Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

1491 results

  • major revisions. time the next morning to have it typed up. Fortunately, we had The President again called me back in November of 1961, at which time Ambassador Bunker was also asked to return. on a television show, "Meet the Press." Press Club here
  • Pearl Hall. F: Right. W: I've got to go one step further on that. In addition, through Mary Pearl originally, I met Horace and Mary Virginia Busby. And I was instrumental with George Hoffman and Horace Busby in forming the local Foreign Policy Club
  • First meeting LBJ in 1958; forming the Austin Foreign Policy Club with George Hoffman and Horace Busby; a visit to the Ranch about 1958; refusing an appointment as general counsel to the army; surprise appointment as chairman of the Administrative
  • to listen to the voices of the establishment, the club, the committee chairmen, that annoyed many of the liberals, who thought they now had the horsepower, had the numbers to write their own ticket. Many of them asked for the caucuses, because
  • it? Rallies on occasion could be put together. But your best exposure was street-level, the factory gates, walking the main street of a town and then tie in a Rotary Club luncheon, a Kiwanis breakfast, meetings that take place on a regular basis
  • paratroopers patrolling Connecticut Avenue. George Christian and I got together and went over to the National Press Building, because that's your best view of the riot area, from the National Press Building--National Press Club--and saw a lot of rather strange
  • , 1983 INTERVIEWEE : KEYES BEECH INTERVIEWER : Ted Gittinger PLACE : The Cosmos Club, Washington, D .C . Tape 1 of 2 B: Yes . There was an example of that, where an ambassador was not fully in control, in Laos, in Vientiane in the early sixties
  • , Fred, Bureau of Public Roads FASSIER, Jean, Redwood City, Calif. BRCWER,David, Sierra Club FAVOO.,Haner, Morgan State College BURDICK, Quentin N., Senate BURRELL, Berkeley G., Natl Business League FISCHER, John, HaJ'per Magazine FISHER, larold W
  • ; for the registrar with the collection; operating the word procc~sor for the oral history department and for the past two year!), in the archives. At the luncheon held at the Austin Country Club nine volunteers were recognized for their service to the Library
  • Press Foun­ dation looked at this problem. Held at the National Press Club in Washing­ ton, D.C., it brought together some re(X)rters who cover the White House (or have in the past), and Presidential press secretaries from the last five administrations
  • to be a Book Of The Month club selection. "A Call to Conscience: The Plight of America's Children" is the title of a symposium scheduled for Sep­ tember 19-20. Planned by a group consisting of the Library, The Uni­ versity of Texas and community representatives
  • the right to sit where they wish on the bus? Impossible! Give them the priv­ ilege of staying at the same hotel, using the same restroom, eating at the same counter. joining the same club, attending the same classroom? Never! Never! "Well this cry of 'never
  • s going. ^ y t \c d t ± d ls L * ~ . N a tu r a lly , I c o u ld c o u n t on two of m y o ld 7 5 t h G r a n t a n d M r s , H a r r y S h e p h e rd of C a lif o rn ia , club m e m b e r s , M attilee A nd th e r e w as the lo v e ly a n d s m
  • to the Coliseum fo r the L i p p i z z a n e r h o r s e show, L i p
  • at the same counter, joining the same club, attending the same classroom? Never! Never! Well, this cry of "never" I've heard since I was a little boy, all my life. And what we commemorate on this great day is some of the work which has helped in some
  • , maintained at the headquarter ■ of the JU.nga CountJ Co■-uniat PartJ, New York. The saae source also advised on March 5, 1944, that the na■e of Wachtel'• wife, Leonora, was ■aintainecl on a list of naaes of newlJ elected officers ef tbe Bath Beach Club
  • reloading, by a single function of the trigger, or any muffler, silencer or device for deadening or muffling the sound of a discharpd firearm, or any bomb, or bomb shell, blackjack, slung shot, billy, metallic knuckle ■, sand club, sand bag, or bludgeon
  • .. SIVES~ I 2o EXCEPTIONS GRANTEDTO MEMBERS·PUALIC SECURITY fORCES ANO ARMY PRIVATE GUARDSERVICES- AUTHORIZEDTO· CARRY WEAPONSONLY AFTER APPROVALOF PREFECT, WHOPASSES THROUGHMINISTRY OF INTERION AND POLICE• 0 IF AUTHORIZEDBY PREFECTS, SPORTING CLUBS
  • • ~JAPONS,~~PR1NG"P~O~EI.LEPPEl.~ET WtAPONS~A~LISTlLtTJ0tTYPE,WEAPONS~, . WEI GMTEO· OR l.OAOEOI-CLUB ORI TRUNCMEilON, ANO! ANY. l(N?FEt WHIICHI:MASi A, s~Bl,Ng ~Q~~EO~l.~QF;;•EURT':IER~.~~l.~~~! M~r~ ~El. cqNSiP~R~O, EO~B'i:OQE~r AVTHO~ITIES·· CONSIDER
  • got underway. Tells of Fund Drive Montgomery told the committee of a fund drive the Three Rivers Rotary Club sponsored to assist , Juan Diaz, a Three Rivers High School football . player, injured on the gridiron in 1947. He said he estimated $1,000
  • had it settled, and then, all of a sudden, Joe Califano and Jim Gaither and Larry Temple showed up in Austin, and we had dinner with them down at the Headliners [Club]. The committee and, 23 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL
  • : President's Club money or--? J: I don't know. Cash, I know it was cash. And he would get together an envelope, and we'd call the guy over. He'd come in and visit a while and talk a while. Before he left, he would get that envelope. No quid pro quo, nothing
  • and precedents and so on. MG: The President's Club had been a large fund-raising center in the 1964 campaign. DG: Yes. MG: Was this organization helpful to you in 1968? DG: I don't recall. I don't remember any discussion of it, and I have no memory
  • LBJ was going to be president to be a place that they would let the town use for community meetings--4-H clubs, home demons­ tration clubs. Then it became something a great deal more, and it was an easy thing, when we could not let people come
  • d r e s s and to the A r m y - N a v y Club •where t h e r e w a s a r e c e p t i o n h o n o rin g J a n e F r e e m a n . L iz and M a r c i a an d H elen e r o d e w ith m e - - a b r i e f s t a y . I s to o d in lin e w ith J a n e and m e t
  • ; Lady Bird to Army-Navy Club to reception for Jane Freeman; Lady Bird meets with Alan Boyd & 35 highway engineers; massage, rest & telephone calls; Archivist Wayne Grover resigns; party for James Webb & astronauts; signing ceremony; Important items
  • , you got to the par.anta, too. 0 (The local Head Stan moth•~• had •,tartfld a aewiag club ucl oth•r actlvltl••· ) Their blgge•t problem would be 1etttn1 the local commulty to come up wltb. lt• tt50,, matchln1 funda requtremeot in 1968. 0 "We •••d more
  • ? Dear Sarah: Thank you very much for your letter in which you ask me to assist in getting ! .fr. J'a rnes Webb to speak at th.e National Convention of the National Federation of Busine·s s and Pro­ fessional Wom.en'e Clubs to be held on the 19th 0
  • ; and secondly, I did engage in some rather active local civic undertakings, such as the president of the Chamber of Commerce, the president of American Red Cross, the president of Rotary Club, and others were really time consuming--that was all the time I could
  • this award. K: Each year at the Women's National Press Club, for many years an award has been given to an outstanding woman. On this particular occasion, President Johnson was to be the speaker. It's a dinner honoring Mrs. Roosevelt and the women who
  • , they all agreed that the Sierra Club's fight was pretty ill founded, and wasn't too factual as to what was involved. I never will forget the Reader's Digest story against it, and a picture of some beautiful waterfalls. Nowhere in the story did it say
  • . Of course, in my state when I was in business, I was called a radical by my competitors because I started the five-day week, the thirty-six hour week, the first profit-sharing plan of any business in the state, a summer cabin for the employees, a flying club
  • President's Club money for support, which I did. Then of course came the day of the primary, and Johnson did win. I don't recall whether it was a plurality or a majority, but if it wasn't a majority, it was very close to 50 per cent. I believe it was 51 per
  • fully understand the Senate and its working. F: Now, are you talking about Senate liberals or all liberals? R: All liberals, it was general. Generally they think of the Senate as sort of a "Gentlemen's Club" where you should have a connnittee
  • they? They can make money on their own. They don't need us." He said, "Well, I tell you what you do. You go and talk to Colonel [Alfred] Petsch, and you go tell him that you want for him to go with you and get the garden club in Fredericksburg to go with ya'll
  • [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Boatner -- III -- 2 was vice president then, and he was asked by the Fort Worth Club over here . He said, "John Connally's a member there now, isn't he