R. Vernon Whiteside, interview 2 (II), 8/6/1985, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- office and started over toward the Rotary Club, which was about two blocks away, with a couple of other guys. twelve. When I got over there it was about, oh, ten minutes till We started at twelve-fifteen. said, "They want you on the telephone
- find a field across town or a few blocks away that was adequate, so they'd come back, and Joe Phipps would apologize, over the loud speaker, and he'd say, "Well, our pilot tells us that it wouldn't be very wise to land there. We'd blow the dust all over
- . I think Estes Kefauver was being nominated, and he was opposed by Texans, who supported John F. Kennedy. Is it true that Walter Reuther blocked that Kennedy move? N: I don't think so. I think it was more or less of an inspiration on Kennedy. I
- to block the access of a cabinet officer to the President. I think the answer to that is that the President has said time and again that anytime a cabinet officer desires to raise an issue with him, the President's door is always open. I believe
Oral history transcript, George McCarthy, interview 2 (II), 9/29/1981, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- /exhibits/show/loh/oh McCarthy -- II -- 24 Johnson to be the director, I guess, of OEO. Morse wouldn't stand for it, and he never did get appointed. And Morse was the guy that [blocked it]. Again, this was Bert's own problem in that we live in a political
- . And if that was the understanding, it worked out very well. There was none of this negative--very little of this negative stuff that is going on now with the Congress, especially the Republicans, trying to block what the administration is doing. I know some of the right wingers
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 24 (XXIV), 2/6/1990, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- . The hospital was just--it was about two blocks from the White House. Walked in, and there was Johnson and Pierre, and I forget who else. And there I was informed that I was the press secretary, and Pierre took me out and introduced me as the press secretary
- felt I had to do it, and I did, but what--it was a--we didn't get out of there until after three in the afternoon, and that was the time that I'd already been told that sometimes Communist units came out on the road and blocked it and stuff like
- shirt at it . wrong time . 19th--it's not called job was to build an apartment house just off Congress on 19th, 19th Street now--about three blocks down from right in there . Johnson Of course, the word all over town was that owned that apartment
- just didn't think we could do it . But that suited me, because I didn't think we ought to . M: You mean the Congress would block it? B: Yes . Congress has a peculiar relationship with the regulatory agencies, which I think it wants to maintain
- opinions, a man who his strong opinions . was rather difficult to know because of He was a well versed person and a philosopher and a close friend of our brother Herman who lived only a block from him . PB : In Austin? GB : In Austin . PB
- relations. B: ~{no are the leaders of those three groups you just outlined? Are they the obvious ones--McClellan, Dirksen, and Hart? c: \~ell, Se;J.ator Eastland is the chairman of the committee--is the leader of that southern block on judicial
- to be recorded. M: Oh, you can edit it out or restrict it, either one. C: [He] drove a few blocks and said, "I'm a man of few words. you or won't you?" were saying. And she said, "Where?" Will So they knew what we We said, seriously, that we would do
- go over six blocks from home. This is hard to believe, but we were trying to get into the cities, particularly in the poor areas where the people are. One of the things we did was to finance I don't know how many swimming pools in the cities, all
- the southern support. He was not blocking it, and he wasn't pushing it. G: As you look back on that period, particularly in terms of civil rights and social issues, what was his political philosophy? How did you regard him? C: That comes back to my