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- the--what is that newspaper--? It's to the President from Tom Johnson, and it said it was from the President's middle desk drawer, "Gardner disappointed--" L: Yes. I couldn't find what paper that was in. C: I think that appeared in the Boston Globe
Oral history transcript, Sam Houston Johnson, interview 7 (VII), 8/26/1976, by Michael L. Gillette
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- it, but I have been in a lot of situations and I need to show you this--all right, tie this Holmes Alexander article. It was in the Boston Globe, with "A new life just beginning." So I went over to the House and had a conference with [John] McCormack and I
Oral history transcript, Gould Lincoln, interview 1 (I), 9/28/1968, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- for the Boston Globe ever since he was a young Congressman, when he first came down here. from the start. And I had a lot of admiration for him right He was a very diffident and attractive young man. From the very first time I saw him I found that Mr. Kennedy
Oral history transcript, Helen Gahagan Douglas, interview 1 (I), 11/10/1969, by Joe B. Frantz
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- . They reversed it. Well, father was a civil contracting engineer. from Boston Tech. He graduated He built railroads--many of the eastern railroads. When he was but thirty years old, he built the foundations for the Williamsburg Bridge. That was, I think
- , when he said that Kennedy couldn't have gotten the Ten Commandments through Congress., But on the other hand there was a real, I don't know, I hate tee word charisma. M: Hero, somebody from the Boston Globe called him. R: He was gallant
Oral history transcript, Clifton C. Carter, interview 1 (I), 10/1/1968, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- is the next place on the route? S: The next from El Paso? We went up to Lordsburg, New Mexico. Went across over to Globe. G: Where’s Globe -- in New Mexico? S: Arizona. We crossed over the Hilo River and that was in Arizona. And it’s Sapira -that’s
Oral history transcript, Melville Bell Grosvenor, interview 1 (I), 4/28/1969, by Joe B. Frantz
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- Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Grosvenor -- I -- 10 F: Did Mrs. Johnson make any response at this time? G: Oh, I have got to tell you, that is where I met her. You see, we've got that big globe down
- editorial policy? B: No. No. The Post Dispatch--it's a funny newspaper. It's for some things and against other things and so forth. I've always been a supporter of the Globe Democrat, more so than the Post. G: There was a writer, Howard Woods, that wrote
- , now in its second year, for which postgraduate students are chosen from all over the globe - in perpetuity - which means that my name will exist for students long after I'm gone. They will study what matters most to me, the three elements of my career
- Prime Minister [Harold] Holt's funeral and circumnavigated the globe the other way, went to Rome trying to see the Pope. G: Did you go on it? D: Yes, I was on that trip. It was a remarkable trip. Lyndon Johnson presenting the Pope with a bust
Oral history transcript, Stanley L. Greigg, interview 1 (I), 12/5/1986, by Michael L. Gillette
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- problems around the globe, but, at the same time, it had some beneficial effects, naturally. If it boosted our standing in the world, so be it. I could feel that few could be critical of that. But also, if it was to assist in the farm economy, again, we had
Oral history transcript, Ashbrook P. Bryant, interview 1 (I), 12/8/1983, by Michael L. Gillette
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- ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Bryant -- I -- 3 B: Well, the matter that we're now talking about was the Globe Aircraft Company, that was one of them. The matter that I
- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 21 the globe reduced in size as it is by modern communications. On the other hand, we've discovered what it is to try to stabilize one small part, namely South Vietnam--the cost in men, treasure, and effort, national
- conservative. The newspapers are--Amarillo Globe-News, conservative, and those people vote conservatively. And it's purely the propaganda that's been drilled into those people's heads by the news media all these years. It's more or less true over the state
Oral history transcript, Roy L. McWilliams, interview 1 (I), 8/15/1979, by Michael L. Gillette
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- these old ceiling fans that were on Casablanca and so forth, ,and that was our air conditioning. He had two light globes under the fans so that every time the lights woul d dim and those fans woul d go around it It/as pretty strenuous on your eyes. G: I
Oral history transcript, Richard R. Brown, interview 1 (I), 7/25/1978, by Michael L. Gillette
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- in charge of the Office for Refugee and Migration Affairs we were trying to get the concept accepted of a world refugee year, with every country on the globe making some contribution to accepting or helping to support refugees . sional Record.. I needed
Oral history transcript, Joseph A. Califano, interview 24 (XXIV), 3/16/1988, by Michael L. Gillette
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- for pleasant luxuries or for idle pleasures. I recommend that you, the representatives of the richest nation on earth, you the elected servants of people who live in abundance unmatched on this globe bring the most urgent decencies of life to fellow Americans
- problems we had over the face of the globe, those discussions and the decisions were made in a group that consisted of the President, the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Director of the CIA
Oral history transcript, Kenneth E. BeLieu, interview 1 (I), 10/11/1984, by Michael L. Gillette
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- him to wear contact lenses. He would always take his glasses off in the hearing room, and one day standing beside the world globe there I said, "You know, boss, why don't you get contact lenses? I hear they're pretty good." So he went out and got some
- that summer- -the back way, the Natural Bridge and Globe--around that way. When I graduated from the normal school, I went up to Stanford and they told me that I didn't have enough entrance credits but if I stayed there and would pass every hour, every
- been published in the St. Louis Globe-Democrat-quite a ruckus started on the Senate floor. I called various people in the course of the afternoon to get some advice as to how I should deal with the problem. I called Bill Moyers; I called Dean Rusk; I
- guess he did his homework. Occasionally when I went in to see President Kennedy, in a very disarming fashion he would say, "Well, let's go over to the globe here and show me where your country is." He tried to use his ignorance as an asset
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 22 (XXII), 1/8/1988, by Michael L. Gillette
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- , and it was overwhelming. There is no doubt about it. We had the mightiest air force on the whole globe, and the result was that because we had this heavy advantage, we did not explore a number of new directions that other nations did explore. The Russians, for example
- has as far as the globe's concerned. It's got a lot of jurisdiction. Then, of course, here again I served with Australian officers in the war. I just went down as a guest, enjoyed it just as I did other occasions in the parliamentary union
- with them on a weekend evening and see how law enforcement was going. I reported once to the President on a program of replacing the glass street lamps-the globes--in the alleys in deprived neighborhoods because the kids were throwing rocks at the glass